Page:An adventure (1911).pdf/65

 Marion and was surprised to see, instead of the girl, a "garçon de la Chambre" suddenly appear, trembling in all his limbs. After reading the letter brought to her from the Minister at the Palace, the Queen desired him to order the carriage and to let Madame de Tourzel know. The messenger bowed (as our man had done), and once out of sight, ran off at full speed. The Queen followed him to the house.

Enquiries through the publisher, in 1907, as to Madame Lavergne's sources of information, elicited the fact that her informant as to every detail of that scene had been Marion herself. This Marion, the Légendes tell us, afterwards married M. Charpentier, an under-gardener, known in 1789 by the name of "Jean de l'Eau," on account of his bringing water daily from Ville d'Avray for the Queen's table. He afterwards became jardinier en chef, being appointed in 1805 by Napoleon in succession to Antoine Richard.

The name "Charpantier" appears in 1786 amongst the "ouvriers terrassiers," who clear