CHAPTER XXXIV.
RETRIBUTION.
[34.1]
In the meantime Montraville having received orders to
return to
[34.2]
"I cannot believe it
possible," said Montraville, "that a mind once so pure as Charlotte Temple's,
should so suddenly become the mansion of vice. Beware, Belcour," continued he,
"beware if you have dared to behave either unjust or dishonorably to that poor
girl, your life shall pay the forfeit:—I will revenge her cause."
[34.3]
He immediately went into the country, to the house where he
had left
[34.4]
Tortured almost to madness by this shocking account, he
returned to the city, but, before he reached it, the evening was drawing to a
close. In entering the town he was
obliged to pass several little huts, the residence of poor women who supported
themselves by washing the clothes of the officers and soldiers. It was
nearly dark: he heard from a neighboring steeple a solemn toll that seemed to say some
poor mortal was going to their last mansion: the sound struck on the heart
of Montraville, and
he involuntarily
stopped, when, from one of the houses, he saw the appearance of a funeral.
Almost unknowing
what he did, he followed at a small distance; and as they let the coffin
into the grave, he inquired of a soldier who stood by, and had just brushed off
a tear that did honor to his heart, who it was that was just buried. "An
[If it]
please your honor," said the man, "'tis a poor girl that
was brought from her friends by a cruel man, who left her when she was big with
child, and married another." Montraville stood motionless, and the man
proceeded—"I met her myself not a fortnight since one night all wet and cold in
the streets; she went to Madam Crayton's, but she would not take her in, and so
the poor thing went raving mad."
Montraville could bear no more; he struck his hands against his forehead with
violence; and exclaiming "poor murdered Charlotte!" ran with precipitation
towards the place where they were heaping the earth on her remains. "Hold,
hold, one moment," said he. "Close not the grave of the injured Charlotte Temple
till I have taken vengeance on her murderer."
[34.5]
"Rash young man,"
said Mr. Temple, "who art thou that thus disturbest the last mournful rites of
the dead, and rudely breakest in upon the grief of an afflicted father."
[34.6]
"If thou art the
father of Charlotte Temple," said he, gazing at him with mingled horror and
amazement—"if thou art her father—I am Montraville." Then falling on his knees,
he continued—"Here is my bosom. I bare it to receive the stroke I merit.
Strike—strike now, and save me from the misery of reflection."
[34.7]
"Alas!" said Mr. Temple, "if
thou wert the seducer of my child, thy own reflections be thy punishment. I
wrest not the power from the hand of omnipotence. Look on that little heap
of earth, there hast thou buried the only joy of a fond father. Look at it
often; and may thy heart feel such true
sorrow as shall merit the mercy of heaven." He turned from him; and
Montraville starting up from the ground, where he had thrown himself, and at
that instant
remembering the perfidy
[deceitfulness]
of
Belcour, flew like lightning to his lodgings. Belcour was intoxicated;
Montraville impetuous: they fought, and the sword of the latter entered the
heart of his adversary. He
[Belcour] fell, and expired almost instantly.
[34.8]
Montraville had received a slight wound; and overcome with
the agitation of his mind and loss of blood, was carried in a state of
insensibility to his distracted wife. A dangerous illness and obstinate delirium
ensued, during which he raved incessantly for
|