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"
I
am
quite
willing
to
be
your
second
,
"
said
Liévin
,
"
but
on
one
condition
.
If
you
fail
to
wound
your
man
you
will
fight
with
me
straight
away
.
"
"
Agreed
,
"
said
Julien
quite
delighted
;
and
they
went
to
find
M
.
de
Beauvoisis
at
the
address
indicated
on
his
card
at
the
end
of
the
Faubourg
Saint
Germain
.
It
was
seven
o
’
clock
in
the
morning
.
It
was
only
when
he
was
being
ushered
in
,
that
Julien
thought
that
it
might
quite
well
be
the
young
relation
of
Madame
de
Rênal
,
who
had
once
been
employed
at
the
Rome
or
Naples
Embassy
,
and
who
had
given
the
singer
Geronimo
a
letter
of
introduction
.
Julien
gave
one
of
the
cards
which
had
been
flung
at
him
the
previous
evening
together
with
one
of
his
own
to
a
tall
valet
.
He
and
his
second
were
kept
waiting
for
a
good
three
-
quarters
of
an
hour
.
Eventually
they
were
ushered
in
to
a
elegantly
furnished
apartment
.
They
found
there
a
tall
young
man
who
was
dressed
like
a
doll
.
His
features
presented
the
perfection
and
the
lack
of
expression
of
Greek
beauty
.
His
head
,
which
was
remarkably
straight
,
had
the
finest
blonde
hair
.
It
was
dressed
with
great
care
and
not
a
single
hair
was
out
of
place
.
"
It
was
to
have
his
hair
done
like
this
,
that
is
why
this
damned
fop
has
kept
us
waiting
,
"
thought
the
lieutenant
of
the
96th
.
The
variegated
dressing
gown
,
the
morning
trousers
,
everything
down
to
the
embroidered
slippers
was
correct
.
He
was
marvellously
well
-
groomed
.
His
blank
and
aristocratic
physiognomy
betokened
rare
and
orthodox
ideas
;
the
ideal
of
a
Metternichian
diplomatist
.
Napoleon
as
well
did
not
like
to
have
in
his
entourage
officers
who
thought
.
Julien
,
to
whom
his
lieutenant
of
the
96th
had
explained
,
that
keeping
him
waiting
was
an
additional
insult
after
having
thrown
his
card
so
rudely
in
his
face
,
entered
brusquely
M
.
de
Beauvoisis
’
room
.
He
intended
to
be
insolent
,
but
at
the
same
time
to
exhibit
good
form
.
Julien
was
so
astonished
by
the
niceness
of
M
.
de
Beauvoisis
’
manners
and
by
the
combination
of
formality
,
self
-
importance
,
and
self
-
satisfaction
in
his
demeanour
,
by
the
admirable
elegance
of
everything
that
surrounded
him
,
that
he
abandoned
immediately
all
idea
of
being
insolent
.
It
was
not
his
man
of
the
day
before
.
His
astonishment
was
so
great
at
meeting
so
distinguished
a
person
,
instead
of
the
rude
creature
whom
he
was
looking
for
,
that
he
could
not
find
a
single
word
to
say
.
He
presented
one
of
the
cards
which
had
been
thrown
at
him
.
"
That
’
s
my
name
,
"
said
the
young
diplomat
,
not
at
all
impressed
by
Julien
’
s
black
suit
at
seven
o
’
clock
in
the
morning
,
"
but
I
do
not
understand
the
honour
.
"