ing into laughter. The perfidiousness had been calculated with extreme ability; the name that was prouounced, instead of the name which the marquise awaited, had precisely the same effect upon her as the badly sharpened axes, which had hacked, without destroying, Messieurs de Chalais and De Thou upon their scaffolds, had upon them. She recovered herself, however, and said:
"I was perfectly right in saying you were a witty woman, for you are making the time pass away most agreeably. The joke is a most amusing one, for I have never seen the Duke of Buckingham."
"Never!" said Marguerite, restraining her laughter.
"I have never even left my own house since the duke has been at Paris."
"Oh!" resumed Mme. Vanel, stretching out her foot toward a paper which was lying on the carpet near the window, "it is not necessary for people to see one another, since they can write."
The marquise trembled, for this paper was the envelope of the letter she was reading as her friend had entered, and was sealed with the surintendant's arms. As she leaned back on the sofa on which she was sitting Mme. Belliere covered the paper with the thick folds of her large silk dress, and so concealed it.
"Come, Marguerite, tell me, is it to tell me all these foolish reports that you have come to see me so early in the day?"
"No; I came to see you in the first place, and to remind you of those habits of our earlier days, so delightful to remember, when we used to wander about together at Vincennes, and, sitting beneath an oak, or in some sylvan shade, used to talk of those we loved, and who loved us."
"Do you propose that we should go out together now?"
"My carriage is here, and I have three hours at my disposal."
"I am not dressed yet. Marguerite; but if you wish that we should talk together, we can, without going to the woods of Vincennes, find in my own garden here beautiful trees, shady groves, a greensward covered with daisies and violets, the perfume of which can be perceived from where we are sitting."
"I regret your refusal, my dear marquise, for I wanted to pour out my whole heart into yours."
"I repeat it again. Marguerite, my heart is yours just as much in this room, or beneath the lime-trees in the garden here, as it is under the oaks in the wood yonder."