Page:Ten Years Later 2.djvu/504

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TEN YEARS LATER

492 TEN YEARS LATER. "Why not?" "There are only two hundred tickets, so tSiat it was not possible to inscribe every one's name on the list." "And hers is not there, then?" "No." "What a pity; she might have won them, and then sold them." "Sold them!" exclaimed the queen. "Yes; it would have been a dowry for her, and she would not have been obliged to marry without her trousseau, as will probably be the case." "Really,'" answered the queen-mother, "poor little thing, has she no dresses, then?" And she pronounced these words like a woman who has never been able to understand the inconveniences of a slenderly filled purse. "Stay, look at her. Heaven forgive me, if she is not wearing the very same petticoat this evening that she had on this morning during the promenade, and which she managed to keep clean, thanks to the care the king took of her in sheltering her from the rain." At the very moment madame uttered these words the king entered the room. The two queens would not perhaps have observed his arrival, so completely were they occupied in their ill-natured remarks, had not madame noticed that all at once La Valliere, who was standing up facing the gallery, exhibited certain signs of confusion, and then said a few words to the courtiers who surrounded her, who im- mediately dispersed. This movement induced madame to look toward the door, and at that moment, the captain of the guards announced the king. At this moment La Val- liere, who had hitherto kept her eyes fixed upon the gallery, suddenly cast them down as the king entered. His majesty was dressed magnificently and in the most perfect taste; he was conversing with Monsieur and the Due de Roquelaure, Monsieur on his right and the Due de Roquelaure on his left. The king advanced, in the first place, toward the queens, to whom he bowed with an air full of graceful re- spect. He took his mother's hand and kissed it, addressed a few compliments to madame upon the beauty of her toilet, and then began to make the round of the assembly. La Valliere was saluted in the same manner as the others, but with neither more nor less attention. His majesty then returned to his mother and his wife. When the courtiers noticed that the king had only addressed some ordinary