NEWS
Scene
1
All
this happened some time ago, but it seems almost like yesterday.
Before, my life had always been tedious, the same old routine day
after day, the same small quarrels among the girls, mostly due to
pettiness and jealousies, until that day when I received the news
that turned my life upside down and made me feel like someone
stranded on a deserted island with no hope of being rescued.
(By
the way, my
name is Adele,) and I will start by relating the terrible news I
received that day. I remember it was a fine sunny day although it was
still the month of February, and I was in good spirits, happy and
cheerful, looking
forward to my
future,
as all girls of my age do. But, ironically, the bright and sunny
future I looked forward to turned
stormy with
many squalls.
It
all started
when I was told that my father had died. I must say I was not
particularly sad or sorrowful because,
in truth,
I had never met him. I only knew that he was a wealthy American who
paid for my boarding school fees at "The School for Young
Ladies", an exclusive school located on the fashionable Rue De
Passy in Paris. Yes, thanks to him, I had been living a sheltered
life and
had
taken for granted my privileges, thinking that they would last
forever.
It
was Mme Neuville, our headmistress, who told me the news. She
was a kind-hearted lady who has
always
had a special place for me in her heart.
Maybe that
was because when I came to school after my mother died, I was only
seven years old. During the ten years I spent in school I saw many
pupils
arriving and leaving, and
they never stayed more than two years. They came to school to finish
their education. In
upper-class circles, Mme Neuville's institution is called a
finishing school.
Most
of the girls were conceited, haughty and spoiled, daughters of
wealthy Americans, or belonging to the European aristocracy. I was an
exception then, and I used to joke about that, saying that it was
taking more than ten years for my "finishing." Needless to say
that a commoner like me had no way to form
any close friendships
with those girls, and as Madame often told me: "Chacun a sa place."
(Each to his/her own place). Thus, before long I learnt my place
within the confines of the social ladder, and as soon as money had
flooded in, I had no reasons to complain. Therefore, it both
surprised and amazed me that Jenny, an American heiress who came to
school after her father died in some mysterious circumstances,
attached herself to me like a pin to a cloth, although I
have often suspected that she merely used me as a mirror to her
vanity. But,
I
will come to that later.
That
day we were having a very tedious Latin lesson, of all subjects, with
Father Leopold who was a friend of Mme Neuville, or
maybe even
something more than a friend. So, we were trying to make most of our
tedium by having some fun, slipping
each other small
notes on thin strips of paper about the latest gossip in the school -
a very childish
sort of behaviour, considering
we were 17 or 18-year-old girls ready for the marriage market.
We were so entertained that I did not notice the door opening, and
when I looked to the blackboard, I spotted Mme Neuville's skinny
figure standing on the dais. She grinned at Father Leopold before
addressing me:
"Mademoiselle
Dubois, would you follow me, please?" At once, I smelled
trouble, and I followed her to the office,
reluctantly.
After locking the door, she sat behind her desk, while I sat in the
armchair next to her, and
with a real poker face she broke
the news:
"Well
Adele, my dear, I have some sad news," she said, "your father
has just passed away. He was on an expedition in Egypt, well,
something to do with the tomb of a pharaoh."
I
had a vague idea that my father was an eminent archaeologist who
spent his leisure time travelling to exotic countries to look for
bones and relics of people that had died a
long time ago.
But more I couldn't say.
"It
was an accident," Mme Neville went on, "he fell while on a dig."
I
collapsed into the armchair and shivered out of panic, yet I
tried to control myself. It could not be the end of the world, could
it? For the first time, I saw that Mme Neuville, wearing her usual
black garments, looked fragile and powerless,
and I wondered what I would do now without him, so I got straight to
the point:
"Am
I to be destitute?"
"Yes,
my pauvre
fille,
now that your father is dead, you have no one to pay for your
expenses."
"But,
why? You always told me he was very rich."
"Oh
yes, he was very wealthy." And she fell silent.
"So,
what happened?" I asked, breaking the silence.
"You
were his illegitimate daughter and he didn't mention you in his
will." (This was not
news for me. For some years now I had suspected that I was an
illegitimate daughter which
explained why I
had never met him). I saw two tears rolling down her cheek. I had
never seen her sad before, so I was embarrassed. Did she love me so
much that my being on the borderline affected her?
Surely,
she felt sorry for me, as for the second time in my life I was left
an orphan.
"Why
didn't he make a will on my behalf?" I ventured to ask.
"Someone
might have prevented him from doing so," she whispered, "because,
knowing him well, it was indeed a very peculiar thing for him to do."
"Did
you know him well?" I asked, puzzled.
But,
changing the subject at once and taking
my
palms on her hands, she whispered some gibberish: "Poor
child, your life
is reaching a turning point, but I can only see dusk on the skyline
and around this, black ravens are fighting for life."
As
usual under stress, Mme Neville turned to the obscure and the
supernatural, which was of little comfort to me. Thus, I felt I
needed a confidante,
but could I ever trust Jenny? It is true that she was spoiled and
self-centred, but
she might understand my misfortunes. After all, she had also lost her
father, but unlike me she had been left an heiress.
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