The Queen's Necklace. Dumas Alexandre

The Queen's Necklace - Dumas Alexandre


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      The Queen's Necklace

      PROLOGUE. – THE PREDICTIONS

      AN OLD NOBLEMAN AND AN OLD MAÎTRE-D'HÔTEL

      It was the beginning of April, 1784, between twelve and one o'clock. Our old acquaintance, the Marshal de Richelieu, having with his own hands colored his eyebrows with a perfumed dye, pushed away the mirror which was held to him by his valet, the successor of his faithful Raffè and shaking his head in the manner peculiar to himself, "Ah!" said he, "now I look myself;" and rising from his seat with juvenile vivacity, he commenced shaking off the powder which had fallen from his wig over his blue velvet coat, then, after taking a turn or two up and down his room, called for his maître-d'hôtel.

      In five minutes this personage made his appearance, elaborately dressed.

      The marshal turned towards him, and with a gravity befitting the occasion, said, "Sir, I suppose you have prepared me a good dinner?"

      "Certainly, your grace."

      "You have the list of my guests?"

      "I remember them perfectly, your grace; I have prepared a dinner for nine."

      "There are two sorts of dinners, sir," said the marshal.

      "True, your grace, but – "

      The marshal interrupted him with a slightly impatient movement, although still dignified.

      "Do you know, sir, that whenever I have heard the word 'but,' and I have heard it many times in the course of eighty-eight years, it has been each time, I am sorry to say, the harbinger of some folly."

      "Your grace – "

      "In the first place, at what time do we dine?"

      "Your grace, the citizens dine at two, the bar at three, the nobility at four – "

      "And I, sir?"

      "Your grace will dine to-day at five."

      "Oh, at five!"

      "Yes, your grace, like the king – "

      "And why like the king?"

      "Because, on the list of your guests, is the name of a king."

      "Not so, sir, you mistake; all my guests to-day are simply noblemen."

      "Your grace is surely jesting; the Count Haga,1 who is among the guests – "

      "Well, sir!"

      "The Count Haga is a king."

      "I know no king so called."

      "Your grace must pardon me then," said the maître-d'hôtel, bowing, "but, I believed, supposed – "

      "Your business, sir, is neither to believe nor suppose; your business is to read, without comment, the orders I give you. When I wish a thing to be known, I tell it; when I do not tell it, I wish it unknown."

      The maître-d'hôtel bowed again, more respectfully, perhaps, than he would have done to a reigning monarch.

      "Therefore, sir," continued the old marshal, "you will, as I have none but noblemen to dinner, let us dine at my usual hour, four o'clock."

      At this order, the countenance of the maître-d'hôtel became clouded as if he had heard his sentence of death; he grew deadly pale; then, recovering himself, with the courage of despair he said, "In any event, your grace cannot dine before five o'clock."

      "Why so, sir?" cried the marshal.

      "Because it is utterly impossible."

      "Sir," said the marshal, with a haughty air, "it is now, I believe, twenty years since you entered my service?"

      "Twenty-one years, a month, and two weeks."

      "Well, sir, to these twenty-one years, a month, and two weeks, you will not add a day, nor an hour. You understand me, sir," he continued, biting his thin lips and depressing his eyebrows; "this evening you seek a new master. I do not choose that the word impossible shall be pronounced in my house; I am too old now to begin to learn its meaning."

      The maître-d'hôtel bowed a third time.

      "This evening," said he, "I shall have taken leave of your grace, but, at least, up to the last moment, my duty shall have been performed as it should be;" and he made two steps towards the door.

      "What do you call as it should be?" cried the marshal. "Learn, sir, that to do it as it suits me is to do it as it should be. Now, I wish to dine at four, and it does not suit me, when I wish to dine at four, to be obliged to wait till five."

      "Your grace," replied the maître-d'hôtel, gravely, "I have served as butler to his highness the Prince de Soubise, and as steward to his eminence the Cardinal de Rohan. With the first, his majesty, the late King of France, dined once a year; with the second, the Emperor of Austria dined once a month. I know, therefore, how a sovereign should be treated. When he visited the Prince de Soubise, Louis XV. called himself in vain the Baron de Gonesse; at the house of M. de Rohan, the Emperor Joseph was announced as the Count de Packenstein; but he was none the less emperor. To-day, your grace also receives a guest, who vainly calls himself Count Haga – Count Haga is still King of Sweden. I shall leave your service this evening, but Count Haga will have been treated like a king."

      "But that," said the marshal, "is the very thing that I am tiring myself to death in forbidding; Count Haga wishes to preserve his incognito as strictly as possible. Well do I see through your absurd vanity; it is not the crown that you honor, but yourself that you wish to glorify; I repeat again, that I do not wish it imagined that I have a king here."

      "What, then, does your grace take me for? It is not that I wish it known that there is a king here."

      "Then in heaven's name do not be obstinate, but let us have dinner at four."

      "But at four o'clock, your grace, what I am expecting will not have arrived."

      "What are you expecting? a fish, like M. Vatel?"

      "Does your grace wish that I should tell you?"

      "On my faith, I am curious."

      "Then, your grace, I wait for a bottle of wine."

      "A bottle of wine! Explain yourself, sir, the thing begins to interest me."

      "Listen then, your grace; his majesty the King of Sweden – I beg pardon, the Count Haga I should have said – drinks nothing but tokay."

      "Well, am I so poor as to have no tokay in my cellar? If so, I must dismiss my butler."

      "Not so, your grace; on the contrary, you have about sixty bottles."

      "Well, do you think Count Haga will drink sixty bottles with his dinner?"

      "No, your grace; but when Count Haga first visited France, when he was only prince royal, he dined with the late king, who had received twelve bottles of tokay from the Emperor of Austria. You are aware that the tokay of the finest vintages is reserved exclusively for the cellar of the emperor, and that kings themselves can only drink it when he pleases to send it to them."

      "I know it."

      "Then, your grace, of these twelve bottles of which the prince royal drank, only two remain. One is in the cellar of his majesty Louis XVI. – "

      "And the other?"

      "Ah, your grace!" said the maître-d'hôtel, with a triumphant smile, for he felt that, after the long battle he had been fighting, the moment of victory was at hand, "the other one was stolen."

      "By whom, then?"

      "By one of my friends, the late king's butler, who was under great obligations to me."

      "Oh! and so he gave it to you."

      "Certainly, your grace," said the maître-d'hôtel with pride.

      "And what did you do with it?"

      "I placed it carefully in my master's cellar."

      "Your master! And who was your master at that time?"

      "His eminence the Cardinal


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<p>1</p>

The name of Count Haga was well known as one assumed by the King of Sweden when traveling in France.