THE'A MER IC AN V 4 CHAPTER XXXIV. FATHER DAK;RIGN"y'8 SECRETARY. Hardly had the magistrate and Dr. Baleinier disappeared, than Mdl'e. de Curdoville, whose countenance was beaming with joy, exclaimed, as she looked at Rodin with a mixture of respect and gratitude, " At length, thanks to you, sir, I am free frte! Oh, I had never before felt how much happiness, expans?on, delight, there is in that'adorable word liberty! " Her bosom rose and fell, her rosy nostrils dila ted, her vermilion lips were half open, as if she again inhaled with rapture pure and vivifying air. " I have been only a few days in this horrible place," she resumed, " but I have suffered enough from my captivity to make me rfsolre never to let a year pass without restoring to liberty some poor prisoners for debt. Thi3 vow no doubt ap pears to belong to the Middle Ages," added she, uith a Rmilfi? "but I would fain borrow a little from that noble epoch something more than its old windows and furniture. So, doubly thanks, sir! for I take you as a partner in that project of deliverance, which has just (you see) unfolded itself in the midst of the happiness I owe to you and by which you seem so much affected. Oh! let my joy speak my gratitude, and pay you for your generous aid!" exclaimed the young girl, with enthusiasm. Mdlle. de Cardoville had truly remarked complete transfiguration in the countenance of Rodin. This man, lately so harsh, severe, , in flexible, with regard to Dr. Baleinier, appeared now under the influence of the mildest and most tender sentiments. His little, half-veiled eyes were fixed upon Adrienne with an expression of ineffable interest. Then, as if he wished to tear himself from these impressions, he said, speak ing to himself, " Come, come, no weakness. Time is too precious; my mission is not fulfilled. My dear young lady," added he, addressing himself to Adrienne, "believe what I say we will talk hereafter of gratitude but we have now to talk of the present so important, for you and your family. Do you know what is taking place? Adrienne looked at the Jesuit with surprise, and said: " What is taking place, sir? "Do you know the real motive of your impris onment in this house? Do you know what in fluenced the Princess de Saint-Dizer and Abbe d'Aigrigny?" At the found of those detested names, Mdlle. de Cardoville's face, now so full of happiness, became suddenly sad. and she answered with bitterness: " It is hatred, sir, that no doubt ani mated Madame de Saint-Dizier against me. "Yes, hatred; and, moreover, the desire to rob you with impunity of an immense fortune." "Me, sir! how?" " You must be ignorant, my dear young lady, of the interest you had to be in the Rue Saint Francois on the 13th February, for an inheri tance?" " I was ignorant, sir, of the date and details; but I knew by some family papers, and thanks to an extraordinary circumstance, that one of our ancestors " " Had left an enormous sum to be divided be tween his descendants! is it not so?" "Yes, sir." "But what unfortunately you did not know, my dear young lady, was that the heirs were all bound to be present at a certain hour on the 13th of February. This day and hour once past, the absent would forfeit their claim. Do you now understand why you have been imprisoned here, my dear young lady?" "Yes, yes; I understand it," cried Mdlle. de Cardoville; "cupidity was added to the hatred which my aunt felt for me. All is explained. Marshal Simon's daughters, having the same right as I had, have, like me, been imprisoned." " And yet," cried Rodin, " you and they were not the only victims." " Who, then, are the others, sir?" " A young East Indian." "Prince Djalma?" said Adrienne, hastily.. . "For the same reason he has been nearly poisoned with a narcotic." "Great God!" cried the young girl, clasping her hands in horror. " It is fearful. That young prince, who was said to have so noble and gener ous a character! But I sent to Cardoville Cas tle " " A confidential person, to fetch the prince to Paris I know it, my dear young lady; but, by means of a trick, your friend was got out of the and the young Oriental delivered to his way, enemies. " And where is he now? " I have only vague information on the sub ject. I know that he is in Paris, and do not de spair of finding him. I shall punue my re searches with an almost paternal ardor, for we cannot too much love the rare qualities of that poor king's son. What a heart, my dear young lady! what a heart! , Oh, it is a heart of gold, pure and bright as the gold of his country! " "We must find the prince, sir," said Adrienne with emotion; "let me entreat you to neglect nothing for that end. He is my relation alone here without support without assistance. "Certainly," replied Rodin, with cominisera- tion. " Poor boy! for he is almost a boy eigh teen or nineteen years of age thrown into the heart of Paris, of this hell with his fresh, ar dent, half-savage passious with his simplicity and confidence to what perils may he not be exposed? " "Well, we must first find him, sir," said Adri enne, hastily; "and then we will save him from these dangers, Before I was confined here, I learned bis arrival in France, and sent a confi dential person to offer him the services of an un known friend. I now see that this mad idea, with which I have been so much reproached, was a very sensible one. I am more convinced of it than ever. The prince belongs to my fam ily, and I owe him a generous hospitality. I had destined for him the lodge I occupied at my aunt's." " And you, my dear young lady?" "To-day, I shall remove to a house, which I had prepared sometime ago, with the determina tion of quiting Madame de Saint-Dizier, and liv ing alone as I pleased, Then, sir, as you seem bent upon being the good genius of our family, be as generous with regard to Prince Djalma, as you have been to me and Marshal Simon's daughters. I entreat you to discover the hiding place of this poor king's son, as you call him; keen my secret for me, and conduct him to the house offered by the unknown friend. Let him not disquiet himself about anything;, all his wants shall be provided for; he shall live like a prince." "Yes; he will indeed live like a prince, thanks to your royal munificence. But never was such kind interest better deserved. It is enough to see (as I have seen) his fine, melancholy coun tenance " "You have seen him then, sir?" said Adrienne interrupting Rodin. " Yes, my dear young lady; I was with him for about two hours. It was quite enough to judge of him. His charming features are the mirror of his soul." "And where did you see him, sir?" " At your old Chateau de Cardoville, my dear young lady, near which he had been shipwrecked in a storm, and whither I had gone to " Rodin hesitated for a moment, and then, as if yielding to the frankness of his disposition, added: " Whither I had gone to commit a bad action a shameful, miserable action, I must confess !" "You, sir? at Cardoville House to commit a bad action?" cried Adrienne, much surprised "Alas! yes, my dear young lady," answered Rodin with simplicity. "In one word, I had orders from Abbe d'Aigrigny, to place your form er bailiff in the alternative either of losing his situation or lendinc himself to mean action something, in fact, that resembled spying and calumny; out wie jiuuesi, wunujr mau iciuscu. " Why, who are you, sir?" said Mdlle. de Car doville, more and more astonished. "I am Rodin, lately secretary of the Abbe d'Aigrigny a person of very little importance, as you see." It is impossible to describe the accent, at once humble and ingenuous, of the Jesuit, as he pro nounced these words, which he accompanied with a respectful bow. On this revelation, Mdlle. de Cardoville drew back abruptly. We have said that Adrienrie had sometimes heard talk of Ro din, the humble secretary of the Abbe d'Aig rigny, as a sort of obedient and passive machine That was not all; the bailiff of Cardoville Manor, writing to Adrienne on the subject of Prince Djalma, had complained of the perfidious and dishonest propositions of Rodin. She felt, there fore, a vague suspicion, when she heard that her liberator was the man who had played so odious a part. Yet this unfavorable feeling was . bal anced by the sense of what she owed to Rodin, and by his frank denunciation of Abbe d'Aig rigny before the magistrate. . And then the Jesuit, by his own confession, had anticipated, as it were, the reproaches that might have been addressed to him. Still, it was with a kind of cold reserve that Mdlle. de Cardoville resumed this dialogue; which she had commenced with as much frankness as warmth and sympathy. Rodin perceived the impression he had made. He expected it. He was not the least discon certed when Mdlle. de Cardoville said to him, as she fixed upon him a piercing glance, "Ah! you are M. Rodin secretary to the Abbe d'Aig rigny? " "Say ex-secretary, if you please, my dear young lady," answered the Jesuit; "for you see clearly that I can never again enter the house of the Abbe d'Aigrigny. I have made of him an implacable enemy, and I am now without em (Continued on page 5.) I'ES 1'OIMFBS, . UY H. W BoWMAM. Tapal pills are sugar coated. Credulity la the basis of Rome"! re ligion. Get a papist to thinking and the priest will curee you. The priest's blindest eye la on the side where the mott money comes from. A Ulble la the most hurtful book a papist can read It we judge from Rome's past acts. 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