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- The Count's Millions by Emile Gaboriau
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-
- THE COUNT'S MILLIONS
-
- Translated from the French of
- EMILE GABORIAU
-
- A novel in two parts. Part Two of this novel is found in the volume:
- Baron Trigault's Vengeance
-
-
-
- PASCAL AND MARGUERITE.
-
- 1.
-
-
- It was a Thursday evening, the fifteenth of October; and although
- only half-past six o'clock, it had been dark for some time
- already. The weather was cold, and the sky was as black as ink,
- while the wind blew tempestuously, and the rain fell in torrents.
-
- The servants at the Hotel de Chalusse, one of the most magnificent
- mansions in the Rue de Courcelles in Paris, were assembled in the
- porter's lodge, a little building comprising a couple of rooms
- standing on the right hand side of the great gateway. Here, as in
- all large mansions, the "concierge" or porter, M. Bourigeau, was a
- person of immense importance, always able and disposed to make any
- one who was inclined to doubt his authority, feel it in cruel
- fashion. As could be easily seen, he held all the other servants
- in his power. He could let them absent themselves without leave,
- if he chose, and conceal all returns late at night after the
- closing of public balls and wine-shops. Thus, it is needless to
- say that M. Bourigeau and his wife were treated by their fellow-
- servants with the most servile adulation.
-
- The owner of the house was not at home that evening, so that M.
- Casimir, the count's head valet, was serving coffee for the
- benefit of all the retainers. And while the company sipped the
- fragrant beverage which had been generously tinctured with cognac,
- provided by the butler, they all united in abusing their common
- enemy, the master of the house. For the time being, a pert little
- waiting-maid, with an odious turn-up nose, had the floor. She was
- addressing her remarks to a big, burly, and rather insolent-
- looking fellow, who had been added only the evening before to the
- corps of footmen. "The place is really intolerable," she was
- saying. "The wages are high, the food of the very best, the
- livery just such as would show off a good-looking man to the best
- advantage, and Madame Leon, the housekeeper, who has entire charge
- of everything, is not too lynx-eyed."
-
- "And the work?"
-
- "A mere nothing. Think, there are eighteen of us to serve only
- two persons, the count and Mademoiselle Marguerite. But then
- there is never any pleasure, never any amusement here."
-
- "What! is one bored then?"
-
- "Bored to death. This grand house is worse than a tomb. No
- receptions, no dinners--nothing. Would you believe it, I have
- never seen the reception-rooms! They are always closed; and the
- furniture is dropping to pieces under its coverings. There are
- not three visitors in the course of a month."
-
- She was evidently incensed, and the new footman seemed to share
- her indignation. "Why, how is it?" he exclaimed. "Is the count
- an owl? A man who's not yet fifty years old, and who's said to be
- worth several millions."
-
- "Yes, millions; you may safely say it--and perhaps ten, perhaps
- twenty millions too."
-
- "Then all the more reason why there should be something going on
- here. What does he do with himself alone, all the blessed day?"
-
- "Nothing. He reads in the library, or wanders about the garden.
- Sometimes, in the evening, he drives with Mademoiselle Marguerite
- to the Bois de Boulogne in a closed carriage; but that seldom
- happens. Besides, there is no such thing as teasing the poor man.
- I've been in the house for six months, and I've never heard him
- say anything but: 'yes'; 'no'; 'do this'; 'very well'; 'retire.'
- You would think these are the only words he knows. Ask M. Casimir
- if I'm not right."
-
- "Our guv'nor isn't very gay, that's a fact," responded the valet.
-
- The footman was listening with a serious air, as if greatly
- interested in the character of the people whom he was to serve.
- "And mademoiselle," he asked, "what does she say to such an
- existence?"
-
- "Bless me! during the six months she has been here, she has never
- once complained."
-
- "If she is bored," added M. Casimir, "she conceals it bravely."
-
- "Naturally enough," sneered the waiting-maid, with an ironical
- gesture; "each month that mademoiselle remains here, brings her
- too much money for her to complain."
-
- By the laugh that greeted this reply, and by the looks the older
- servants exchanged, the new-comer must have realized that he had
- discovered the secret skeleton hidden in every house. "What!
- what!" he exclaimed, on fire with curiosity; "is there really
- anything in that? To tell the truth, I was inclined to doubt it."
-
- His companions were evidently about to tell him all they knew, or
- rather all they thought they knew, when the front-door bell rang
- vigorously.
-
- "There he comes!" exclaimed the concierge; "but he's in too much
- of a hurry; hell have to wait awhile."
-
- He sullenly pulled the cord, however; the heavy door swayed on its
- hinges, and a cab-driver, breathless and hatless, burst into the
- room, crying, "Help! help!"
-
- The servants sprang to their feet.
-
- "Make haste!" continued the driver. "I was bringing a gentleman
- here--you must know him. He's outside, in my vehicle----"
-
- Without pausing to listen any longer, the servants rushed out, and
- the driver's incoherent explanation at once became intelligible.
- At the bottom of the cab, a roomy four-wheeler, a man was lying
- all of a heap, speechless and motionless. He must have fallen
- forward, face downward, and owing to the jolting of the vehicle
- his head had slipped under the front seat.
-
- "Poor devil!" muttered M. Casimir, "he must have had a stroke of
- apoplexy." The valet was peering into the vehicle as he spoke, and
- his comrades were approaching, when suddenly he drew back,
- uttering a cry of horror. "Ah, my God! it is the count!"
-
- Whenever there is an accident in Paris, a throng of inquisitive
- spectators seems to spring up from the very pavement, and indeed
- more than fifty persons had already congregated round about the
- vehicle. This circumstance restored M. Casimir's composure; or,
- at least, some portion of it. "You must drive into the
- courtyard," he said, addressing the cabman. "M. Bourigeau, open
- the gate, if you please." And then, turning to another servant, he
- added:
-
- "And you must make haste and fetch a physician--no matter who.
- Run to the nearest doctor, and don't return until you bring one
- with you."
-
- The concierge had opened the gate, but the driver had disappeared;
- they called him, and on receiving no reply the valet seized the
- reins and skilfully guided the cab through the gateway.
-
- Having escaped the scrutiny of the crowd, it now remained to
- remove the count from the vehicle, and this was a difficult task,
- on account of the singular position of his body; still, they
- succeeded at last, by opening both doors of the cab, the three
- strongest men uniting in their efforts. Then they placed him in a
- large arm-chair, carried him to his own room, and speedily had him
- undressed and in bed.
-
- He had so far given no sign of life; and as he lay there with his
- head weighing heavily on the pillow, you might have thought that
- all was over. His most intimate friend would scarcely have
- recognized him. His features were swollen and discolored; his eyes
- were closed, and a dark purple circle, looking almost like a
- terrible bruise, extended round them. A spasm had twisted his
- lips, and his distorted mouth, which was drawn on one side and
- hung half open imparted a most sinister expression to his face.
- In spite of every precaution, he had been wounded as he was
- removed from the cab. His forehead had been grazed by a piece of
- iron, and a tiny stream of blood was trickling down upon his face.
- However, he still breathed; and by listening attentively, one
- could distinguish a faint rattling in his throat.
-
- The servants, who had been so garrulous a few moments before, were
- silent now. They lingered in the room, exchanging glances of mute
- consternation. Their faces were pale and sad, and there were
- tears in the eyes of some of them. What was passing in their
- minds? Perhaps they were overcome by that unconquerable fear
- which sudden and unexpected death always provokes. Perhaps they
- unconsciously loved this master, whose bread they ate. Perhaps
- their grief was only selfishness, and they were merely wondering
- what would become of them, where they should find another
- situation, and if it would prove a good one. Not knowing what to
- do, they talked together in subdued voices, each suggesting some
- remedy he had heard spoken of for such cases. The more sensible
- among them were proposing to go and inform mademoiselle or Madame
- Leon, whose rooms were on the floor above, when the rustling of a
- skirt against the door suddenly made them turn. The person whom
- they called "mademoiselle" was standing on the threshold.
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was a beautiful young girl, about twenty
- years of age. She was a brunette of medium height, with big
- gloomy eyes shaded by thick eyebrows. Heavy masses of jet-black
- hair wreathed her lofty but rather sad and thoughtful forehead.
- There was something peculiar in her face--an expression of
- concentrated suffering, and a sort of proud resignation, mingled
- with timidity.
-
- "What has happened?" she asked, gently. "What is the cause of all
- the noise I have heard? I have rung three times and the bell was
- not answered."
-
- No one ventured to reply, and in her surprise she cast a hasty
- glance around. From where she stood, she could not see the bed
- stationed in an alcove; but she instantly noted the dejected
- attitude of the servants, the clothing scattered about the floor,
- and the disorder that pervaded this magnificent but severely
- furnished chamber, which was only lighted by the lamp which M.
- Bourigeau, the concierge, carried. A sudden dread seized her; she
- shuddered, and in a faltering voice she added: "Why are you all
- here? Speak, tell me what has happened."
-
- M. Casimir stepped forward. "A great misfortune, mademoiselle, a
- terrible misfortune. The count----"
-
- And he paused, frightened by what he was about to say.
-
- But Mademoiselle Marguerite had understood him. She clasped both
- hands to her heart, as if she had received a fatal wound, and
- uttered the single word: "Lost!"
-
- The next moment she turned as pale as death, her head drooped, her
- eyes closed, and she staggered as if about to fall. Two maids
- sprang forward to support her, but she gently repulsed them,
- murmuring, "Thanks! thanks! I am strong now."
-
- She was, in fact, sufficiently strong to conquer her weakness.
- She summoned all her resolution, and, paler than a statue, with
- set teeth and dry, glittering eyes, she approached the alcove.
- She stood there for a moment perfectly motionless, murmuring a few
- unintelligible words; but at last, crushed by her sorrow, she sank
- upon her knees beside the bed, buried her face in the counterpane
- and wept.
-
- Deeply moved by the sight of this despair, the servants held their
- breath, wondering how it would all end. It ended suddenly. The
- girl sprang from her knees, as if a gleam of hope had darted
- through her heart. "A physician!" she said, eagerly.
-
- "I have sent for one, mademoiselle," replied M. Casimir. And
- hearing a voice and a sound of footsteps on the staircase, he
- added: "And fortunately, here he comes."
-
- The doctor entered. He was a young man, although his head was
- almost quite bald. He was short, very thin, clean-shaven, and
- clad in black from head to foot. Without a word, without a bow,
- he walked straight to the bedside, lifted the unconscious man's
- eyelids, felt his pulse, and uncovered his chest, applying his ear
- to it. "This is a serious case," he said at the close of his
- examination.
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite, who had followed his movements with the
- most poignant anxiety, could not repress a sob. "But all hope is
- not lost, is it, monsieur?" she asked in a beseeching voice, with
- hands clasped in passionate entreaty. "You will save him, will
- you not--you will save him?"
-
- "One may always hope for the best."
-
- This was the doctor's only answer. He had drawn his case of
- instruments from his pocket, and was testing the points of his
- lancets on the tip of his finger. When he had found one to his
- liking: "I must ask you, mademoiselle," said he, "to order these
- women to retire, and to retire yourself. The men will remain to
- assist me, if I require help."
-
- She obeyed submissively, but instead of returning to her own room,
- she remained in the hall, seating herself upon the lower step of
- the staircase near the door, counting the seconds, and drawing a
- thousand conjectures from the slightest sound.
-
- Meanwhile, inside the room, the physician was proceeding slowly,
- not from temperament however, but from principle. Dr. Jodon--for
- such was his name--was an ambitious man who played a part.
- Educated by a "prince of science," more celebrated for the money
- he gained than for the cures he effected, he copied his master's
- method, his gestures, and even the inflections of his voice. By
- casting in people's eyes the same powder as his teacher had
- employed, he hoped to obtain the same results: a large practice
- and an immense fortune. In his secret heart he was by no means
- disconcerted by his patient's condition; on the contrary, he did
- not consider the count's state nearly as precarious as it really
- was.
-
- But bleeding and cupping alike failed to bring the sick man to
- consciousness. He remained speechless and motionless; the only
- result obtained, was that his breathing became a trifle easier.
- Finding his endeavors fruitless, the doctor at last declared that
- all immediate remedies were exhausted, that "the women" might be
- allowed to return, and that nothing now remained but to wait for
- the effect of the remedies he was about to prescribe, and which
- they must procure from the nearest chemist.
-
- Any other man would have been touched by the agony of entreaty
- contained in the glance that Mademoiselle Marguerite cast upon the
- physician as she returned into the room; but it did not affect him
- in the least. He calmly said, "I cannot give my decision as yet."
-
- "My God!" murmured the unhappy girl; "oh, my God, have mercy upon
- me!"
-
- But the doctor, copying his model, had stationed himself near the
- fireplace, with his elbow leaning on the mantel-shelf, in a
- graceful, though rather pompous attitude. "Now," he said,
- addressing his remarks to M. Casimir, "I desire to make a few
- inquiries. Is this the first time the Count de Chalusse has had
- such an attack?"
-
- "Yes, sir--at least since I have been in attendance upon him."
-
- "Very good. That is a chance in our favor. Tell me--have you
- ever heard him complain of vertigo, or of a buzzing in his ears?"
-
- "Never."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite seemed inclined to volunteer some remark,
- but the doctor imposed silence upon her by a gesture, and
- continued his examination. "Is the count a great eater?" he
- inquired. "Does he drink heavily?"
-
- "The count is moderation itself, monsieur, and he always takes a
- great deal of water with his wine."
-
- The doctor listened with an air of intent thoughtfulness, his head
- slightly inclined forward, his brow contracted, and his under lip
- puffed out, while from time to time he stroked his beardless chin.
- He was copying his master. "The devil!" he said, sotto voce.
- "There must be some cause for such an attack, however. Nothing in
- the count's constitution predisposes him to such an accident----"
- Then, suddenly turning toward Mademoiselle Marguerite: "Do you
- know, mademoiselle, whether the count has experienced any very
- violent emotion during the past few days?"
-
- "Something occurred this very morning, which seemed to annoy him
- very much."
-
- "Ah! now we have it," said the doctor, with the air of an oracle.
- "Why did you not tell me all this at first? It will be necessary
- for you to give me the particulars, mademoiselle."
-
- The young girl hesitated. The servants were dazed by the doctor's
- manner; but Mademoiselle Marguerite was far from sharing their awe
- and admiration. She would have given anything to have had the
- regular physician of the household there instead of him! As for
- this coarse examination in the presence of all these servants, and
- by the bedside of a man who, in spite of his apparent
- unconsciousness, was, perhaps, able to hear and to comprehend, she
- looked upon it as a breach of delicacy, even of propriety.
-
- "It is of the most urgent importance that I should be fully
- informed of these particulars," repeated the physician
- peremptorily.
-
- After such an assertion, further hesitation was out of the
- question. Mademoiselle Marguerite seemed to collect her thoughts,
- and then she sadly said: "Just as we sat down to breakfast this
- morning, a letter was handed to the count. No sooner had his eyes
- fallen upon it, than he turned as white as his napkin. He rose
- from his seat and began to walk hastily up and down the dining-
- room, uttering exclamations of anger and sorrow. I spoke to him,
- but he did not seem to hear me. However, after a few moments, he
- resumed his seat at the table, and began to eat----"
-
- "As usual?"
-
- "He ate more than usual, monsieur. Only I must tell you that it
- seemed to me he was scarcely conscious of what he was doing. Four
- or five times he left the table, and then came back again. At
- last, after quite a struggle, he seemed to come to some decision.
- He tore the letter to pieces, and threw the pieces out of the
- window that opens upon the garden."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite expressed herself with the utmost
- simplicity, and there was certainly nothing particularly
- extraordinary in her story. Still, those around her listened with
- breathless curiosity, as though they were expecting some startling
- revelation, so much does the human mind abhor that which is
- natural and incline to that which is mysterious.
-
- Without seeming to notice the effect she had produced, and
- addressing herself to the physician alone, the girl continued:
- "After the letter was destroyed, M. de Chalusse seemed himself
- again. Coffee was served, and he afterward lighted a cigar as
- usual. However, he soon let it go out. I dared not disturb him
- by any remarks; but suddenly he said to me: 'It's strange, but I
- feel very uncomfortable.' A moment passed, without either of us
- speaking, and then he added: 'I am certainly not well. Will you
- do me the favor to go to my room for me? Here is the key of my
- escritoire; open it, and on the upper shelf you will find a small
- bottle which please bring to me.' I noticed with some surprise
- that M. de Chalusse, who usually speaks very distinctly, stammered
- and hesitated considerably in making this request, but,
- unfortunately, I did not think much about it at the time. I did
- as he requested, and he poured eight or ten drops of the contents
- of the vial into a glass of water, and swallowed it."
-
- So intense was Dr. Jodon's interest that he became himself again.
- He forgot to attitudinize. "And after that?" he asked, eagerly.
-
- "After that, M. de Chalusse seemed to feel much better, and
- retired to his study as usual. I fancied that any annoyance the
- letter had caused him was forgotten; but I was wrong, for in the
- afternoon he sent a message, through Madame Leon, requesting me to
- join him in the garden. I hastened there, very much surprised,
- for the weather was extremely disagreeable. 'Dear Marguerite,' he
- said, on seeing me, 'help me to find the fragments of that letter
- which I flung from the window this morning. I would give half my
- fortune for an address which it must certainly have contained, but
- which I quite overlooked in my anger.' I helped him as he asked.
- He might have reasonably hoped to succeed, for it was raining when
- the scraps of paper were thrown out, and instead of flying through
- the air, they fell directly on to the ground. We succeeded in
- finding a large number of the scraps, but what M. de Chalusse so
- particularly wanted was not to be read on any one of them. Several
- times he spoke of his regret, and cursed his precipitation."
-
- M. Bourigeau, the concierge, and M. Casimir exchanged a
- significant smile. They had seen the count searching for the
- remnants of this letter, and had thought him little better than an
- idiot. But now everything was explained.
-
- "I was much grieved at the count's disappointment," continued
- Mademoiselle Marguerite, "but suddenly he exclaimed, joyfully:
- 'That address--why, such a person will give it to me--what a fool
- I am!'"
-
- The physician evinced such absorbing interest in this narrative
- that he forgot to retain his usual impassive attitude. "Such a
- person! Who--who was this person?" he inquired eagerly, without
- apparently realizing the impropriety of his question.
-
- But the girl felt indignant. She silenced her indiscreet
- questioner with a haughty glance, and in the driest possible tone,
- replied: "I have forgotten the name."
-
- Cut to the quick, the doctor suddenly resumed his master's pose;
- but all the same his imperturbable sang-froid was sensibly
- impaired. "Believe me, mademoiselle, that interest alone--a most
- respectful interest--"
-
- She did not even seem to hear his excuse, but resumed: "I know,
- however, monsieur, that M. de Chalusse intended applying to the
- police if he failed to obtain this address from the person in
- question. After this he appeared to be entirely at ease. At
- three o'clock he rang for his valet, and ordered dinner two hours
- earlier than usual. We sat down to table at about half-past four.
- At five he rose, kissed me gayly, and left the house on foot,
- telling me that he was confident of success, and that he did not
- expect to return before midnight." The poor child's firmness now
- gave way; her eyes filled with tears, and it was in a voice choked
- with sobs that she added, pointing to M. de Chalusse: "But at
- half-past six they brought him back as you see him now----"
-
- An interval of silence ensued, so deep that one could hear the
- faint breathing of the unconscious man still lying motionless on
- his bed. However, the particulars of the attack were yet to be
- learned; and it was M. Casimir whom the physician next addressed.
- "What did the driver who brought your master home say to you?"
-
- "Oh! almost nothing, sir; not ten words."
-
- "You must find this man and bring him to me."
-
- Two servants rushed out in search of him. He could not be far
- away, for his vehicle was still standing in the courtyard. They
- found him in a wine-shop near by. Some of the inquisitive
- spectators who had been disappointed in their curiosity by
- Casimir's thoughtfulness had treated him to some liquor, and in
- exchange he had told them all he knew about the affair. He had
- quite recovered from his fright, and was cheerful, even gay.
-
- "Come make haste, you are wanted," said the servants.
-
- He emptied his glass and followed them with very bad grace,
- muttering and swearing between his set teeth. The doctor, strange
- to say, was considerate enough to go out into the hall to question
- him; but no information of value was gained by the man's answers.
- He declared that the gentleman had hired him at twelve o'clock,
- hoping by this means to extort pay for five hours' driving, which,
- joined to the liberal gratuity he could not fail to obtain, would
- remunerate him handsomely for his day's work. Living is dear, it
- should be remembered, and a fellow makes as much as he can.
-
- When the cabby had gone off, still growling, although a couple of
- louis had been placed in his hand, the doctor returned to his
- patient. He involuntarily assumed his accustomed attitude, with
- crossed arms, a gloomy expression of countenance, and his forehead
- furrowed as if with thought and anxiety. But this time he was not
- acting a part. In spite, or rather by reason of, the full
- explanation that had been given him, he found something suspicious
- and mysterious in the whole affair. A thousand vague and
- undefinable suspicions crossed his mind. Was he in presence of a
- crime? Certainly, evidently not. But what was the cause then of
- the mystery and reticence he detected? Was he upon the track of
- some lamentable family secret--one of those terrible scandals,
- concealed for a long time, but which at last burst forth with
- startling effect? The prospect of being mixed up in such an
- affair caused him infinite pleasure. It would bring him into
- notice; he would be mentioned in the papers; and his increased
- practice would fill his hands with gold.
-
- But what could he do to ingratiate himself with these people,
- impose himself upon them if needs be? He reflected for some time,
- and finally what he thought an excellent plan occurred to him. He
- approached Mademoiselle Marguerite, who was weeping in an arm-
- chair, and touched her gently on the shoulder. She sprang to her
- feet at once. "One more question, mademoiselle," said he,
- imparting as much solemnity to his tone as he could. "Do you know
- what liquid it was that M. de Chalusse took this morning?"
-
- "Alas! no, monsieur."
-
- "It is very important that I should know. The accuracy of my
- diagnosis is dependent upon it. What has become of the vial?"
-
- "I think M. de Chalusse replaced it in his escritoire."
-
- The physician pointed to an article of furniture to the left of
- the fireplace: "There?" he asked.
-
- "Yes, monsieur."
-
- He deliberated, but at last conquering his hesitation, he said:
- "Could we not obtain this vial?"
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite blushed. "I haven't the key," she
- faltered, in evident embarrassment.
-
- M. Casimir approached: "It must be in the count's pocket, and if
- mademoiselle will allow me----"
-
- But she stepped back with outstretched arms as if to protect the
- escritoire. "No," she exclaimed, "no--the escritoire shall not be
- touched. I will not permit it----"
-
- "But, mademoiselle," insisted the doctor, "your father----"
-
- "The Count de Chalusse is not my father!"
-
- Dr. Jodon was greatly disconcerted by Mademoiselle Marguerite's
- vehemence. "Ah!" said he, in three different tones, "ah! ah!"
-
- In less than a second, a thousand strange and contradictory
- suppositions darted through his brain. Who, then, could this girl
- be, if she were not Mademoiselle de Chalusse? What right had she
- in that house? How was it that she reigned as a sovereign there?
- Above all, why this angry outburst for no other apparent cause
- than a very natural and exceedingly insignificant request on his
- part?
-
- However, she had regained her self-possession, and it was easy to
- see by her manner that she was seeking some means of escape from
- threatened danger. At last she found it. "Casimir," she said,
- authoritatively, "search M. de Chalusse's pocket for the key of
- his escritoire."
-
- Astonished by what he regarded as a new caprice, the valet obeyed.
- He gathered up the garments strewn over the floor, and eventually
- drew a key from one of the waistcoat pockets. Mademoiselle
- Marguerite took it from him, and then in a determined tone,
- exclaimed: "A hammer."
-
- It was brought; whereupon, to the profound amazement of the
- physician, she knelt down beside the fireplace, laid the key upon
- one of the andirons, and with a heavy blow of the hammer, broke it
- into fragments. "Now," said she, quietly, "my mind will be at
- rest. I am certain," she added, turning toward the servants,
- "that M. de Chalusse would approve what I have done. When he
- recovers, he will have another key made."
-
- The explanation was superfluous. All the servants understood the
- motive that had influenced her, and were saying to themselves,
- "Mademoiselle is right. It would not do to touch the escritoire
- of a dying man. Who knows but what there are millions in it? If
- anything were missed, why any of us might be accused. But if the
- key is destroyed, it will be impossible to suspect any one."
-
- However, the physician's conjectures were of an entirely different
- nature. "What can there be in that escritoire which she desires
- to conceal?" he thought.
-
- But there was no excuse for prolonging his visit. Once more he
- examined the sick man, whose condition remained unchanged; and
- then, after explaining what was to be done in his absence, he
- declared that he must leave at once, as he had a number of
- important visits to make; he added, however, that he would return
- about midnight.
-
- "Madame Leon and I will watch over M. de Chalusse," replied
- Mademoiselle Marguerite; "that is sufficient assurance, monsieur,
- that your orders will be obeyed to the letter. Only--you will not
- take offence, I trust, if I ask the count's regular physician to
- meet you in consultation."
-
- Such a proposal was anything but pleasing to M. Jodon, who had met
- with the same misfortune in this aristocratic neighborhood several
- times before. When an accident happened, he was summoned because
- he chanced to be close at hand, but just as he was flattering
- himself that he had gained a desirable patient, he found himself
- in presence of some celebrated physician, who had come from a
- distance in his carriage. Accustomed to such disappointments, he
- knew how to conceal his dissatisfaction.
-
- "Were I in your place, mademoiselle, I should do precisely what
- you suggest," he answered, "and should you think it unnecessary
- for me to call, I----"
-
- "Oh! monsieur, on the contrary, I shall certainly expect you."
-
- "In that case, very well." Thereupon he bowed and left the room.
-
- But Mademoiselle Marguerite followed him on to the landing. "You
- know, monsieur," she said, speaking rapidly in an undertone, "that
- I am not M. de Chalusse's daughter. You may, therefore, tell me
- the truth. Is his condition hopeless?"
-
- "Alarming--yes; hopeless--no."
-
- "But, monsieur, this terrible unconsciousness----"
-
- "It usually follows such an attack as he has been the victim of.
- Still we may hope that the paralysis will gradually disappear, and
- the power of motion return after a time."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was listening, pale, agitated, and
- embarrassed. It was evident that she had a question on her lips
- which she scarcely dared to ask. At last, however, summoning all
- her courage, she exclaimed: "And if M. de Chalusse should not
- recover, will he die without regaining consciousness--without
- being able to speak?"
-
- "I am unable to say, mademoiselle--the count's malady is one of
- those which set at naught all the hypotheses of science."
-
- She thanked him sadly, sent a servant to summon Madame Leon, and
- returned to the count's room.
-
- As for the doctor, he said to himself as he went downstairs, "What
- a strange girl! Is she afraid that the count will regain
- consciousness? or, on the contrary, does she wish him to speak?
- Is there any question of a will under all this? What else can it
- be? What is at stake?" His preoccupation was so intense that he
- almost forgot where he was going, and he paused on every step. It
- was not until the fresh air of the courtyard blew upon his face,
- reminding him of the realities of life, that the charlatanesque
- element in his nature regained the ascendency. "My friend," he
- said, addressing M. Casimir, who was lighting him out, "you must
- at once have some straw spread over the street so as to deaden the
- sound of the vehicles. And to-morrow, you must inform the
- commissary of police."
-
- Ten minutes later a thick bed of straw had been strewed across the
- thoroughfare, and the drivers of passing vehicles involuntarily
- slackened their speed, for every one in Paris knows what this
- signifies. M. Casimir personally superintended the work which was
- intrusted to the grooms, and he was about to return indoors again,
- when a young man, who had been walking up and down in front of the
- mansion for more than an hour, hastily approached him. He was a
- beardless fellow with a strangely wrinkled face, as leaden-tinted
- as that of a confirmed absinthe-drinker. His general expression
- was shrewd, and at the same time impudent, and surprising audacity
- gleamed in his eyes. "What do you want?" asked M. Casimir.
-
- The young fellow bowed humbly, and replied, "Ah, don't you
- recognize me, monsieur? I'm Toto--excuse me--Victor Chupin,
- employed by M. Isidore Fortunat."
-
- "Oh, yes. I recollect."
-
- "I came, in obedience to my employer's orders, to inquire if you
- had obtained the information you promised him; but seeing that
- something had happened at your house, I didn't dare go in, but
- decided to watch for you----"
-
- "And you did quite right, my lad. I have no information to give
- you--ah, yes! stop! The Marquis de Valorsay was closeted with the
- count for two hours yesterday. But what good will that do? The
- count has been taken suddenly ill, and he will scarcely live
- through the night."
-
- Victor Chupin was thunderstruck. "Impossible!" he cried. "Is it
- for him that the straw has been strewed in the street?"
-
- "It's for him."
-
- "What a lucky fellow! No one would go to such expense for me! But
- I have an idea that my guv'nor will hardly laugh when I tell him
- this. Still, thank you all the same, m'sieur, and au revoir." He
- was darting off when a sudden thought detained him. "Excuse me,"
- said he, with conjuror like volubility; "I was so horrified that I
- forgot business. Tell me, m'sieur, if the count dies, you'll take
- charge of the funeral arrangements, won't you? Very well; a word
- of advice then. Don't go to the regular undertakers, but come to
- me: here's my address"--proffering a card--"I will treat with the
- undertakers for you, and take charge of everything. It will be
- much better and far cheaper for you, on account of certain
- arrangements I've made with these parties. Everything, to the
- very last plume, is warranted to give perfect satisfaction. Each
- item will be specified in the bill, and can be verified during the
- ceremony, no payment exacted until after delivery. Well, is it
- understood?"
-
- The valet shrugged his shoulders. "Nonsense!" said he,
- carelessly; "what is all that to me?"
-
- "Ah! I forgot to mention that there would be a commission of two
- hundred francs to divide between us."
-
- "That's consideration. Give me your card, and rely on me. My
- compliments to M. Fortunat, please." And so saying, he re-entered
- the house.
-
- Victor Chupin drew a huge silver watch from his pocket and
- consulted it. "Five minutes to eight," he growled, "and the
- guv'nor expects me at eight precisely. I shall have to stretch
- out my legs."
-
-
-
- 2.
-
-
- M. Isidore Fortunat resided at No. 27 Place de la Bourse, on the
- third floor. He had a handsome suite of apartments: a drawing-
- room, a dining-room, a bed-room, a large outer office where his
- clerks worked, and a private one, which was the sanctuary of his
- thoughts and meditations. The whole cost him only six thousand
- francs a year, a mere trifle as rents go nowadays. His lease
- entitled him, moreover, to the use of a room ten feet square, up
- under the eaves, where he lodged his servant, Madame Dodelin, a
- woman of forty-six or thereabouts, who had met with reverses of
- fortune, and who now took such good charge of his establishment,
- that his table--for he ate at home--was truly fit for a sybarite.
-
- Having been established here for five years or more, M. Fortunat
- was very well known in the neighborhood, and, as he paid his rent
- promptly, and met all his obligations without demur, he was
- generally respected. Besides, people knew very well from what
- source M. Fortunat derived his income. He gave his attention to
- contested claims, liquidations, the recovery of legacies, and so
- on, as was shown by the inscription in large letters which figured
- on the elegant brass plate adorning his door. He must have had a
- prosperous business, for he employed six collectors in addition to
- the clerks who wrote all day long in his office; and his clients
- were so numerous that the concierge was often heard to complain of
- the way they ran up and down the stairs, declaring that it was
- worse than a procession.
-
- To be just, we must add that M. Fortunat's appearance, manners and
- conduct were of a nature to quiet all suspicions. He was some
- thirty-eight years of age, extremely methodical in his habits,
- gentle and refined in his manner, intelligent, very good-looking,
- and always dressed in perfect taste. He was accused of being, in
- business matters, as cold, as polished, and as hard as one of the
- marble slabs of the Morgue; but then, no one was obliged to employ
- him unless they chose to do so. This much is certain: he did not
- frequent cafes or places of amusement. If he went out at all
- after dinner, it was only to pass the evening at the house of some
- rich client in the neighborhood. He detested the smell of
- tobacco, and was inclined to be devout--never failing to attend
- eight o'clock mass on Sunday mornings. His housekeeper suspected
- him of matrimonial designs, and perhaps she was right.
-
- On the evening that the Count de Chalusse was struck with apoplexy
- M. Isidore Fortunat had been dining alone and was sipping a cup of
- tea when the door-bell rang, announcing the arrival of a visitor.
- Madame Dodelin hastened to open the door, and in walked Victor
- Chupin, breathless from his hurried walk. It had not taken him
- twenty-five minutes to cover the distance which separates the Rue
- de Courcelles from the Place de la Bourse.
-
- "You are late, Victor," said M. Fortunat, quietly.
-
- "That's true, monsieur, but it isn't my fault. Everything was in
- confusion down there, and I was obliged to wait "
-
- "How is that? Why?"
-
- "The Count de Chalusse was stricken with apoplexy this evening,
- and he is probably dead by this time."
-
- M. Fortunat sprang from his chair with a livid face and trembling
- lips. "Stricken with apoplexy!" he exclaimed in a husky voice.
- "I am ruined!"
-
- Then, fearing Madame Dodelin's curiosity, he seized the lamp and
- rushed into his office, crying to Chupin: "Follow me."
-
- Chupin obeyed without a word, for he was a shrewd fellow, and knew
- how to make the best of a trying situation. He was not usually
- allowed to enter this private room, the floor of which was covered
- with a magnificent carpet; and so, after carefully closing the
- door, he remained standing, hat in hand, and looking somewhat
- intimidated. But M. Fortunat seemed to have forgotten his
- presence. After depositing the lamp on the mantel-shelf, he
- walked several times round and round the room like a hunted beast
- seeking for some means of egress.
-
- "If the count is dead," he muttered, "the Marquis de Valorsay is
- lost! Farewell to the millions!"
-
- The blow was so cruel, and so entirely unexpected, that he could
- not, would not believe in its reality. He walked straight to
- Chupin, and caught him by the collar, as if the young fellow had
- been the cause of this misfortune. "It isn't possible," said he;
- "the count CANNOT be dead. You are deceiving me, or they deceived
- you. You must have misunderstood--you only wished to give some
- excuse for your delay perhaps. Speak, say something!"
-
- As a rule, Chupin was not easily impressed, but he felt almost
- frightened by his employer's agitation. "I only repeated what M.
- Casimir told me, monsieur," was his reply.
-
- He then wished to furnish some particulars, but M. Fortunat had
- already resumed his furious tramp to and fro, giving vent to his
- wrath and despair in incoherent exclamations. "Forty thousand
- francs lost!" he exclaimed. "Forty thousand francs, counted out
- there on my desk! I see them yet, counted and placed in the hand
- of the Marquis de Valorsay in exchange for his signature. My
- savings for a number of years, and I have only a worthless scrap
- of paper to show for them. That cursed marquis! And he was to
- come here this evening, and I was to give him ten thousand francs
- more. They are lying there in that drawer. Let him come, the
- wretch, let him come!"
-
- Anger had positively brought foam to M. Fortunat's lips, and any
- one seeing him then would subsequently have had but little
- confidence in his customary good-natured air and unctuous
- politeness. "And yet the marquis is as much to be pitied as I
- am," he continued. "He loses as much, even more! And such a sure
- thing it seemed, too! What speculation can a fellow engage in
- after this? And a man must put his money somewhere; he can't bury
- it in the ground!"
-
- Chupin listened with an air of profound commiseration; but it was
- only assumed. He was inwardly jubilant, for his interest in the
- affair was in direct opposition to that of his employer. Indeed,
- if M. Fortunat lost forty thousand francs by the Count de
- Chalusse's death, Chupin expected to make a hundred francs
- commission on the funeral.
-
- "Still, he may have made a will!" pursued M. Fortunat. "But no,
- I'm sure he hasn't. A poor devil who has only a few sous to leave
- behind him always takes this precaution. He thinks he may be run
- over by an omnibus and suddenly killed, and he always writes and
- signs his last wishes. But millionaires don't think of such
- things; they believe themselves immortal!" He paused to reflect
- for a moment, for power of reflection had returned to him. His
- excitement had quickly spent itself by reason of its very
- violence. "This much is certain," he resumed, slowly, and in a
- more composed voice, "whether the count has made a will or not,
- Valorsay will lose the millions he expected from Chalusse. If
- there is no will, Mademoiselle Marguerite won't have a sou, and
- then, good evening! If there is one, this devil of a girl,
- suddenly becoming her own mistress, and wealthy into the bargain,
- will send Monsieur de Valorsay about his business, especially if
- she loves another, as he himself admits--and in that case, again
- good evening!"
-
- M. Fortunat drew out his handkerchief, and, pausing in front of
- the looking-glass, wiped the perspiration from his brow, and
- arranged his disordered hair. He was one of those men who may be
- stunned, but never crushed, by a catastrophe. "In conclusion," he
- muttered, "I must enter my forty thousand francs as an item in the
- profit and loss account. It only remains to be seen if it would
- not be possible to regain them in the same affair." He was again
- master of himself, and never had his mind been more clear. He
- seated himself at his desk, leant his elbows upon it, rested his
- head on his hands, and remained for some time perfectly
- motionless; but there was triumph in his gesture when he at last
- looked up again.
-
- "I am safe," he muttered, so low that Chupin could not hear him.
- "What a fool I was! If there is no will a fourth of the millions
- shall be mine! Ah, when a man knows his ground, he never need lose
- the battle! But I must act quickly," he added, "very quickly." And
- so speaking, he rose and glanced at the clock. "Nine o'clock,"
- said he. "I must open the campaign this very evening."
-
- Motionless in his dark corner, Chupin still retained his
- commiserating attitude; but he was so oppressed with curiosity
- that he could scarcely breathe. He opened his eyes and ears to
- the utmost, and watched his employer's slightest movements with
- intense interest.
-
- Prompt to act when he had once decided upon his course, M.
- Fortunat now drew from his desk a large portfolio, crammed full of
- letters, receipts, bills, deeds of property, and old parchments.
- "I can certainly discover the necessary pretext here," he
- murmured, rummaging through the mass of papers. But he did not at
- once find what he sought, and he was growing impatient, as could
- be seen by his feverish haste, when all at once he paused with a
- sigh of relief. "At last!"
-
- He held in his hand a soiled and crumpled note of hand, affixed by
- a pin to a huissier's protest, thus proving conclusively that it
- had been dishonored. M. Fortunat waved these strips of paper
- triumphantly, and with a satisfied air exclaimed: "It is here
- that I must strike; it is here--if Casimir hasn't deceived me--
- that I shall find the indispensable information I need."
-
- He was in such haste that he did not wait to put his portfolio in
- order. He threw it with the papers it had contained into the
- drawer of his desk again, and, approaching Chupin, he asked, "It
- was you, was it not, Victor, who obtained that information
- respecting the solvency of the Vantrassons, husband and wife, who
- let out furnished rooms?"
-
- "Yes, monsieur, and I gave you the answer: nothing to hope for----"
-
- "I know; but that doesn't matter. Do you remember their address?"
-
- "Perfectly. They are now living on the Asnieres Road, beyond the
- fortifications, on the right hand side."
-
- "What is the number?"
-
- Chupin hesitated, reflected for a moment, and then began to
- scratch his head furiously, as he was in the habit of doing
- whenever his memory failed him and he wished to recall it to duty.
- "I'm not sure whether the number is eighteen or forty-six," he
- said, at last; "that is----"
-
- "Never mind," interrupted M. Fortunat. "If I sent you to the
- house could you find it?"
-
- "Oh--yes, m'sieur--at once- with my eyes shut. I can see the
- place perfectly--a rickety old barrack. There is a tract of
- unoccupied land on one side, and a kitchen-garden in the rear."
-
- "Very well; you shall accompany me there."
-
- Chupin seemed astonished by this strange proposal. "What,
- m'sieur," said he, "do you think of going there at this time of
- night?"
-
- "Why not? Shall we find the establishment closed?"
-
- "No; certainly not. Vantrasson doesn't merely keep furnished
- rooms; he's a grocer, and sells liquor too. His place is open
- until eleven o'clock at least. But if you are going there to
- present a bill, it's perhaps a little late. If I were in your
- place, m'sieur, I should wait till to-morrow. It's raining, and
- the streets are deserted. It's an out-of-the-way place too; and
- in such cases, a man has been known to settle his account with
- whatever came handiest--with a cudgel, or a bullet, for instance."
-
- "Are you afraid?"
-
- This question seemed so utterly absurd to Chupin that he was not
- in the least offended by it; his only answer was a disdainful
- shrug of the shoulders.
-
- "Then we will go," remarked M. Fortunat. "While I'm getting
- ready, go and hire a cab, and see that you get a good horse."
-
- Chupin was off in an instant, tearing down the staircase like a
- tempest. There was a cab-stand only a few steps from the house,
- but he preferred to run to the jobmaster's stables in the Rue
- Feydeau.
-
- "Cab, sir!" shouted several men, as they saw him approaching.
-
- He made no reply, but began to examine the horses with the air of
- a connoisseur, until at last he found an animal that suited him.
- Thereupon he beckoned to the driver, and going to the little
- office where a woman sat reading: "My five sous, if you please,"
- he said, authoritatively.
-
- The woman looked at him. Most jobmasters are in the habit of
- giving five sous to any servant who comes in search of a cab for
- his master; and this was the custom here. But the keeper of the
- office, who felt sure that Chupin was not a servant, hesitated;
- and this made the young fellow angry. "Make haste," he cried,
- imperiously. "If you don't, I shall run to the nearest stand."
-
- The woman at once threw him five sous, which he pocketed with a
- satisfied grin. They were his--rightfully his--since he had taken
- the trouble to gain them. He then hastily returned to the office
- to inform his employer that the cab was waiting at the door, and
- found himself face to face with a sight which made him open his
- eyes to their widest extent.
-
- M. Fortunat had profited by his clerk's absence, not to disguise
- himself--that would be saying too much--but to make some changes
- in his appearance. He had arrayed himself in a long overcoat,
- shiny with grease and wear, and falling below his knees; in place
- of his elegant satin cravat he had knotted a gaudy silk
- neckerchief about his throat; his boots were worn, and out of
- shape; and his hat would have been treated with contempt even by a
- dealer in old clothes. Of the prosperous Fortunat, so favorably
- known round about the Place de la Bourse, naught remained save his
- face and his hands. Another Fortunat had taken his place, more
- than needy in aspect--wretched, famished, gaunt with hunger, ready
- for any desperate deed. And, yet, he seemed at ease in this garb;
- it yielded to his every movement, as if he had worn it for a long
- time. The butterfly had become a chrysalis again. Chupin's
- admiring smile must have repaid him for his trouble. Since the
- young clerk evinced approval, M. Fortunat felt sure that
- Vantrasson would take him for what he wished to appear--a poor
- devil of an agent, who was acting on some other person's behalf.
- "Let us start at once," said he.
-
- But just as he was leaving the ante-room, he remembered an order
- of great importance which he wished to give. He called Madame
- Dodelin, and without paying the slightest heed to her astonishment
- at seeing him thus attired: "If the Marquis de Valorsay comes, in
- my absence," said he--" and he WILL come--ask him to wait for me.
- I shall return before midnight. Don't take him into my office--he
- can wait in the drawing-room."
-
- This last order was certainly unnecessary, since M. Fortunat had
- closed and double-locked his office door and placed the key
- carefully in his own pocket. But perhaps he had forgotten this
- circumstance. There were now no traces of his recent anger and
- disappointment. He was in excellent humor; and you might have
- supposed that he was starting on an enterprise from which he
- expected to derive both pleasure and profit.
-
- Chupin was climbing to a place on the box beside the driver when
- his employer bade him take a seat inside the vehicle. They were
- not long in reaching their destination, for the horse was really a
- good one, and the driver had been stimulated by the promise of a
- magnificent gratuity. In fact, M. Fortunat and his companion
- reached the Asnieres Road in less than forty minutes.
-
- In obedience to the orders he had received before starting, the
- cabman drew up on the right hand side of the road, at about a
- hundred paces from the city gate, beyond the fortifications.
- "Well, sir, here you are! Are you satisfied?" he inquired, as he
- opened the door.
-
- "Perfectly satisfied," replied M. Fortunat. "Here is your
- promised gratuity. Now, you have only to wait for us. Don't stir
- from this place. Do you understand?"
-
- But the driver shook his head. "Excuse me," he said, "but if it's
- all the same to you, I will station myself over there near the
- gate. Here, you see, I should be afraid to go to sleep, while
- over there----"
-
- "Very well; suit yourself," M. Fortunat replied.
-
- This precaution on the driver's part convinced him that Chupin had
- not exaggerated the evil reputation of this quarter of the
- Parisian suburbs. And, indeed, there was little of a reassuring
- character in the aspect of this broad road, quite deserted at this
- hour, and shrouded in the darkness of a tempestuous night. The
- rain had ceased falling, but the wind blew with increased
- violence, twisting the branches off the trees, tearing slates from
- the roofs, and shaking the street-lamps so furiously as to
- extinguish the gas. They could not see a step before them; the
- mud was ankle-deep, and not a person, not a solitary soul was
- visible.
-
- "Are we almost there?" M. Fortunat asked every ten paces.
-
- "Almost there, m'sieur."
-
- Chupin said this; but to tell the truth, he knew nothing about it.
- He tried to discover where he was, but did not succeed. Houses
- were becoming scanty, and vacant plots of building ground more
- numerous; it was only with the greatest difficulty that one could
- occasionally discern a light. At last, however, after a quarter
- of an hour's hard struggling, Chupin uttered a joyful cry. "Here
- we are, m'sieur--look!" said he.
-
- A large building, five stories high, sinister of aspect, and
- standing quite alone, could just be distinguished in the darkness.
- It was already falling to pieces, and yet it was not entirely
- completed. Plainly enough, the speculator who had undertaken the
- enterprise had not been rich enough to complete it. On seeing the
- many closely pierced windows of the facade, a passer-by could not
- fail to divine for what purpose the building had been erected; and
- in order that no one should remain in ignorance of it, this
- inscription: "Furnished Rooms," figured in letters three feet
- high, between the third and fourth floors. The inside
- arrangements could be easily divined: innumerable rooms, all small
- and inconvenient, and let out at exorbitant rentals.
-
- However, Victor Chupin's memory had misled him. This establishment
- was not on the right, but on the left-hand side of the road, a
- perfect mire through which M. Fortunat and his companion were
- obliged to cross. Their eyes having become accustomed to the
- darkness, they could discern sundry details as they approached the
- building. The ground floor comprised two shops, one of which was
- closed, but the other was still open, and a faint light gleamed
- through the soiled red curtains. Over the frontage appeared the
- shop-keeper's name, Vantrasson, while on either side, in smaller
- letters, were the words: "Groceries and Provisions--Foreign and
- French Wines." Everything about this den denoted abject poverty
- and low debauchery.
-
- M. Fortunat certainly did not recoil, but before entering the shop
- he was not sorry to have an opportunity to reconnoitre. He
- approached cautiously, and peered through the window at a place
- where a rent in the curtain allowed him some view of the interior.
- Behind the counter a woman who looked some fifty years of age was
- seated, mending a soiled dress by the light of a smoking lamp.
- She was short and very stout. She seemed literally weighed down,
- and puffed out by an unwholesome and unnatural mass of superfluous
- flesh; and she was as white as if her veins had been filled with
- water, instead of blood. Her hanging cheeks, her receding
- forehead, and her thin lips, imparted an alarming expression of
- wickedness and cunning to her countenance. At the farther end of
- the store Fortunat could vaguely discern the figure of a man
- seated on a stool. He seemed to be asleep, for his crossed arms
- rested on a table, with his head leaning on them.
-
- "Good luck!" whispered Chupin in his employer's ear; "there is not
- a customer in the place. Vantrasson and his wife are alone." This
- circumstance was by no means displeasing to M. Fortunat, as could
- be seen by his expression of face. "So, m'sieur," continued
- Chupin, "you need have no fears. I'll remain here and watch,
- while you go in."
-
- M. Fortunat did so. On hearing the door open and shut, the woman
- laid down her work. "What can I do for monsieur?" she asked, in a
- wheedling voice.
-
- M. Fortunat did not reply at once; but he drew the note with which
- he had provided himself from his pocket, and displayed it. "I am
- a huissier's clerk," he then exclaimed; "and I called in reference
- to this little matter--a note of hand for five hundred and eighty-
- three francs, value received in goods, signed Vantrasson, and made
- payable to the order of a person named Barutin."
-
- "An execution!" said the woman, whose voice suddenly soured.
- "Vantrasson, wake up, and come and see about this."
-
- This summons was unnecessary. On hearing the words "note of
- hand," the man had lifted his head; and at the name of Barutin, he
- rose and approached with a heavy, uncertain step, as if he had not
- yet slept off his intoxication. He was younger than his wife,
- tall, with a well-proportioned and athletic form. His features
- were regular, but the abuse of alcohol and all sorts of excesses
- had greatly marred them, and their present expression was one of
- ferocious brutishness. "What's that you are talking about?" he
- asked in a harsh, grating voice. "Is it to mock people that you
- come and ask for money on the 15th of October--rent day? Where
- have you seen any money left after the landlord has made his
- round? Besides, what is this bill? Give it me to look at."
-
- M. Fortunat was not guilty of such folly; he did not intrust the
- paper to Vantrasson's hand, but held it a little distance from
- him, and then read it aloud.
-
- When he had finished: "That note fell due eighteen months ago,"
- declared Vantrasson. "It is worth nothing now "
-
- "You are mistaken--a note of this kind is of value any time within
- five years after the day it goes to protest."
-
- "Possibly; but as Barutin has failed, and gone no one knows where,
- I am released----"
-
- "Another mistake on your part. You owe these five hundred and
- eighty-three francs to the person who bought this note at
- Barutin's sale, and who has given my employer orders to prosecute----"
-
- The blood had risen to Vantrasson's face. "And what of that? Do
- you suppose I've never been sued for debts before? Even the king
- can't take anything from a person who possesses nothing; and I own
- nothing. My furniture is all pawned or mortgaged, and my stock is
- not worth a hundred francs. When your employer finds it useless
- to waste money in worrying me, he'll let me alone. You can't
- injure a man like me."
-
- "Do you really think so?"
-
- "I'm sure of it."
-
- "Unfortunately you are again mistaken, for although the holder of
- the note doesn't care so very much about obtaining his dues, he'll
- spend his own money like water to make trouble for you." And
- thereupon M. Fortunat began to draw a vivid and frightful picture
- of a poor debtor pursued by a rich creditor who harassed him, and
- tortured him, and hounded him everywhere, until not even a change
- of clothing was left him.
-
- Vantrasson rolled his eyes and brandished his formidable fist in
- the most defiant manner; but his wife was evidently much alarmed.
- At last she could bear it no longer, and rising hastily she led
- her husband to the rear of the shop, saying: "Come, I must speak
- with you."
-
- He followed her, and they remained for some little time conversing
- together in a low tone, but with excited gestures. When they
- returned, the woman opened the conversation. "Alas! sir," she
- said to M. Fortunat, "we have no money just now; business is so
- very bad, and if you prosecute us, we are lost. What can be done?
- You look like an honest man; give us your advice."
-
- M. Fortunat did not reply at once; he was apparently absorbed in
- thought, but suddenly he exclaimed: "One owes a duty to
- unfortunate folks, and I'm going to tell you the exact truth. My
- employer, who isn't a bad man at heart, hasn't the slightest
- desire for revenge. He said to me: 'Go and see these Vantrassons,
- and if they seem to be worthy people, propose a compromise. If
- they choose to accept it, I shall be quite satisfied.'"
-
- "And what is this compromise?"
-
- "It is this: you must write an acknowledgment of the debt on a
- sheet of stamped paper, together with a promise to pay a little on
- account each month. In exchange I will give you this note of
- hand."
-
- The husband and wife exchanged glances, and it was the woman who
- said: "We accept."
-
- But to carry out this arrangement it was necessary to have a sheet
- of stamped paper, and the spurious clerk had neglected to provide
- himself with some. This circumstance seemed to annoy him greatly,
- and you might almost have sworn that he regretted the concession
- he had promised. Did he think of going? Madame Vantrasson feared
- so, and turning eagerly to her husband, she exclaimed: "Run to
- the tobacco shop in the Rue de Levis; you will find some paper
- there!"
-
- He started off at once, and M. Fortunat breathed freely again. He
- had certainly retained his composure admirably during the
- interview, but more than once he had fancied that Vantrasson was
- about to spring on him, crush him with his brawny hands, tear the
- note from him, burn it, and then throw him, Fortunat, out into the
- street, helpless and nearly dead. But now that danger had passed
- and Madame Vantrasson, fearing he might tire of waiting, was
- prodigal in her attentions. She brought him the only unbroken
- chair in the establishment, and insisted that he should partake of
- some refreshment--a glass of wine at the very least. While
- rummaging among the bottles, she alternately thanked him and
- complained, declaring she had a right to repine, since she had
- known better days--but fate had been against her ever since her
- marriage, though she had little thought she would end her days in
- such misery, after having been so happy in the Count de Chalusse's
- household many years before.
-
- To all appearance, M. Fortunat listened with the mere superficial
- interest which ordinary politeness requires one to show, but in
- reality his heart was filled with intense delight. Coming here
- without any clearly-defined plan, circumstances had served him a
- thousand times better than he could reasonably have hoped. He had
- preserved his power over the Vantrassons, had won their
- confidence, had succeeded in obtaining a tete-a-tete with the
- wife, and to crown all, this woman alluded, of her own accord, to
- the very subject upon which he was longing to question her.
-
- "Ah! if I were only back in the Count's household again," she
- exclaimed. "Six hundred francs a year, and gifts worth double
- that amount. Those were good times for me. But you know how it
- is--one is never content with one's lot, and then the heart is
- weak----"
-
- She had not succeeded in finding the sweet wine which she proposed
- to her guest; so in its place she substituted a mixture of ratafia
- and brandy in two large glasses which she placed upon the counter.
- "One evening, to my sorrow," she resumed, "I met Vantrasson at a
- ball. It was the 13th day of the month. I might have known no
- good would come of it. Ah, you should have seen him at that time,
- in full uniform. He belonged to the Paris Guards then. All the
- women were crazy about soldiers, and my head was turned, too----"
- Her tone, her gestures, and the compression of her thin lips,
- revealed the bitterness of her disappointment and her unavailing
- regret. "Ah, these handsome men!" she continued; "don't talk to
- me about them! This one had heard of my savings. I had nineteen
- thousand francs, so he begged me to marry him, and I was fool
- enough to consent. Yes, fool--for I was forty, and he was only
- thirty. I might have known it was my money that he wanted, and
- not me. However, I gave up my situation, and even purchased a
- substitute for him, in order that I might have him all to myself."
-
- She had gradually warmed with her theme, as she described her
- confidence and blind credulity, and then, with a tragic gesture,
- as if she desired to drive away these cruel memories, she suddenly
- seized her glass and emptied it at a draught.
-
- Chupin, who was still at his post outside, experienced a thrill of
- envy, and involuntarily licked his lips. "A mixed ratafia," he
- said, longingly. "I shouldn't object to one myself."
-
- However, this choice compound seemed to inspire Madame Vantrasson
- with renewed energy, for, with still greater earnestness, she
- resumed: "At first, all went well. We employed my savings in
- purchasing the Hotel des Espagnes, in the Rue Notre Dame des
- Victoires, and business prospered; there was never a vacant room.
- But any person who has drank, sir, will drink again. Vantrasson
- kept sober for a few months, but gradually he fell into his old
- habits. He was in such a condition most of the time that he was
- scarcely able to ask for food. And if that had been all! But,
- unfortunately, he was too handsome a man to be a good husband.
- One night he didn't come home, and the next day, when I ventured
- to reproach him--very gently, I assure you--he answered me with an
- oath and a blow. All our happiness was over! Monsieur declared
- that he was master, and would do as he liked. He drank and
- carried away all the wine from the cellar--he took all the money--
- he remained away for weeks together; and if I complained--more
- blows!"
-
- Her voice trembled, and a tear gathered in her eye; but, wiping it
- away with the back of her hand, she resumed: "Vantrasson was
- always drunk, and I spent my time in crying my very eyes out.
- Business became very bad, and soon everybody left the house. We
- were obliged to sell it. We did so, and bought a small cafe. But
- by the end of the year we lost that. Fortunately, I still had a
- little money left, and so I bought a stock of groceries in my own
- name; but in less than six months the stock was eaten up, and we
- were cast into the street. What was to be done? Vantrasson drank
- worse than ever; he demanded money when he knew that I had none to
- give him, and he treated me even more cruelly than before. I lost
- courage--and yet one must live! Oh, you wouldn't believe it if I
- told you how we have lived for the past four years." She did not
- tell him, but contented herself with adding, "When you begin to go
- down hill, there is no such thing as stopping; you roll lower and
- lower, until you reach the bottom, as we have done. Here we live,
- no one knows how; we have to pay our rent each week, and if we are
- driven from this place, I see no refuge but the river."
-
- "If I had been in your position, I should have left my husband,"
- M. Fortunat ventured to remark.
-
- "Yes--it would have been better, no doubt. People advised me to
- do so, and I tried. Three or four times I went away, and yet I
- always returned--it was stronger than myself. Besides, I'm his
- wife; I've paid dearly for him; he's mine--I won't yield him to
- any one else. He beats me, no doubt; I despise him, I hate him,
- and yet I----" She poured out part of a glass of brandy, and
- swallowed it; then, with a gesture of rage, she added: "I can't
- give him up! It's fate! As it is now, it will be until the end,
- until he starves, or I----"
-
- M. Fortunat's countenance wore an expression of profound
- commiseration. A looker-on would have supposed him interested and
- sympathetic to the last degree; but in reality, he was furious.
- Time was passing, and the conversation was wandering farther and
- farther from the object of his visit. "I am surprised, madame,"
- said he, "that you never applied to your former employer, the
- Count de Chalusse."
-
- "Alas! I did apply to him for assistance several times----"
-
- "With what result?"
-
- "The first time I went to him he received me; I told him my
- troubles, and he gave me bank-notes to the amount of five thousand
- francs."
-
- M. Fortunat raised his hands to the ceiling. "Five thousand
- francs!" he repeated, in a tone of astonishment; "this count must
- be very rich----"
-
- "So rich, monsieur, that he doesn't know how much he's worth. He
- owns, nobody knows how many houses in Paris, chateaux in every
- part of the country, entire villages, forests--his gold comes in
- by the shovelful."
-
- The spurious clerk closed his eyes, as if he were dazzled by this
- vision of wealth.
-
- "The second time I went to the count's house," resumed Madame
- Vantrasson, "I didn't see him, but he sent me a thousand francs.
- The third and last time they gave me twenty francs at the door,
- and told me that the count had gone on a journey. I understood
- that I could hope for no further help from him. Besides, all the
- servants had been changed. One morning, without any apparent
- reason, M. de Chalusse dismissed all the old servants, so they
- told me. He even sent away the concierge and the housekeeper."
-
- "Why didn't you apply to his wife?"
-
- "M. de Chalusse isn't married. He never has been married."
-
- From the expression of solicitude upon her guest's features,
- Madame Vantrasson supposed he was racking his brain to discover
- some mode of escape from her present difficulties. "If I were in
- your place," he said, "I should try to interest his relatives and
- family in my case----"
-
- "The count has no relatives."
-
- "Impossible!"
-
- "He hasn't, indeed. During the ten years I was in his service, I
- heard him say more than a dozen times that he alone was left of
- all his family--that all the others were dead. People pretend
- that this is the reason why he is so immensely rich."
-
- M. Fortunat's interest was no longer assumed; he was rapidly
- approaching the real object of his visit. "No relatives!" he
- muttered. "Who, then, will inherit his millions when he dies?"
-
- Madame Vantrasson jerked her head. "Who can say?" she replied.
- "Everything will go to the government, probably, unless---- But
- no, that's impossible."
-
- "What's impossible?"
-
- "Nothing. I was thinking of the count's sister, Mademoiselle
- Hermine."
-
- "His sister! Why, you said just now that he had no relatives."
-
- "It's the same as if he hadn't; no one knows what has become of
- her, poor creature! Some say that she married; others declare that
- she died. It's quite a romance."
-
- M. Isidore Fortunat was literally upon the rack; and to make his
- sufferings still more horrible, he dared not ask any direct
- question, nor allow his curiosity to become manifest, for fear of
- alarming the woman. "Let me see," said he; "I think--I am sure
- that I have heard--or that I have read--I cannot say which--some
- story about a Mademoiselle de Chalusse. It was something
- terrible, wasn't it?"
-
- "Terrible, indeed. But what I was speaking of happened a long
- time ago--twenty-five or twenty-six years ago, at the very least.
- I was still in my own part of the country--at Besancon. No one
- knows the exact truth about the affair."
-
- "What! not even you?"
-
- "Oh! I--that's an entirely different thing. When I entered the
- count's service, six years later, there was still an old gardener
- who knew the whole story, and who told it to me, making me swear
- that I would never betray his confidence."
-
- Lavish of details as she had been in telling her own story, it was
- evident that she was determined to exercise a prudent reserve in
- everything connected with the De Chalusse family; and M. Fortunat
- inwardly cursed this, to him, most unseasonable discretion. But
- he was experienced in these examinations, and he had at his
- command little tricks for loosening tongues, which even an
- investigating magistrate might have envied. Without seeming to
- attach the slightest importance to Madame Vantrasson's narrative,
- he rose with a startled air, like a man who suddenly realizes that
- he has forgotten himself. "Zounds!" he exclaimed, "we sit here
- gossiping, and it's growing late. I really can't wait for your
- husband. If I remain here any longer, I shall miss the last
- omnibus; and I live on the other side of the river, near the
- Luxembourg."
-
- "But our agreement, monsieur?"
-
- "We will draw that up at some future time. I shall be passing
- again, or I will send one of my colleagues to see you."
-
- It was Madame Vantrasson's turn to tremble now. She feared, if
- she allowed this supposed clerk to go without signing the
- agreement, that the person who came in his stead might not prove
- so accommodating; and even if he called again himself, he might
- not be so kindly disposed. "Wait just a moment longer, monsieur,"
- she pleaded; "my husband will soon be back, and the last omnibus
- doesn't leave the Rue de Levis until midnight."
-
- "I wouldn't refuse, but this part of the suburbs is so lonely."
-
- "Vantrasson will see you on your way." And, resolved to detain him
- at any cost, she poured out a fresh glass of liquor for him, and
- said: "Where were we? Oh, yes! I was about to tell you
- Mademoiselle Hermine's story."
-
- Concealing his delight with an assumed air of resignation, M.
- Fortunat reseated himself, to the intense disgust of Chupin, who
- was thoroughly tired of waiting outside in the cold.
-
- "I must tell you," began Madame Vantrasson, "that when this
- happened--at least twenty-five years ago--the De Chalusse family
- lived in the Rue Saint-Dominique. They occupied a superb mansion,
- with extensive grounds, full of splendid trees like those in the
- Tuileries gardens. Mademoiselle Hermine, who was then about
- eighteen or nineteen years old, was, according to all accounts,
- the prettiest young creature ever seen. Her skin was as white as
- milk, she had a profusion of golden hair, and her eyes were as
- blue as forget-me-nots. She was very kind and generous, they say,
- only, like all the rest of the family, she was very haughty and
- obstinate--oh, obstinate enough to allow herself to be roasted
- alive over a slow fire rather than yield an inch. That's the
- count's nature exactly. Having served him, I know something about
- it, to be sure, and----"
-
- "Excuse me," interrupted M. Fortunat, who was determined to
- prevent these digressions, "and Mademoiselle Hermine?"
-
- "I was coming to her. Although she was very beautiful and
- immensely rich, she had no suitors--for it was generally
- understood that she was to marry a marquis, whose father was a
- particular friend of the family. The parents had arranged the
- matter between them years before, and nothing was wanting but the
- young lady's consent; but Mademoiselle Hermine absolutely refused
- to hear the marquis's name mentioned.
-
- They did everything to persuade her to consent to this marriage;
- they employed prayers and threats alike, but they might as well
- have talked to a stone. When they asked her why she refused to
- marry the marquis, she replied, 'Because'--and that was all. In
- fact, at last she declared she would leave home and take refuge in
- a convent, if they didn't cease to torment her. Her relatives
- were certain there must be some reason for her refusal. It isn't
- natural for a girl to reject a suitor who is young, handsome,
- rich, and a marquis besides. Her friends suspected there was
- something she wouldn't confess; and M. Raymond swore that he would
- watch his sister, and discover her secret."
-
- "M. Raymond is the present Count de Chalusse, suppose?" inquired
- M. Fortunat.
-
- "Yes, monsieur. Such was the state of matters when, one night,
- the gardener thought he heard a noise in the pavilion, at the end
- of the garden. This pavilion was very large. I have seen it. It
- contained a sitting-room, a billiard-room, and a large fencing-
- hall. Naturally enough, the gardener got up to go and see what
- was the matter. As he left the house, he fancied he saw two
- persons moving about among the trees. He ran after them, but
- could find nothing. They had made their escape through a small
- gate leading from the garden into the street. When the gardener
- was telling me this story, he declared again and again that he had
- fancied the noise he had heard was made by some of the servants
- trying to leave the house secretly, and for this reason he didn't
- give the alarm. However, he hurried to the pavilion, but on seeing
- no light there, he went back to bed with an easy mind."
-
- "And it was Mademoiselle Hermine eloping with a lover?" asked M.
- Fortunat.
-
- Madame Vantrasson seemed as disappointed as an actor who has been
- deprived of an opportunity of producing a grand effect. "Wait a
- moment," she replied, "and you'll see. The night passed, morning
- came, and then the breakfast hour. But Mademoiselle Hermine did
- not make her appearance. Some one was sent to rap at her door--
- there was no answer. The door was opened--the young lady was not
- in her room, and the bed had not even been disturbed. In a few
- moments the whole household was in the wildest commotion; the
- mother weeping, and the father half wild with rage and sorrow. Of
- course, the next thought was of Mademoiselle Hermine's brother,
- and he was sent for. But, he, too, was not in his room, and his
- bed had not been touched. The excitement was becoming frenzy,
- when it occurred to the gardener to mention what he had heard and
- seen on the previous night. They hastened to the pavilion, and
- discovered what? Why, M. Raymond stretched upon the ground,
- stiff, cold, and motionless, weltering in his own blood. One of
- his rigid hands still grasped a sword. They lifted him up,
- carried him to the house, laid him upon his bed, and sent for a
- physician. He had received two dangerous wounds; one in the
- throat, the other in the breast. For more than a month he hung
- between life and death, and six weeks elapsed before he had
- strength to relate what had happened. He was lighting a cigar at
- his window when he thought he saw a woman's form flit through the
- garden. A suspicion that it might be his sister flashed through
- his mind; so he hastened down, stole noiselessly into the
- pavilion, and there he found his sister and a young man who was
- absolutely unknown to him. He might have killed the intruder, but
- instead of doing so, he told him they would fight then and there.
- Weapons were within reach, and they fought, with the result that
- Raymond was wounded twice, in quick succession, and fell. His
- adversary, supposing him dead, thereupon fled from the spot,
- taking Mademoiselle Hermine with him."
-
- At this point in her narrative Madame Vantrasson evinced a desire
- to pause and draw a breath, and perhaps partake of some slight
- refreshment; but M. Fortunat was impatient. The woman's husband
- might return at any moment. "And, after that?" he inquired.
-
- "After that--well--M. Raymond recovered, and in about three
- months' time he was out again; but the parents, who were old
- folks, had received their death-blow. They never rallied from the
- shock. Perhaps they felt that it was their own hard-heartedness
- and obstinacy that had caused their daughter's ruin--and remorse
- is hard to bear. They waned perceptibly from day to day, and
- during the following year they were borne to the cemetery within
- two months of each other."
-
- From the spurious clerk's demeanor it was easy to see that he had
- ceased thinking about his omnibus, and his hostess felt both
- reassured and flattered. "And Mademoiselle Hermine?" he inquired,
- eagerly.
-
- "Alas! monsieur, no one ever knew where she went, or what became
- of her."
-
- "Didn't they try to find her?"
-
- "They searched for her everywhere, for I don't know how long; all
- the ablest detectives in France and in foreign countries tried to
- find her, but not one of them succeeded in discovering the
- slightest trace of her whereabouts. M. Raymond promised an
- enormous sum to the man who would find his sister's betrayer. He
- wished to kill him, and he sought for him for years; but all in
- vain."
-
- "And did they never receive any tidings of this unfortunate girl?"
-
- "I was told that they heard from her twice. On the morning
- following her flight her parents received a letter, in which she
- implored their forgiveness. Five or six months later, she wrote
- again to say that she knew her brother was not dead. She
- confessed that she was a wicked, ungrateful girl--that she had
- been mad; but she said that her punishment had come, and it was
- terrible. She added that every link was severed between herself
- and her friends, and she hoped they would forget her as completely
- as if she had never existed. She went so far as to say that her
- children should never know who their mother was, and that never in
- her life again would she utter the name which she had so
- disgraced."
-
- It was the old, sad story of a ruined girl paying for a moment's
- madness with her happiness and all her after life. A terrible
- drama, no doubt; but one that is of such frequent occurrence that
- it seems as commonplace as life itself. Thus any one who was
- acquainted with M. Isidore Fortunat would have been surprised to
- see how greatly he was moved by such a trifle. "Poor girl!" said
- he, in view of saying something. And then, in a tone of assumed
- carelessness, he inquired: "Did they never discover what
- scoundrel carried Mademoiselle de Chalusse away?"
-
- "Never. Who he was, whence he came, whether he was young or old,
- how he became acquainted with Mademoiselle Hermine--these
- questions were never answered. It was rumored at one time that he
- was an American, a captain in the navy; but that was only a rumor.
- To tell the truth, they never even discovered his name."
-
- "What, not even his name?"
-
- "Not even his name."
-
- Unable to master his emotion, M. Fortunat had at least the
- presence of mind to rise and step back into the darker part of the
- shop. But his gesture of disappointment and the muttered oath
- that fell from his lips did not escape Madame Vantrasson. She was
- startled, and from that moment she looked upon the supposed clerk
- with evident distrust. It was not long before he again resumed
- his seat nearer the counter, still a trifle pale, perhaps, but
- apparently calm. Two questions more seemed indispensable to him,
- and yet either one of them would be sure to arouse suspicion.
- Nevertheless, he resolved to incur the risk of betraying himself.
- And, after all, what would it matter now? Did he not possess the
- information he had wished for, at least as much of it as it was in
- this woman's power to impart?" I can scarcely tell you, my dear
- madame, how much your narrative has interested me," he began. "I
- can confess now that I am slightly acquainted with the Count de
- Chalusse, and that I have frequently visited the house in the Rue
- de Courcelles, where he now resides."
-
- "You!" exclaimed the woman, taking a hasty inventory of M.
- Fortunat's toilette.
-
- "Yes, I--on the part of my employer, understand. Each time I've
- been to visit M. de Chalusse's I've seen a young lady whom I took
- for his daughter there. I was wrong, no doubt, since he isn't a
- married man--"
-
- He paused. Astonishment and anger seemed to be almost suffocating
- his hostess. Without understanding how or why, she felt convinced
- that she had been duped; and if she had obeyed her first impulse
- she would have attacked M. Isidore then and there. If she
- restrained this impulse, if she made an effort to control herself,
- it was only because she thought she held a better revenge in
- reserve.
-
- "A young lady in the count's house!" she said, thoughtfully.
- "That's scarcely possible. I've never seen her; I've never heard
- her spoken of. How long has she been there?"
-
- "For six or seven months?"
-
- "In that case, I can't absolutely deny it. It's two years since I
- set foot in the count's house."
-
- "I fancied this young lady might be the count's niece Mademoiselle
- Hermine's daughter."
-
- Madame Vantrasson shook her head. "Put that fancy out of your
- head," she remarked. "The count said that his sister was dead to
- him from the evening of her flight."
-
- "Who CAN this young girl be, then?"
-
- "Bless me! I don't know. What sort of a looking person is she?"
-
- "Very tall; a brunette."
-
- "How old is she?"
-
- "Eighteen or nineteen."
-
- The woman made a rapid calculation on her fingers. "Nine and four
- are thirteen," she muttered, "and five are eighteen. Ah, ha!--why
- not? I must look into this."
-
- "What did you say?"
-
- "Nothing; a little reflection I was making to myself. Do you know
- this young lady's name?"
-
- "It's Marguerite."
-
- The woman's face clouded. "No; it can't be then," she muttered,
- in a scarcely audible voice.
-
- M. Fortunat was on coals of fire. It was evident that this
- frightful creature, even if she knew nothing definite, had some
- idea, some vague suspicion of the truth. How could he compel her
- to speak now that she was on her guard? He had not time to
- ascertain, for the door suddenly opened, and Vantrasson appeared
- on the threshold. He was scarcely sober when he left the shop,
- but now he was fairly drunk; his heavy shamble had become a
- stagger. "Oh, you wretch, you brigand!" howled his wife; "you've
- been drinking again!"
-
- He succeeded in maintaining his equilibrium, and, gazing at her
- with the phlegmatic stare peculiar to intoxicated men, he replied:
- "Well, what of that! Can't I have a little pleasure with my
- friends? I came across a couple of men who were just taking their
- fifteenth glass; why should I refuse a compliment?"
-
- "You can't hold yourself up."
-
- "That's true." And to prove it he tumbled on to a chair.
-
- A torrent of abuse now flowed from Madame Vantrasson's lips! M.
- Fortunat only imperfectly distinguished the words "thief," "spy,"
- and "detective;" but he could not mistake the meaning of the looks
- which she alternately gave her husband and himself. "It's a
- fortunate thing for you that my husband is in this condition," her
- glances plainly implied, "otherwise there would be an explanation,
- and then we should see--"
-
- "I've had a lucky escape," thought the spurious clerk. But as
- matters stood there was nothing to fear. It was a case where one
- could show a brave front to the enemy without incurring the
- slightest danger. "Let your husband alone," said he. "If he has
- only brought the paper that he was sent to fetch, I sha'n't have
- lost my evening to oblige you."
-
- Vantrasson had brought not one sheet of stamped paper, but two. A
- bad pen and some muddy ink were produced, and M. Fortunat began to
- draw up an acknowledgment according to the established formula.
- However, it was necessary to mention the name of the creditor of
- whom he had spoken, and not wishing to state his own, he used that
- of poor Victor Chupin, who was at that very moment shivering at
- the door, little suspecting what liberty was being taken with his
- cognomen.
-
- "Chupin!" repeated the vixen, as if to engrave the name on her
- memory; "Victor Chupin! I should just like to see him," she added,
- viciously.
-
- When the document was finished, it became necessary to wake
- Vantrasson, so that he might sign it. He did so with very good
- grace, and his wife appended her signature beside her husband's.
- Thereupon M. Fortunat gave them in exchange the note which had
- served as a pretext for his visit. "And above all," he remarked,
- as he opened the door to go, "don't forget that you are to pay
- something on account each month."
-
- "Go to the devil, and your account with you!" growled Madame
- Vantrasson.
-
- But Fortunat did not hear this. He was already walking down the
- road by the side of Chupin, who was saying: "Well, here you are,
- at last, m'sieur! I thought you had taken a lease of that old
- barrack. If ever I come here again, I'll bring a foot-warmer with
- me."
-
- But one of those fits of profound abstraction to which determined
- seekers after truth are subject had taken possession of M.
- Fortunat, and made him oblivious of all surrounding circumstances.
- His heart had been full of hope when he reached the Asnieres Road,
- but he went away gloomy and despondent; and quite unconscious of
- the darkness, the mud, and the rain, which was again falling, he
- silently plodded along in the middle of the highway. Chupin was
- obliged to stop him at the city gate, and remind him that the cab
- was waiting.
-
- "That's true," was M. Fortunat's only answer. He entered the
- vehicle, certainly without knowing it; and as they rolled
- homeward, the thoughts that filled his brain to overflowing found
- vent in a sort of monologue, of which Chupin now and then caught a
- few words. "What a piece of business!" he muttered--"what a piece
- of business! I've had seven years' experience in such matters, and
- yet I've never met with an affair so shrouded in mystery. My
- forty thousand francs are in a precarious condition. Certainly
- I've lost money before through heirs whose existence I hadn't even
- suspected; but by reinstating these same heirs in their rights,
- I've regained my lost money, and received a handsome reward in
- addition; but in this case all is darkness; there isn't a single
- gleam of light--not the slightest clew. If I could only find
- them! But how can I search for people whose names I don't even
- know--for people who have escaped all the inquiries of the police?
- And where shall I look for them--in Europe, in America? It would
- be sheer madness! To whom, then, will the count's millions go?"
-
- It was only the sudden stoppage of the cab in front of his own
- door that recalled M. Fortunat to the realities of life. "Here
- are twenty francs, Victor," he said to Chupin. "Pay the driver,
- and keep the rest yourself."
-
- As he spoke, he sprang nimbly to the ground. A handsome brougham,
- drawn by two horses, was standing before the house. "The Marquis
- de Valorsay's carriage," muttered M. Fortunat. "He has been very
- patient; he has waited for me--or, rather, he has waited for my
- ten thousand francs. Well, we shall see."
-
-
-
- III.
-
-
- M. Fortunat had scarcely started off on his visit to the
- Vantrassons when the Marquis de Valorsay reached the Place de la
- Bourse.
-
- "Monsieur has gone out," said Madame Dodelin, as she opened the
- door.
-
- "You must be mistaken, my good woman."
-
- "No, no; my master said you would, perhaps, wait for him."
-
- "Very well; I will do so."
-
- Faithful to the orders she had received, the servant conducted the
- visitor to the drawing-room, lit the tapers in the candelabra, and
- retired. "This is very strange!" growled the marquis. "Monsieur
- Fortunat makes an appointment, Monsieur Fortunat expects me to
- wait for him! What will happen next?" However, he drew a newspaper
- from his pocket, threw himself into an arm-chair, and waited.
-
- By his habits and tastes, the Marquis de Valorsay belonged to that
- section of the aristocracy which has coined the term "high life"
- in view of describing its own manners and customs. The matters
- that engrossed the marquis's frivolous mind were club-life and
- first performances at the opera and the leading theatres, social
- duties and visits to the fashionable watering-places, racing and
- the shooting and hunting seasons, together with his mistress and
- his tailor.
-
- He considered that to ride in a steeple-chase was an act of
- prowess worthy of his ancestors; and when he galloped past the
- stand, clad as a jockey, in top-boots and a violet silk jacket, he
- believed he read admiration in every eye. This was his every-day
- life, which had been enlivened by a few salient episodes: two
- duels, an elopement with a married woman, a twenty-six hours'
- seance at the gaming table, and a fall from his horse, while
- hunting, which nearly cost him his life. These acts of valor had
- raised him considerably in the estimation of his friends, and
- procured him a celebrity of which he was not a little proud. The
- newspaper reporters were constantly mentioning his name, and the
- sporting journals never failed to chronicle his departure from
- Paris or his arrival in the city.
-
- Unfortunately, such a life of busy idleness has its trials and its
- vicissitudes, and M. de Valorsay was a living proof of this. He
- was only thirty-three, but in spite of the care he expended upon
- his toilette, he looked at least forty. Wrinkles were beginning
- to show themselves; it required all the skill of his valet to
- conceal the bald spots on his cranium; and since his fall from his
- horse, he had been troubled by a slight stiffness in his right
- leg, which stiffness became perfect lameness in threatening
- weather. Premature lassitude pervaded his entire person, and when
- he relaxed in vigilance even his eyes betrayed a distaste for
- everything--weariness, satiety as it were. All the same, however,
- he bore himself with an undeniable air of distinction, albeit the
- haughtiness of his manner indicated an exaggerated idea of his own
- importance. He was indeed in the habit of treating all those whom
- he considered his inferiors with supercilious sufficiency.
-
- The clock on M. Fortunat's mantel-shelf struck eleven at last and
- the marquis rose to his feet with a muttered oath. "This is too
- much!" he growled, angrily.
-
- He looked about for a bell, and seeing none, he was reduced to the
- dire necessity of opening the door himself, and calling some one.
- Madame Dodelin answered the summons. "Monsieur said he would
- return before midnight," she replied; "so he will certainly be
- here. There is no one like him for punctuality. Won't monsieur
- have patience a little longer?"
-
- "Well, I will wait a few moments; but, my good woman, light the
- fire; my feet are frozen!"
-
- M. Fortunat's drawing-room being used but seldom, was really as
- frigid as an iceberg; and to make matters still worse, M. de
- Valorsay was in evening dress, with only a light overcoat. The
- servant hesitated for an instant, thinking this visitor difficult
- to please, and inclined to make himself very much at home, still
- she obeyed.
-
- "I think I ought to go," muttered the marquis. "I really think I
- ought to go." And yet he remained. Necessity, it should be
- remembered, effectually quiets the revolts of pride.
-
- Left an orphan in his early childhood, placed in possession of an
- immense fortune at the age of twenty-three, M. de Valorsay had
- entered life like a famished man enters a dining-room. His name
- entitled him to a high position in the social world; and he
- installed himself at table without asking how much the banquet
- might cost him. It cost him dear, as he discovered at the end of
- the first year, on noting that his disbursements had considerably
- exceeded his large income. It was very evident that if he went on
- in this way, each twelvemonth would deepen an abyss where in the
- one hundred and sixty thousand francs a year, left him by his
- father, would finally be swallowed up. But he had plenty of time
- to reflect upon this unpleasant possibility ere it could come to
- pass! And, besides, he found his present life so delightful, and
- he obtained so much gratification for his money, that he was
- unwilling to make any change. He possessed several fine estates,
- and he found plenty of men who were only too glad to lend him
- money on such excellent security. He borrowed timidly at first,
- but more boldly when he discovered what a mere trifle a mortgage
- is. Moreover, his wants increased in proportion to his vanity.
- Occupying a certain position in the opinion of his acquaintances,
- he did not wish to descend from the heights to which they had
- exalted him; and the very fact that he had been foolishly
- extravagant one year made it necessary for him to be guilty of
- similar folly during the succeeding twelvemonth. He failed to pay
- his creditors the interest that was due on his loans. They did
- not ask him for it; and perhaps he forgot that it was slowly but
- surely accumulating, and that at the end of a certain number of
- years the amount of his indebtedness would be doubled. He never
- thought what the end would be. He became absolutely ignorant of
- the condition of his affairs, and really arrived at the conclusion
- that his resources were inexhaustible. He believed this until one
- day when on going to his lawyer for some money, that gentleman
- coldly said: "You requested me to obtain one hundred thousand
- francs for you, Monsieur le Marquis--but I have only been able to
- procure fifty thousand--here they are. And do not hope for more.
- All your real estate is encumbered beyond its value. Your
- creditors will probably leave you in undisturbed possession for
- another year--it will be to their interest--but when it has
- elapsed they will take possession of their own, as they have a
- perfect right to do." Then, with a meaning smile, the smile of a
- wily prime minister, he added: "If I were in your place, Monsieur
- le Marquis, I would profit by this year of grace. You undoubtedly
- understand what I mean. I have the honor to wish you good-
- morning."
-
- What an awakening--after a glorious dream that had lasted for ten
- years. M. de Valorsay was stunned--crushed. For three days he
- remained immured in his own room, obstinately refusing to receive
- any one. "The marquis is ill," was his valet's answer to every
- visitor.
-
- M. de Valorsay felt that he must have time to regain his mental
- equilibrium--to look his situation calmly in the face. It was a
- frightful one, for his ruin was complete, absolute. He could save
- nothing from the wreck. What was to become of him? What could he
- do? He set his wits to work; but he found that he was incapable
- of plying any kind of avocation. All the energy he had been
- endowed with by nature had been squandered--exhausted in pandering
- to his self-conceit. If he had been younger he might have turned
- soldier; but at his age he had not even this resource. Then it
- was that his notary's smile recurred to his mind. "His advice was
- decidedly good," he muttered. "All is not yet lost; one way of
- escape still remains--marriage."
-
- And why, indeed, shouldn't he marry, and marry a rich wife too?
- No one knew anything about his misfortune; for a year at least, he
- would retain all the advantages that wealth bestows upon its
- possessor. His name alone was a great advantage. It would be
- very strange if he could not find some manufacturer's or banker's
- daughter who would be only too delighted to have a marquisial
- coronet emblazoned on her carriage panels.
-
- Having arrived at this conclusion, M. de Valorsay began his
- search, and it was not long before he thought he had found what he
- was seeking. But something was still necessary. The bestowers of
- large dowers are inclined to be suspicious; they like to have a
- clear understanding as to the financial position of the suitors
- who present themselves, and they not unfrequently ask for
- information. Accordingly, before committing himself, M. de
- Valorsay understood that it was necessary he should provide
- himself with an intelligent and devoted adviser. There must be
- some one to hold his creditors in check, to silence them, and
- obtain sundry concessions from them--in a word, some one to
- interest them in his success. With this object in view, M. de
- Valorsay applied to his notary; but the latter utterly refused to
- mix himself up in any such affair, and declared that the marquis's
- suggestion was almost an insult. Then touched, perhaps, by his
- client's apparent despair, he said, "But I can mention a person
- who might be of service to you. Go to M. Isidore Fortunat, No. 27
- Place de la Bourse. If you succeed in interesting him in your
- marriage, it is an accomplished fact."
-
- It was under these circumstances that the marquis became
- acquainted with M. Fortunat. M. de Valorsay was a man of no
- little penetration, and on his first visit he carefully weighed
- his new acquaintance. He found him to be the very counsellor he
- desired--prudent, and at the same time courageous; fertile in
- expedients; a thorough master of the art of evading the law, and
- not at all troubled by scruples. With such an adviser, it would
- be mere child's play to conceal his financial embarrassments and
- deceive the most suspicious father-in-law. So M. de Valorsay did
- not hesitate a moment. He frankly disclosed his pecuniary
- condition and his matrimonial hopes, and concluded by promising M.
- Fortunat a certain percentage on the bride's dowry, to be paid on
- the day following the marriage.
-
- After a prolonged conference, the agreement was drawn up and
- signed, and that very day M. Fortunat took the nobleman's
- interests in hand. How heartily, and with what confidence in his
- success, is shown by the fact that he had advanced forty thousand
- francs for his client's use, out of his own private purse. After
- such a proof of confidence the marquis could hardly have been
- dissatisfied with his adviser; in point of fact, he was delighted
- with him, and all the more so, as this invaluable man always
- treated him with extreme deference, verging on servility. And in
- M. de Valorsay's eyes this was a great consideration; for he was
- becoming more arrogant and more irascible in proportion as his
- right to be so diminished. Secretly disgusted with himself, and
- deeply humiliated by the shameful intrigue to which he had
- stooped, he took a secret satisfaction in crushing his accomplice
- with his imaginary superiority and lordly disdain. According as
- his humor was good or bad, he called him "my dear extortioner,"
- "Mons. Fortunat," or "Master Twenty-per-cent." But though these
- sneers and insults drove the obsequious smile from M. Fortunat's
- lips, he was quite capable of including them in the bill under the
- head of sundries.
-
- The unvarying deference and submission which M. de Valorsay's
- adviser displayed made his failure to keep the present appointment
- all the more remarkable. Such neglect of the commonest rules of
- courtesy was inconceivable on the part of so polite a man; and the
- marquis's anger gradually changed to anxiety. "What can have
- happened?" he thought.
-
- He was trying to decide whether he should leave or stay, when he
- heard a key grate in the lock of the outer door, and then some
- quick steps along the ante-room. "At last--here he is!" he
- muttered, with a sigh of relief.
-
- He expected to see M. Fortunat enter the room at once, but he was
- disappointed. The agent had no desire to show himself in the garb
- which he had assumed for his excursion with Chupin; and so he had
- hastened to his room to don his wonted habiliments. He also
- desired a few moments for deliberation.
-
- If--as was most probably the case--M. de Valorsay were ignorant of
- the Count de Chalusse's critical condition, was it advisable to
- tell him of it? M. Fortunat thought not, judging with reason that
- this would lead to a discussion and very possibly to a rupture,
- and he wished to avoid anything of the kind until he was quite
- certain of the count's death.
-
- Meanwhile the marquis was thinking--he was a trifle late about it--
- that he had done wrong to wait in that drawing-room for three
- mortal hours. Was such conduct worthy of him? Had he shown
- himself proper respect? Would not M. Fortunat construe this as an
- acknowledgment of the importance of his services and his client's
- urgent need? Would he not become more exacting, more exorbitant
- in his demands? If the marquis could have made his escape
- unheard, he would, no doubt, have done so; but this was out of the
- question. So he resorted to a stratagem which seemed to him
- likely to save his compromised dignity. He stretched himself out
- in his arm-chair, closed his eyes, and pretended to doze. Then,
- when M. Fortunat at last entered the drawing-room he sprang up as
- if he were suddenly aroused from slumber, rubbed his eyes, and
- exclaimed: "Eh! what's that? Upon my word I must have been
- asleep!"
-
- But M. Fortunat was not deceived. He noticed, on the floor, a
- torn and crumpled newspaper, which betrayed the impatience and
- anger his client had experienced during his long waiting. "Well,"
- resumed the marquis, "what time is it? Half-past twelve? This is
- a pretty time to keep an appointment fixed for ten o'clock. This
- is presuming on my good-nature, M. Fortunat! Do you know that my
- carriage has been waiting below ever since half-past nine, and
- that my horses have, perhaps, taken cold? A pair of horses worth
- six hundred louis!"
-
- M. Fortunat listened to these reproaches with the deepest
- humility. "You must excuse me, Monsieur le Marquis," said he.
- "If I remained out so much later than usual, it was only because
- your business interests detained me."
-
- "Zounds! that is about the same as if it had been your own
- business that detained you!" And well pleased with this joke, he
- added, "Ah well! How are affairs progressing?"
-
- "On my side as well as could be desired."
-
- The marquis had resumed his seat in the chimney-corner, and was
- poking the fire with a haughty, but poorly assumed air of
- indifference. "I am listening," he said carelessly.
-
- "In that case, Monsieur le Marquis, I will state the facts in a
- few words, without going into particulars. Thanks to an expedient
- devised by me, we shall obtain for twenty hours a release from all
- the mortgages that now encumber your estates. On that very day we
- will request a certificate from the recorder. This certificate
- will declare that your estates are free from all encumbrances; you
- will show this statement to M. de Chalusse, and all his doubts--
- that is, if he has any--will vanish. The plan was very simple;
- the only difficulty was about raising the money, but I have
- succeeded in doing so. All your creditors but two lent themselves
- very readily to the arrangement. I have now won the consent of
- the two who at first refused, but we shall have to pay dearly for
- it. It will cost you about twenty-six thousand francs."
-
- M. de Valorsay was so delighted that he could not refrain from
- clapping his hands. "Then the affair is virtually concluded," he
- exclaimed. "In less than a month Mademoiselle Marguerite will be
- the Marquise de Valorsay, and I shall have a hundred thousand
- francs a year again." Then, noting how gravely M. Fortunat shook
- his head: "Ah! so you doubt it!" he cried. "Very well; now it is
- your turn to listen. Yesterday I had a long conference with the
- Count de Chalusse, and everything has been settled. We exchanged
- our word of honor, Master Twenty-per-cent. The count does things
- in a princely fashion; he gives Mademoiselle Marguerite two
- millions."
-
- "Two millions!" the other repeated like an echo.
-
- "Yes, my dear miser, neither more nor less. Only for private
- reasons, which he did not explain, the count stipulates that only
- two hundred thousand francs shall appear in the marriage contract.
- The remaining eighteen hundred thousand francs, he gives to me
- unreservedly and unconditionally. Upon my word, I think this very
- charming. How does it strike you?"
-
- M. Fortunat made no reply. M. de Valorsay's gayety, instead of
- cheering, saddened him. "Ah! my fine fellow," he thought, "you
- would sing a different song if you knew that by this time M. de
- Chalusse is probably dead, and that most likely Mademoiselle
- Marguerite has only her beautiful eyes left her, and will dim them
- in weeping for her vanished millions."
-
- But this brilliant scion of the aristocracy had no suspicion of
- the real state of affairs, for he continued: "You will say,
- perhaps, it is strange, that I, Ange-Marie Robert Dalbou, Marquis
- de Valorsay, should marry a girl whose father and mother no one
- knows, and whose only name is Marguerite. In this respect it is
- true that the match is not exactly a brilliant one. Still, as it
- will appear that she merely has a fortune of two hundred thousand
- francs, no one will accuse me of marrying for money on the
- strength of my name. On the contrary, it will seem to be a love-
- match, and people will suppose that I have grown young again." He
- paused, incensed by M. Fortunat's lack of enthusiasm. "Judging
- from your long face, Master Twenty-per-cent, one would fancy you
- doubted my success," he said.
-
- "It is always best to doubt," replied his adviser,
- philosophically.
-
- The marquis shrugged his shoulders. "Even when one has triumphed
- over all obstacles?" he asked sneeringly.
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Then, tell me, if you please, what prevents this marriage from
- being a foregone conclusion?"
-
- "Mademoiselle Marguerite's consent, Monsieur le Marquis."
-
- It was as if a glass of ice-water had been thrown in M. de
- Valorsay's face. He started, turned as pale as death, and then
- exclaimed: "I shall have that; I am sure of it."
-
- You could not say that M. Fortunat was angry. Such a man, as cold
- and as smooth as a hundred franc piece, has no useless passions.
- But he was intensely irritated to hear his client foolishly
- chanting the paeons of victory, while he was compelled to conceal
- his grief at the loss of his forty thousand francs, deep in the
- recesses of his heart. So, far from being touched by the
- marquis's evident alarm, it pleased him to be able to turn the
- dagger in the wound he had just inflicted. "You must excuse my
- incredulity," said he. "It comes entirely from something you,
- yourself, told me about a week ago."
-
- "What did I tell you?"
-
- "That you suspected Mademoiselle Marguerite of a--how shall I
- express it?--of a secret preference for some other person."
-
- The gloomiest despondency had now followed the marquis's
- enthusiasm and exultation. He was evidently in torture. "I more
- than suspected it," said he.
-
- "Ah!"
-
- "I was certain of it, thanks to the count's house-keeper, Madame
- Leon, a miserable old woman whom I have hired to look after my
- interests. She has been watching Mademoiselle Marguerite, and saw
- a letter written by her----"
-
- "Oh!"
-
- "Certainly nothing has passed that Mademoiselle Marguerite has any
- cause to blush for. The letter, which is now in my possession,
- contains unmistakable proofs of that. She might proudly avow the
- love she has inspired, and which she undoubtedly returns. Yet----"
-
- M. Fortunat's gaze was so intent that it became unbearable. "You
- see, then," he began, "that I had good cause to fear "
-
- Exasperated beyond endurance, M. de Valorsay sprang up so
- violently that he overturned his chair. "No!" he exclaimed, "no,
- a thousand times no! You are wrong--for the man who loves
- Mademoiselle Marguerite is now ruined. Yes, such is really the
- case. While we are sitting here, at this very moment, he is lost--
- irredeemably lost. Between him and the woman whom I wish to
- marry--whom I SHALL marry--I have dug so broad and deep an abyss
- that the strongest love cannot overleap it. It is better and
- worse than if I had killed him. Dead, he would have been mourned,
- perhaps; while now, the lowest and most degraded woman would turn
- from him in disgust, or, even if she loved him, she would not dare
- to confess it."
-
- M. Fortunat seemed greatly disturbed. "Have you then put into
- execution the project--the plan you spoke of?" he faltered. "I
- thought you were only jesting."
-
- The marquis lowered his head. "Yes," he answered.
-
- His companion stood for a moment as if petrified, and then
- suddenly exclaimed: "What! You have done that--you--a gentleman?"
-
- M. de Valorsay paced the floor in a state of intense agitation.
- Had he caught a glimpse of his own face in the looking-glass, it
- would have frightened him. "A gentleman!" he repeated, in a tone
- of suppressed rage; "a gentleman! That word is in everybody's
- mouth, nowadays. Pray, what do you understand by a gentleman,
- Mons. Fortunat? No doubt, you mean a heroic idiot who passed
- through life with a lofty mien, clad in all the virtues, as
- stoical as Job, and as resigned as a martyr--a sort of moral Don
- Quixote, preaching the austerest virtue, and practising it? But,
- unfortunately, nobility of soul and of purpose are expensive
- luxuries, and I am a ruined man. I am no saint! I love life and
- all that makes life beautiful and desirable--and to procure its
- pleasures I must fight with the weapons of the age. No doubt, it
- is grand to be honest; but in my case it is so impossible, that I
- prefer to be dishonest--to commit an act of shameful infamy which
- will yield a hundred thousand francs a year. This man is in my
- way--I suppress him--so much the worse for him--he has no business
- to be in my way. If I could have met him openly, I would have
- dispatched him according to the accepted code of honor; but, then,
- I should have had to renounce all idea of marrying Mademoiselle
- Marguerite, so I was obliged to find some other way. I could not
- choose my means. The drowning man does not reject the plank,
- which is his only chance of salvation, because it chances to be
- dirty."
-
- His gestures were even more forcible than his words; and when he
- concluded, he threw himself on to the sofa, holding his head
- tightly between his hands, as if he felt that it was bursting.
- Anger choked his utterance--not anger so much as something he
- would not confess, the quickening of his own conscience and the
- revolt of every honorable instinct; for, in spite of his sins of
- omission, and of commission, never, until this day, had he
- actually violated any clause of the code acknowledged by men of
- honor.
-
- "You have been guilty of a most infamous act, Monsieur le
- Marquis," said M. Fortunat, coldly.
-
- "Oh! no moralizing, if you please."
-
- "Only evil will come of it."
-
- The marquis shrugged his shoulders, and in a tone of bitter scorn,
- retorted: "Come, Mons. Fortunat, if you wish to lose the forty
- thousand francs you advanced to me, it's easy enough to do so.
- Run to Madame d'Argeles's house, ask for M. de Coralth, and tell
- him I countermand my order. My rival will be saved, and will
- marry Mademoiselle Marguerite and her millions."
-
- M. Fortunat remained silent. He could not tell the marquis: "My
- forty thousand francs are lost already. I know that only too
- well. Mademoiselle Marguerite is no longer the possessor of
- millions, and you have committed a useless crime." However, it
- was this conviction which imparted such an accent of eagerness to
- his words as he continued to plead the cause of virtue and of
- honesty. Would he have said as much if he had entertained any
- great hope of the success of the marquis's matrimonial enterprise?
- It is doubtful, still we must do M. Fortunat the justice to admit
- that he was really and sincerely horrified by what he had
- unhesitatingly styled an "infamous act."
-
- The marquis listened to his agent for a few moments in silence,
- and then rose to his feet again. "All this is very true," he
- interrupted; "but I am, nevertheless, anxious to learn the result
- of my little plot. For this reason, Monsieur Fortunat, give me at
- once the five hundred louis you promised me, and I will then bid
- you good-evening."
-
- The agent had been preparing himself for this moment, and yet he
- trembled. "I am deeply grieved, monsieur," he replied, with a
- doleful smile; "it was this matter that kept me out so much later
- than usual this evening. I hoped to have obtained the money from
- a banker, who has always accommodated me before--M. Prosper
- Bertomy, you know him: he married M. Andre Fauvel's niece----"
-
- "Yes, I know; proceed, if you please."
-
- "Ah, well! it was impossible for me to procure the money."
-
- The marquis had hitherto been pale, but now his face flushed
- crimson. "This is a jest, I suppose," said he.
-
- "Alas!--unfortunately--no."
-
- There was a moment's silence, which the marquis probably spent in
- reflecting upon the probable consequences of this disappointment,
- for it was in an almost threatening tone that he eventually
- exclaimed: "You know that I must have this money at once--that I
- must have it."
-
- M. Fortunat would certainly have preferred to lose a good pound of
- flesh rather than the sum of money mentioned; but, on the other
- hand, he felt that it would not do for him to sever his connection
- with his client until the death of the Count de Chalusse was
- certain; and being anxious to save his money and to keep his
- client, his embarrassment was extreme. "It was the most
- unfortunate thing in the world," he stammered; "I apprehended no
- difficulty whatever--" Then, suddenly clapping his hand to his
- forehead, he exclaimed: "But, Monsieur le Marquis, couldn't you
- borrow this amount from one of your friends, the Duke de Champdoce
- or the Count de Commarin?--that would be a good idea."
-
- M. de Valorsay was anything but unsophisticated, and his natural
- shrewdness had been rendered much more acute by the difficulties
- with which he had recently been obliged to contend. M. Fortunat's
- confusion had not escaped his keen glance; and this last
- suggestion aroused his suspicions at once. "What!" he said,
- slowly, and with an air of evident distrust. "YOU give me this
- advice, Master Twenty-per-cent. This is wonderful! How long is it
- since your opinions have undergone such a change?"
-
- "My opinions?"
-
- "Yes. Didn't you say to me during our first interview; 'The thing
- that will save you, is that you have never in your while life
- borrowed a louis from a friend. An ordinary creditor only thinks
- of a large interest; and if that is paid him he holds his peace.
- A friend is never satisfied until everybody knows that he has
- generously obliged you. It is far better to apply to a usurer.' I
- thought all that very sensible, and I quite agreed with you when
- you added: 'So, Monsieur le Marquis, no borrowing of this kind
- until after your marriage--not on any pretext whatever. Go
- without eating rather than do it. Your credit is still good; but
- it is being slowly undermined--and the indiscretion of a friend
- who chanced to say: "I think Valorsay is hard up," might fire the
- train, and then you'd explode.'"
-
- M. Fortunat's embarrassment was really painful to witness. He was
- not usually wanting in courage, but the events of the evening had
- shaken his confidence and his composure. The hope of gain and the
- fear of loss had deprived him of his wonted clearness of mind.
- Feeling that he had just committed a terrible blunder, he racked
- his brain to find some way of repairing it, and finding none, his
- confusion increased.
-
- "Did you, or didn't you, use that language?" insisted M. de
- Valorsay. "What have you to say in reply?"
-
- "Circumstances----"
-
- "What circumstances?"
-
- "Urgent need--necessity. There is no rule without its exceptions.
- I did not imagine you would be so rash. I have advanced you forty
- thousand francs in less than five months--it is outrageous. If I
- were in your place, I would be more reasonable--I would economize----"
-
- He paused! in fact, he was compelled to pause by the piercing
- glance which M. de Valorsay turned upon him. He was furious with
- himself. "I am losing my wits," he thought.
-
- "Still more wise counsel," remarked the ruined nobleman
- ironically. "While you are about it, why don't you advise me to
- sell my horses and carriages, and establish myself in a garret in
- the Rue Amelot? Such a course would seem very natural, wouldn't
- it? and, of course, it would inspire M. de Chalusse with boundless
- confidence!"
-
- "But without going to such extremes----"
-
- "Hold your tongue!" interrupted the marquis, violently. "Better
- than any one else you know that I cannot retrench, although the
- reality no longer exists. I am condemned, cost what it may, to
- keep up appearances. That is my only hope of salvation. I have
- gambled, given expensive suppers, indulged in dissipation of every
- kind, and I must continue to do so. I have come to hate Ninette
- Simplon, for whom I have committed so many acts of folly, and yet
- I still keep her--to show that I am rolling in wealth. I have
- thrown thousand-franc notes out of the window, and I mustn't stop
- throwing them. Indeed, what would people say if I stopped! Why,
- 'Valorsay is a ruined man!' Then, farewell to my hopes of marrying
- an heiress. And so I am always gay and smiling; that is part of
- my role. What would my servants--the twenty spies that I pay--
- what would they think if they saw me thoughtful or disturbed? You
- would scarcely believe it, M. Fortunat, but I have positively been
- reduced to dining on credit at my club, because I had paid, that
- morning, for a month's provender for my horses! It is true I have
- many valuable articles in my house, but I cannot dispose of them.
- People would recognize them at once; besides, they form a part of
- my stock-in-trade. An actor doesn't sell his costumes because
- he's hungry--he goes without food--and when it's time for the
- curtain to rise, he dons his satin and velvet garments, and,
- despite his empty stomach, he chants the praises of a bountiful
- table and rare old wine. That is what I am doing--I, Robert
- Dalbou, Marquis de Valorsay! At the races at Vincennes, about a
- fortnight ago, I was bowling along the boulevard behind my four-
- in-hand, when I heard a laborer say, 'How happy those rich people
- must be!' Happy, indeed! Why, I envied him his lot. He was sure
- that the morrow would be like the day that preceded it. On that
- occasion my entire fortune consisted of a single louis, which I
- had won at baccarat the evening before. As I entered the
- enclosure, Isabelle, the flower-girl, handed me a rose for my
- button-hole. I gave her my louis--but I longed to strangle her!"
-
- He paused for a moment, and then, in a frenzy of passion, he
- advanced toward M. Fortunat, who instinctively retreated into the
- protecting embrasure of a window. "And for eight months I have
- lived this horrible life!" he resumed. "For eight months each
- moment has been so much torture. Ah! better poverty, prison, and
- shame! And now, when the prize is almost won, actuated either by
- treason or caprice, you try to make all my toil and all my
- suffering unavailing. You try to thwart me on the very threshold
- of success! No! I swear, by God's sacred name, it shall not be! I
- will rather crush you, you miserable scoundrel--crush you like a
- venomous reptile!"
-
- There was such a ring of fury in his voice that the crystals of
- the candelabra vibrated; and Madame Dodelin, in her kitchen, heard
- it, and shuddered. "Some one will certainly do M. Fortunat an
- injury one of these days," she thought.
-
- It was not by any means the first time that M. Fortunat had found
- himself at variance with clients of a sanguine temperament; but he
- had always escaped safe and sound, so that, after all, he was not
- particularly alarmed in the present instance, as was proved by the
- fact that he was still calm enough to reflect and plan. "In
- forty-eight hours I shall be certain of the count's fate," he
- thought; "he will be dead, or he will be in a fair way to
- recovery--so by promising to give this frenzied man what he
- desires on the day after to-morrow, I shall incur no risk."
-
- Taking advantage of an opportunity which M. de Valorsay furnished,
- on pausing to draw breath, he hastily exclaimed, "Really, Monsieur
- le Marquis, I cannot understand your anger."
-
- "What! scoundrel!"
-
- "Excuse me. Before insulting me, permit me to explain----"
-
- "No explanation--five hundred louis!"
-
- "Have the kindness to allow me to finish. Yes, I know that you
- are in urgent need of money--not by-and-by, but now. To-day I was
- unable to procure it, nor can I promise it to-morrow; but on the
- day after to-morrow, Saturday, I shall certainly have it ready for
- you."
-
- The marquis seemed to be trying to read his agent's very soul.
- "Are you in earnest?" he asked. "Show your hand. If you don't
- intend to help me out of my embarrassment, say so."
-
- "Ah, Monsieur le Marquis, am I not as much interested in your
- success as you yourself can be? Have you not received abundant
- proofs of my devotion?"
-
- "Then I can rely upon you."
-
- "Absolutely." And seeing a lingering doubt in his client's eyes,
- M. Fortunat added, "You have my word of honor!"
-
- The clock struck three. The marquis took his hat and started
- toward the door. But M. Fortunat, in whose heart the word
- scoundrel was still rankling, stopped him. "Are you going to that
- lady's house now? What is she called? I've forgotten her name.
- Ah, yes, I remember now. Madame d'Argeles, isn't she called?
- It's at her place, I believe, that the reputation of Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's favored lover is to be ruined."
-
- The marquis turned angrily. "What do you take me for, Master
- Twenty-per-cent?" he rudely asked. "That is one of those things
- no well-bred gentleman will do himself. But in Paris people can
- be found to do any kind of dirty work, if you are willing to pay
- them for it."
-
- "Then how will you know the result?"
-
- "Why, twenty minutes after the affair is over, M. de Coralth will
- be at my house. He is there even now, perhaps." And as this
- subject was anything but pleasant, he hastened away, exclaiming,
- "Get to bed, my dear extortioner. Au revoir. And, above all,
- remember your promise."
-
- "My respects, Monsieur le Marquis."
-
- But when the door closed, M. Fortunat's expression immediately
- changed. "Ah! you insult me!" he muttered sullenly. "You rob me,
- and you call me a scoundrel into the bargain. You shall pay
- dearly for it, my fine fellow, no matter what may happen!"
-
-
-
- IV.
-
-
- It is in vain that the law has endeavored to shield private life
- from prying eyes. The scribes who pander to Parisian curiosity
- surmount all obstacles and brave every danger. Thanks to the
- "High Life" reporters, every newspaper reader is aware that twice
- a week--Mondays and Thursdays--Madame Lia d'Argeles holds a
- reception at her charming mansion in the Rue de Berry. Her guests
- find plenty of amusement there. They seldom dance; but card-
- playing begins at midnight, and a dainty supper is served before
- the departure of the guests.
-
- It was on leaving one of these little entertainments that that
- unfortunate young man, Jules Chazel, a cashier in a large banking-
- house, committed suicide by blowing out his brains. The brilliant
- frequenters of Madame d'Argeles's entertainments considered this
- act proof of exceeding bad taste and deplorable weakness on his
- part. "The fellow was a coward," they declared. "Why, he had
- lost hardly a thousand louis!"
-
- He had lost only that, it is true--a mere trifle as times go.
- Only the money was not his; he had taken it from the safe which
- was confided to his keeping, expecting, probably, to double the
- amount in a single night. In the morning, when he found himself
- alone, without a penny, and the deficit staring him in the face,
- the voice of conscience cried, "You are a thief!" and he lost his
- reason.
-
- The event created a great sensation at the time, and the Petit
- Journal published a curious story concerning this unfortunate
- young man's mother. The poor woman--she was a widow--sold all she
- possessed, even the bed on which she slept, and when she had
- succeeded in gathering together twenty thousand francs--the ransom
- of her son's honor--she carried them to the banker by whom her boy
- had been employed. He took them, without even asking the mother
- if she had enough left to purchase her dinner that evening; and
- the fine gentleman, who had won and pocketed Jules Chazel's stolen
- gold, thought the banker's conduct perfectly natural and just. It
- is true that Madame d'Argeles was in despair during forty-eight
- hours or so; for the police had begun a sort of investigation, and
- she feared this might frighten her visitors and empty her drawing-
- rooms. Not at all, however; on the contrary, she had good cause
- to congratulate herself upon the notoriety she gained through this
- suicide. For five days she was the talk of Paris, and Alfred
- d'Aunay even published her portrait in the Illustrated Chronicle.
-
- Still, no one was able to say exactly who Madame Lia d'Argeles
- was. Who was she, and whence did she come? How had she lived
- until she sprang up, full grown, in the sunshine of the
- fashionable world? Did the splendid mansion in the Rue de Berry
- really belong to her? Was she as rich as she was supposed to be?
- Where had she acquired such manners, the manners of a thorough
- woman of the world, with her many accomplishments, as well as her
- remarkable skill as a musician? Everything connected with her was
- a subject of conjecture, even to the name inscribed upon her
- visiting cards--"Lia d'Argeles."
-
- But no matter. Her house was always filled to over-flowing; and
- at the very moment when the Marquis de Valorsay and M. Fortunat
- were speaking of her, a dozen coroneted carriages stood before her
- door, and her rooms were thronged with guests. It was a little
- past midnight, and the bi-weekly card party had just been made up,
- when a footman announced, "Monsieur le Vicomte de Coralth!
- Monsieur Pascal Ferailleur!"
-
- Few of the players deigned to raise their heads. But one man
- growled, "Good--two more players!" And four or five young men
- exclaimed, "Ah! here's Ferdinand! Good evening, my dear fellow!"
-
- M. de Coralth was very young and remarkably good-looking, almost
- too good-looking, indeed; for his handsomeness was somewhat
- startling and unnatural. He had an exceedingly fair complexion,
- and large, melting black eyes, while a woman might have envied him
- his wavy brown hair and the exquisite delicacy of his skin. He
- dressed with great care and taste, and even coquettishly; his
- turn-down collar left his firm white throat uncovered, and his
- rose-tinted gloves fitted as perfectly as the skin upon his soft,
- delicate hands. He bowed familiarly on entering, and with a
- rather complacent smile on his lips, he approached Madame
- d'Argeles, who, half reclining in an easy chair near the fire-
- place, was conversing with two elderly gentlemen of grave and
- distinguished bearing. "How late you are, viscount," she remarked
- carelessly. "What have you been doing to-day? I fancied I saw
- you in the Bois, in the Marquis de Valorsay's dog-cart."
-
- A slight flush suffused M. de Coralth's cheeks, and to hide it,
- perhaps, he turned toward the visitor who had entered with him,
- and drew him toward Madame d'Argeles, saying, "Allow me, madame,
- to present to you one of my great friends, M. Pascal Ferailleur,
- an advocate whose name will be known to fame some day."
-
- "Your friends are always welcome at my house, my dear viscount,"
- replied Madame d'Argeles. And before Pascal had concluded his
- bow, she averted her head, and resumed her interrupted
- conversation.
-
- The new-comer, however, was worthy of more than that cursory
- notice. He was a young man of five or six-and-twenty, dark-
- complexioned and tall; each movement of his person was imbued with
- that natural grace which is the result of perfect harmony of the
- muscles, and of more than common vigor. His features were
- irregular, but they gave evidence of energy, kindness of heart,
- and honesty of purpose. A man possessing such a proud,
- intelligent, and open brow, such a clear, straightforward gaze,
- and such finely-cut lips, could be no ordinary one. Deserted by
- his sponsor, who was shaking hands right and left, he seated
- himself on a sofa a little in the background; not because he was
- embarrassed, but because he felt that instinctive distrust of self
- which frequently seizes hold of a person on entering a crowd of
- strangers. He did his best to conceal his curiosity, but
- nevertheless he looked and listened with all his might.
-
- The salon, was an immense apartment, divided into two rooms by
- sliding doors and hangings. When Madame d'Argeles gave a ball,
- the rooms were thrown into one; but, as a general rule, one room
- was occupied by the card-players, and the other served as a refuge
- for those who wished to chat. The card-room, into which Pascal
- had been ushered, was an apartment of noble proportions, furnished
- in a style of tasteful magnificence. The tints of the carpet were
- subdued; there was not too much gilding on the cornices; the clock
- upon the mantel-shelf was chaste and elegant in design. The only
- thing at all peculiar about the room and its appointments was a
- reflector, ingeniously arranged above the chandelier in such a way
- as to throw the full glare of the candles upon the card-table
- which stood directly beneath it. The table itself was adorned
- with a rich tapestry cover, but this was visible only at the
- corners, for it was covered, in turn, with a green baize cloth
- considerably the worse for wear. Madame d'Argeles's guests were
- probably not over fifty in number, but they all seemed to belong
- to the very best society. The majority of them were men of forty
- or thereabouts; several wore decorations, and two or three of the
- eldest were treated with marked deference. Certain well-known
- names which Pascal overheard surprised him greatly. "What! these
- men here?" he said to himself; "and I--I regarded my visit as a
- sort of clandestine frolic."
-
- There were only seven or eight ladies present, none of them being
- especially attractive. Their toilettes were very costly, but in
- rather doubtful taste, and they wore a profusion of diamonds.
- Pascal noticed that these ladies were treated with perfect
- indifference, and that, whenever the gentlemen spoke to them, they
- assumed an air of politeness which was too exaggerated not to be
- ironical.
-
- A score of persons were seated at the card-table, and the guests
- who had retired into the adjoining salon were silently watching
- the progress of the game, or quietly chatting in the corners of
- the room. It surprised him to note that every one spoke in very
- low tones; there was something very like respect, even awe, in
- this subdued murmur. One might have supposed that those present
- were celebrating the rites of some mysterious worship. And is not
- gaming a species of idolatry, symbolized by cards, and which has
- its images, its fetishes, its miracles, its fanatics, and its
- martyrs?
-
- Occasionally, above the accompaniment of whispers, rose the
- strange and incoherent exclamations of the players: "Here are
- twenty louis! I take it--I pass! The play is made! Banco!"
-
- "What a strange gathering!" thought Pascal Ferailleur. "What
- singular people!" And he turned his attention to the mistress of
- the house, as if he hoped to decipher the solution of the enigma
- on her face.
-
- But Madame Lia d'Argeles defied all analysis. She was one of
- those women whose uncertain age varies according to their mood,
- between the thirties and the fifties; one who did not look over
- thirty in the evening, but who would have been charged with being
- more than fifty the next morning. In her youth she must have been
- very beautiful, and she was still good-looking, though she had
- grown somewhat stout, and her face had become a trifle heavy, thus
- marring the symmetry of her very delicate features. A perfect
- blonde, she had eyes of so clear a blue that they seemed almost
- faded. The whiteness of her skin was so unnatural that it almost
- startled one. It was the dull, lifeless white which suggests an
- excessive use of cosmetics and rice powder, and long baths, late
- hours, and sleep at day-time, in a darkened room. Her face was
- utterly devoid of expression. One might have fancied that its
- muscles had become relaxed after terrible efforts to feign or to
- conceal some violent emotions; and there was something melancholy,
- almost terrifying in the eternal, and perhaps involuntary smile,
- which curved her lips. She wore a dress of black velvet, with
- slashed sleeves and bodice, a new design of the famous man-
- milliner, Van Klopen.
-
- Pascal was engaged in these observations when M. de Coralth,
- having made his round, came and sat down on the sofa beside him.
- "Well, what do you think of it?" he inquired.
-
- "Upon my word!" replied the young advocate, "I am infinitely
- obliged to you for inviting me to accompany you here. I am
- intensely amused."
-
- "Good! My philosopher is captivated."
-
- "Not captivated, but interested, I confess." Then, in the tone of
- good-humor which was habitual to him, he added: "As for being the
- sage you call me, that's all nonsense. And to prove it, I'm going
- to risk my louis with the rest."
-
- M. de Coralth seemed amazed, but a close observer might have
- detected a gleam of triumph in his eyes. "You are going to play--
- you?"
-
- "Yes. Why not?"
-
- "Take care!"
-
- "Of what, pray? The worst I can do is to lose what I have in my
- pocket--something over two hundred francs."
-
- The viscount shook his head thoughtfully. "It isn't that which
- one has cause to fear. The devil always has a hand in this
- business, and the first time a man plays he's sure to win."
-
- "And is that a misfortune?"
-
- "Yes, because the recollection of these first winnings is sure to
- lure you back to the gaming-table again. You go back, you lose,
- you try to recover your money, and that's the end of it--you
- become a gambler."
-
- Pascal Ferailleur's smile was the smile of a man who has full
- confidence in himself. "My brain is not so easily turned, I
- hope," said he. "I have the thought of my name, and the fortune I
- must make, as ballast for it."
-
- "I beseech you not to play," insisted the viscount. "Listen to
- me; you don't know what this passion for play is; the strongest
- and the coldest natures succumb--don't play."
-
- He had raised his voice, as if he intended to be overheard by two
- guests who had just approached the sofa. They did indeed hear
- him. "Can I believe my own eyes and ears!" exclaimed one of them,
- an elderly man. "Can this really be Ferdinand who is trying to
- shake the allegiance of the votaries of our noble lady--the Queen
- of Spades?"
-
- M. de Coralth turned quickly round: "Yes, it is indeed I," he
- answered. "I have purchased with my patrimony the right of
- saying: 'Distrust yourself, and don't do as I've done,' to an
- inexperienced friend."
-
- The wisest counsels, given in a certain fashion, never fail to
- produce an effect diametrically opposed to that which they
- seemingly aim at. M. de Coralth's persistence, and the importance
- he attached to a mere trifle, could not fail to annoy the most
- patient man in the world, and in fact his patronizing tone really
- irritated Pascal. "You are free, my friend, to do as you please,"
- said he; "but I----"
-
- "Are you resolved?" interrupted the viscount.
-
- "Absolutely."
-
- "So be it, then. You are no longer a child, and I have warned
- you. Let us play, then." Thereupon they approached the table;
- room was made for them, and they seated themselves, Pascal being
- on M. Ferdinand de Coralth's right-hand side.
-
- The guests were playing "Baccarat tournant," a game of terrible
- and infantile simplicity. There are no such things as skill or
- combination possible in it; science and calculation are useless.
- Chance alone decides, and decides with the rapidity of lightning.
- Amateurs certainly assert that, with great coolness and long
- practice, one can, in a measure at least, avert prolonged ill-
- luck. Maybe they are right, but it is not conclusively proved.
- Each person takes the cards in his turn, risks what he chooses,
- and when his stakes are covered, deals. If he wins, he is free to
- follow up his vein of good-luck, or to pass the deal. When he
- loses, the deal passes at once to the next player on the right.
-
- A moment sufficed for Pascal Ferailleur to learn the rules of the
- game. It was already Ferdinand's deal. M. de Coralth staked a
- hundred francs; the bet was taken; he dealt, lost, and handed the
- cards to Pascal.
-
- The play, which had been rather timid at first--since it was
- necessary, as they say, to try the luck--had now become bolder.
- Several players had large piles of gold before them, and the heavy
- artillery--that is to say, bank-notes--were beginning to put in
- appearance. But Pascal had no false pride. "I stake a louis!"
- said he
-
- The smallness of the sum attracted instant attention, and two or
- three voices replied: "Taken!"
-
- He dealt, and won. "Two louis!" he said again. this wager was
- also taken; he won, and his run of luck was so remarkable that, in
- a wonderfully short space of time, he won six hundred francs.
-
- "Pass the deal," whispered Ferdinand, and Pascal followed this
- advice. "Not because I desire to keep my winnings," he whispered
- in M. de Coralth's ear, "but because I wish to have enough to play
- until the end of the evening without risking anything."
-
- But such prudence was unnecessary so far as he was concerned.
- When the deal came to him again, fortune favored him even more
- than before. He started with a hundred francs, and doubling them
- each time in six successive deals, he won more than three thousand
- francs.
-
- "The devil! Monsieur is in luck."--"Zounds! And he is playing for
- the first time."--"That accounts for it. The inexperienced always
- win."
-
- Pascal could not fail to hear these comments. The blood mantled
- over his cheeks, and, conscious that he was flushing, he, as
- usually happens, flushed still more. His good fortune embarrassed
- him, as was evident, and he played most recklessly. Still his
- good luck did not desert him; and do what he would he won--won
- continually. In fact, by four o'clock in the morning he had
- thirty-five thousand francs before him.
-
- For some time he had been the object of close attention. "Do you
- know this gentleman?" inquired one of the guests.
-
- "No. He came with Coralth."
-
- "He is an advocate, I understand."
-
- And all these whispered doubts and suspicions, these questions
- fraught with an evil significance, these uncharitable replies,
- grew into a malevolent murmur, which resounded in Pascal's ears
- and bewildered him. He was really becoming most uncomfortable,
- when Madame d'Argeles approached the card-table and exclaimed:
- "This is the third time, gentlemen, that you have been told that
- supper is ready. What gentleman will offer me his arm?"
-
- There was an evident unwillingness to leave the table, but an old
- gentleman who had been losing heavily rose to his feet. "Yes, let
- us go to supper!" he exclaimed; "perhaps that will change the
- luck."
-
- This was a decisive consideration. The room emptied as if by
- magic; and no one was left at the table but Pascal, who scarcely
- knew what to do with all the gold piled up before him. He
- succeeded, however, in distributing it in his pockets, and was
- about to join the other guests in the dining-room, when Madame
- d'Argeles abruptly barred his passage.
-
- "I desire a word with you, monsieur," she said. Her face still
- retained its strange immobility, and the same stereotyped smile
- played about her lips. And yet her agitation was so evident that
- Pascal, in spite of his own uneasiness, noticed it, and was
- astonished by it.
-
- "I am at your service, madame," he stammered, bowing.
-
- She at once took his arm, and led him to the embrasure of a
- window. "I am a stranger to you, monsieur," she said, very
- hurriedly, and in very low tones, "and yet I must ask, and you
- must grant me, a great favor."
-
- "Speak, madame."
-
- She hesitated, as if at a loss for words, and then all of a sudden
- she said, eagerly: "You will leave this house at once, without
- warning any one, and while the other guests are at supper."
-
- Pascal's astonishment changed into stupor.
-
- "Why am I to go?" he asked.
-
- "Because--but, no; I cannot tell you. Consider it only a caprice
- on my part--it is so; but I entreat you, don't refuse me. Do me
- this favor, and I shall be eternally grateful."
-
- There was such an agony of supplication in her voice and her
- attitude, that Pascal was touched. A vague presentiment of some
- terrible, irreparable misfortune disturbed his own heart.
- Nevertheless, he sadly shook his head, and bitterly exclaimed:
- "You are, perhaps, not aware that I have just won over thirty
- thousand francs."
-
- "Yes, I am aware of it. And this is only another, and still
- stronger reason why you should protect yourself against possible
- loss. It is well to pattern after Charlemagne* in this house.
- The other night, the Count d'Antas quietly made his escape
- bareheaded. He took a thousand louis away with him, and left his
- hat in exchange. The count is a brave man; and far from indulging
- in blame, every one applauded him the next day. Come, you have
- decided, I see--you will go; and to be still more safe, I will
- show you out through the servants' hall, then no one can possibly
- see you."
-
- * French gamblers use this expression which they explain by the
- fact that Charlemagne departed this life with all his possessions
- intact, having always added to his dominions without ever
- experiencing a loss. Historically this is no doubt incorrect, hut
- none the less, the expression prevails in France.--[TRANS.]
-
- Pascal had almost decided to yield to her entreaties; but this
- proposed retreat through the back-door was too revolting to his
- pride to be thought of for a moment. "I will never consent to
- such a thing," he declared. "What would they think of me?
- Besides I owe them their revenge and I shall give it to them."
-
- Neither Madame d'Argeles nor Pascal had noticed M. de Coralth, who
- in the meantime had stolen into the room on tiptoe, and had been
- listening to their conversation, concealed behind the folds of a
- heavy curtain. He now suddenly revealed his presence. "Ah! my
- dear friend," he exclaimed, in a winning tone. "While I honor
- your scruples, I must say that I think madame is a hundred times
- right. If I were in your place, if I had won what you have won, I
- shouldn't hesitate. Others might think what they pleased; you
- have the money, that is the main thing."
-
- For the second time, the viscount's intervention decided Pascal.
- "I shall remain," he said, resolutely.
-
- But Madame d'Argeles laid her hand imploringly on his arm. "I
- entreat you, monsieur," said she. "Go now, there is still time "
-
- "Yes, go," said the viscount, approvingly, "it would be a most
- excellent move. Retreat and save the cash."
-
- These words were like the drop which makes the cup overflow.
- Crimson with anger and assailed by the strangest suspicions,
- Pascal turned from Madame d'Argeles and hastened into the dining-
- room. The conversation ceased entirely on his arrival there. He
- could not fail to understand that he had been the subject of it.
- A secret instinct warned him that all the men around him were his
- enemies--though he knew not why--and that they were plotting
- against him. He also perceived that his slightest movements were
- watched and commented upon. However he was a brave man; his
- conscience did not reproach him in the least, and he was one of
- those persons who, rather than wait for danger, provoke it.
-
- So, with an almost defiant air, he seated himself beside a young
- lady dressed in pink tulle, and began to laugh and chat with her.
- He possessed a ready wit, and what is even better, tact; and for a
- quarter of an hour astonished those around him by his brilliant
- sallies. Champagne was flowing freely; and he drank four or five
- glasses in quick succession. Was he really conscious of what he
- was doing and saying? He subsequently declared that he was not,
- that he acted under the influence of a sort of hallucination
- similar to that produced by the inhalation of carbonic gas.
-
- However, the guests did not linger long at the supper-table. "Let
- us go back!" cried the old gentleman, who had insisted upon the
- suspension of the game; "we are wasting a deal of precious time
- here!"
-
- Pascal rose with the others, and in his haste to enter the
- adjoining room he jostled two men who were talking together near
- the door. "So it is understood," said one of them.
-
- "Yes, yes, leave it to me; I will act as executioner."
-
- This word sent all Pascal's blood bounding to his heart. "Who is
- to be executed?" he thought? "I am evidently to be the victim. But
- what does it all mean?"
-
- Meanwhile the players at the green table had changed places, and
- Pascal found himself seated not on Ferdinand's right, but directly
- opposite him, and between two men about his own age--one of them
- being the person who had announced his intention of acting as
- executioner. All eyes were fixed upon the unfortunate advocate
- when it came his turn to deal. He staked two hundred louis, and
- lost them. There was a slight commotion round the table; and one
- of the players who had lost most heavily, remarked in an
- undertone: "Don't look so hard at the gentleman--he won't have any
- more luck."
-
- As Pascal heard this ironical remark, uttered in a tone which made
- it as insulting as a blow, a gleam of light darted through his
- puzzled brain. He suspected at last, what any person less honest
- than himself would have long before understood. He thought of
- rising and demanding an apology; but he was stunned, almost
- overcome by the horrors of his situation. His ears tingled, and
- it seemed to him as if the beating of his heart were suspended.
-
- However the game proceeded; but no one paid any attention to it.
- The stakes were insignificant, and loss or gain drew no
- exclamation from any one. The attention of the entire party was
- concentrated on Pascal; and he, with despair in his heart,
- followed the movements of the cards, which were passing from hand
- to hand, and fast approaching him again. When they reached him
- the silence became breathless, menacing, even sinister. The
- ladies, and the guests who were not playing, approached and leaned
- over the table in evident anxiety. "My God!" thought Pascal, "my
- God, if I can only lose!"
-
- He was as pale as death; the perspiration trickled down from his
- hair upon his temples, and his hands trembled so much that he
- could scarcely hold the cards. "I will stake four thousand
- francs," he faltered.
-
- "I take your bet," answered a voice.
-
- Alas! the unfortunate fellow's wish was not gratified; he won.
- Then in the midst of the wildest confusion, he exclaimed: "Here
- are eight thousand francs!"
-
- "Taken!"
-
- But as he began to deal the cards, his neighbor sprang up, seized
- him roughly by the hands and cried: "This time I'm sure of it--
- you are a thief!"
-
- With a bound, Pascal was on his feet. While his peril had been
- vague and undetermined, his energy had been paralyzed. But it was
- restored to him intact when his danger declared itself in all its
- horror. He pushed away the man who had caught his hands, with
- such violence that he sent him reeling under a sofa; then he
- stepped back and surveyed the excited throng with an air of menace
- and defiance. Useless! Seven or eight players sprang upon him and
- overpowered him, as if he had been the vilest criminal.
-
- Meanwhile, the executioner, as he had styled himself, had risen to
- his feet with his cravat untied, and his clothes in wild disorder.
- "Yes," he said, addressing Pascal, "you are a thief! I saw you
- slip other cards among those which were handed to you."
-
- "Wretch!" gasped Pascal.
-
- "I saw you--and I am going to prove it." So saying he turned to
- the mistress of the house, who had dropped into an arm-chair, and
- imperiously asked, "How many packs have we used?"
-
- "Five."
-
- "Then there ought to be two hundred and sixty cards upon the
- table."
-
- Thereupon he counted them slowly and with particular care, and he
- found no fewer than three hundred and seven. "Well, scoundrel!"
- he cried; "are you still bold enough to deny it?"
-
- Pascal had no desire to deny it. He knew that words would weigh
- as nothing against this material, tangible, incontrovertible
- proof. Forty-seven cards had been fraudulently inserted among the
- others. Certainly not by him! But by whom? Still he, alone, had
- been the gainer through the deception.
-
- "You see that the coward will not even defend himself!" exclaimed
- one of the women.
-
- He did not deign to turn his head. What did the insult matter to
- him? He knew himself to be innocent, and yet he felt that he was
- sinking to the lowest depths of infamy--he beheld himself
- disgraced, branded, ruined. And realizing that he must meet facts
- with facts, he besought God to grant him an idea, an inspiration,
- that would unmask the real culprit.
-
- But another person came to his aid. With a boldness which no one
- would have expected on his part, M. de Coralth placed himself in
- front of Pascal, and in a voice which betokened more indignation
- than sorrow, he exclaimed: "This is a terrible mistake,
- gentlemen. Pascal Ferailleur is my friend; and his past vouches
- for his present. Go to the Palais de Justice, and make inquiries
- respecting his character there. They will tell you how utterly
- impossible it is that this man can be guilty of the ignoble act he
- is accused of."
-
- No one made any reply. In the opinion of all his listeners,
- Ferdinand was simply fulfilling a duty which it would have been
- difficult for him to escape. The old gentleman who had decided
- the suspension and the resumption of the game, gave audible
- expression to the prevailing sentiment of the party. He was a
- portly man, who puffed like a porpoise when he talked, and whom
- his companions called the baron. "Your words do you honor--really
- do you honor," he said, addressing Ferdinand--"and no possible
- blame can attach to you. That your friend is not an honest man is
- no fault of yours. There is no outward sign to distinguish
- scoundrels."
-
- Pascal had so far not opened his lips. After struggling for a
- moment in the hands of his captors, he now stood perfectly
- motionless, glancing furiously around him as if hoping to discover
- the coward who had prepared the trap into which he had fallen.
- For he felt certain that he was the victim of some atrocious
- conspiracy, though it was impossible for him to divine what motive
- had actuated his enemies. Suddenly those who were holding him
- felt him tremble. He raised his head; he fancied he could detect
- a ray of hope. "Shall I be allowed to speak in my own defence?"
- he asked.
-
- "Speak!"
-
- He tried to free himself; but those beside him would not relax
- their hold, so he desisted, and then, in a voice husky with
- emotion, he exclaimed: "I am innocent! I am the victim of an
- infamous plot. Who the author of it is I do not know. But there
- is some one here who must know." Angry exclamations and sneering
- laughs interrupted him. "Would you condemn me unheard?" he
- resumed, raising his voice. "Listen to me. About an hour ago,
- while you were at supper, Madame d'Argeles almost threw herself at
- my feet as she entreated me to leave this house. Her agitation
- astonished me. Now I understand it."
-
- The gentleman known as the baron turned toward Madame d'Argeles:
- "Is what this man says true?"
-
- She was greatly agitated, but she answered: "Yes."
-
- "Why were you so anxious for him to go?"
-
- "I don't know--a presentiment--it seemed to me that something was
- going to happen."
-
- The least observant of the party could not fail to notice Madame
- d'Argeles's hesitation and confusion; but even the shrewdest were
- deceived. They supposed that she had seen the act committed, and
- had tried to induce the culprit to make his escape, in order to
- avoid a scandal.
-
- Pascal saw he could expect no assistance from this source. "M. de
- Coralth could assure you," he began.
-
- "Oh, enough of that," interrupted a player. "I myself heard M. de
- Coralth do his best to persuade you not to play."
-
- So the unfortunate fellow's last and only hope had vanished.
- Still he made a supreme effort, and addressing Madame d'Argeles:
- "Madame," he said, in a voice trembling with anguish?" I entreat
- you, tell what you know. Will you allow an honorable man to be
- ruined before your very eyes? Will you abandon an innocent man
- whom you could save by a single word?" But she remained silent;
- and Pascal staggered as if some one had dealt him a terrible blow.
- "It is all over!" he muttered.
-
- No one heard him; everybody was listening to the baron, who seemed
- to be very much put out. "We are wasting precious time with all
- this," said he. "We should have made at least five rounds while
- this absurd scene has been going on. We must put an end to it.
- What are you going to do with this fellow? I am in favor of
- sending for a commissary of police."
-
- Such was not at all the opinion of the majority of the guests.
- Four or five of the ladies took flight at the bare suggestion and
- several men--the most aristocratic of the company--became angry at
- once. "Are you mad?" said one of them. "Do you want to see us all
- summoned as witnesses? You have probably forgotten that Garcia
- affair, and that rumpus at Jenny Fancy's house. A fine thing it
- would be to see, no one knows how many great names mixed up with
- those of sharpers and notorious women!"
-
- Naturally of a florid complexion, the baron's face now became
- scarlet. "So it's fear of scandal that deters you! Zounds, sir! a
- man's courage should equal his vices. Look at me."
-
- Celebrated for his income of eight hundred thousand francs a year,
- for his estates in Burgundy, for his passion for gaming, his
- horses, and his cook, the baron wielded a mighty influence.
- Still, on this occasion he did not carry the day, for it was
- decided that the "sharper " should be allowed to depart
- unmolested. "Make him at least return the money," growled a
- loser; "compel him to disgorge."
-
- "His winnings are there upon the table."
-
- "Don't believe it," cried the baron. "All these scoundrels have
- secret pockets in which they stow away their plunder. Search him
- by all means."
-
- "That's it--search him!"
-
- Crushed by this unexpected, undeserved and incomprehensible
- misfortune, Pascal had almost yielded to his fate. But the
- shameful cry: "Search him!" kindled terrible wrath in his brain.
- He shook off his assailants as a lion shakes off the hounds that
- have attacked him, and, reaching the fireplace with a single
- bound, he snatched up a heavy bronze candelabrum and brandished it
- in the air, crying: "The first who approaches is a dead man!"
-
- He was ready to strike, there was no doubt about it; and such a
- weapon in the hands of a determined man, becomes positively
- terrible. The danger seemed so great and so certain that his
- enemies paused--each encouraging his neighbor with his glance; but
- no one was inclined to engage in this struggle, by which the
- victor would merely gain a few bank-notes. "Stand back, and allow
- me to retire?" said Pascal, imperiously. They still hesitated;
- but finally made way. And, formidable in his indignation and
- audacity, he reached the door of the room unmolested, and
- disappeared.
-
- This superb outburst of outraged honor, this marvellous energy--
- succeeding, as it did, the most complete mental prostration--and
- these terrible threats, had proved so prompt and awe-inspiring
- that no one had thought of cutting off Pascal's retreat. The
- guests had not recovered from their stupor, but were still
- standing silent and intimidated when they heard the outer door
- close after him.
-
- It was a woman who at last broke the spell. "Ah, well!" she
- exclaimed, in a tone of intense admiration, "that handsome fellow
- is level-headed!"
-
- "He naturally desired to save his plunder!"
-
- It was the same expression that M. de Coralth had employed; and
- which had, perhaps, prevented Pascal from yielding to Madame
- d'Argeles's entreaties. Everybody applauded the sentiment--
- everybody, the baron excepted. This rich man, whose passions had
- dragged him into the vilest dens of Europe, was thoroughly
- acquainted with sharpers and scoundrels of every type, from those
- who ride in their carriages down to the bare-footed vagabond. He
- knew the thief who grovels at his victim's feet, humbly confessing
- his crime, the desperate knave who swallows the notes he has
- stolen, the abject wretch who bares his back to receive the blows
- he deserves, and the rascal who boldly confronts his accusers and
- protests his innocence with the indignation of an honest man. But
- never, in any of these scoundrels, had the baron seen the proud,
- steadfast glance with which this man had awed his accusers.
-
- With this thought uppermost in his mind he drew the person who had
- seized Pascal's hands at the card-table a little aside. "Tell
- me," said he, "did you actually see that young man slip the cards
- into the pack?"
-
- "No, not exactly. But you know what we agreed at supper? We were
- sure that he was cheating; and it was necessary to find some
- pretext for counting the cards."
-
- "What if he shouldn't be guilty, after all?"
-
- "Who else could be guilty then? He was the only winner."
-
- To this terrible argument--the same which had silenced Pascal--the
- baron made no reply. Indeed his intervention became necessary
- elsewhere, for the other guests were beginning to talk loudly and
- excitedly around the pile of gold and bank-notes which Pascal had
- left on the table. They had counted it, and found it to amount to
- the sum of thirty-six thousand three hundred and twenty francs;
- and it was the question of dividing it properly among the losers
- which was causing all this uproar. Among these guests, who
- belonged to the highest society--among these judges who had so
- summarily convicted an innocent man, and suggested the searching
- of a supposed sharper only a moment before--there were several who
- unblushingly misrepresented their losses. This was undeniable;
- for on adding the various amounts that were claimed together a
- grand total of ninety-one thousand francs was reached. Had this
- man who had just fled taken the difference between the two sums
- away with him? A difference amounting almost to fifty-five
- thousand francs? No, this was impossible; the supposition could
- not be entertained for a moment. However, the discussion might
- have taken an unfortunate turn, had it not been for the baron. In
- all matters relating to cards, his word was law. He quietly said,
- "It is all right;" and they submitted.
-
- Nevertheless, he absolutely refused to take his share of the
- money; and after the division, rubbing his hands as if he were
- delighted to see this disagreeable affair concluded, he exclaimed:
- "It is only six o'clock; we have still time for a few rounds."
-
- But the other guests, pale, disturbed, and secretly ashamed of
- themselves, were eager to depart, and in fact they were already
- hastening to the cloak-room. "At least play a game of ecarte,"
- cried the baron, "a simple game of ecarte, at twenty louis a
- point."
-
- But no one listened, and he reluctantly prepared to follow his
- departing friends, who bowed to Madame d'Argeles on the landing,
- as they filed by, M. de Coralth, who was among the last to retire,
- had already reached the staircase, and descended two or three
- steps, when Madame d'Argeles called to him. "Remain," said she; "I
- want to speak with you."
-
- "You will excuse me," he began; "I----"
-
- But she again bade him "remain" in such an imperious tone that he
- dared not resist. He reascended the stairs, very much after the
- manner of a man who is being dragged into a dentist's office, and
- followed Madame d'Argeles into a small boudoir at the end of the
- gambling-room. As soon as the door was closed and locked, the
- mistress of the house turned to her prisoner. "Now you will
- explain," said she. "It was you who brought M. Pascal Ferailleur
- here."
-
- "Alas! I know only too well that I ought to beg your forgiveness.
- However, this affair will cost me dear myself. It has already
- embroiled me in a difficulty with that fool of a Rochecote, with
- whom I shall have to fight in less than a couple of hours."
-
- "Where did you make his acquaintance?"
-
- "Whose--Rochecote's?"
-
- Madame d'Argeles's sempiternal smile had altogether disappeared.
- "I am speaking seriously," said she, with a threatening ring in
- her voice. "How did you happen to become acquainted with M.
- Ferailleur?"
-
- "That can be very easily explained. Seven or eight months ago I
- had need of an advocate's services, and he was recommended to me.
- He managed my case very cleverly, and we kept up the
- acquaintance."
-
- "What is his position?"
-
- M. de Coralth's features wore an expression of exceeding weariness
- as if he greatly longed to go to sleep. He had indeed installed
- himself in a large arm-chair, in a semi-recumbent position. "Upon
- my word, I don't know," he replied. "Pascal had always seemed to
- be the most irreproachable man in the world--a man you might call
- a philosopher! He lives in a retired part of the city, near the
- Pantheon, with his mother, who is a widow, a very respectable
- woman, always dressed in black. When she opened the door for me,
- on the occasion of my first visit, I thought some old family
- portrait had stepped down from its frame to receive me. I judge
- them to be in comfortable circumstances. Pascal has the
- reputation of being a remarkable man, and people supposed he would
- rise very high in his profession."
-
- "But now he is ruined; his career is finished."
-
- "Certainly! You can be quite sure that by this evening all Paris
- will know what occurred here last night."
-
- He paused, meeting Madame Argeles's look of withering scorn with a
- cleverly assumed air of astonishment. "You are a villain!
- Monsieur de Coralth," she said, indignantly.
-
- "I--and why?"
-
- "Because it was you who slipped those cards, which made M.
- Ferailleur win, into the pack; I saw you do it! And yielding to my
- entreaties, the young fellow was about to leave the house when
- you, intentionally, prevented him from saving himself. Oh! don't
- deny it."
-
- M. de Coralth rose in the coolest possible manner. "I deny
- nothing, my dear lady," he replied, "absolutely nothing. You and
- I understand each other."
-
- Confounded by his unblushing impudence, Madame d'Argeles remained
- speechless for a moment. "You confess it!" she cried, at last.
- "You dare to confess it! Were you not afraid that I might speak
- and state what I had seen?"
-
- He shrugged his shoulders. "No one would have believed you," he
- exclaimed.
-
- "Yes, I should have been believed, Monsieur de Coralth, for I
- could have given proofs. You must have forgotten that I know you,
- that your past life is no secret to me, that I know who you are,
- and what dishonored name you hide beneath your borrowed title! I
- could have told my guests that you are married--that you have
- abandoned your wife and child, leaving them to perish in want and
- misery--I could have told them where you obtain the thirty or
- forty thousand francs you spend each year. You must have
- forgotten that Rose told me everything, Monsieur--Paul!"
-
- She had struck the right place this time, and with such precision
- that M. de Coralth turned livid, and made a furious gesture, as if
- he were about to fell her to the ground. "Ah, take care!" he
- exclaimed; "take care!"
-
- But his rage speedily subsided, and with his usual indifferent
- manner, and in a bantering tone, he said: "Well, what of that? Do
- you fancy that the world doesn't already suspect what you could
- reveal? People have suspected me of being even worse than I am.
- When you proclaim on the housetops that I am an adventurer, folks
- will only laugh at you, and I shall be none the worse for it. A
- matter that would crush a dozen men like Pascal Ferailleur would
- not injure me in the least. I am accustomed to it. I must have
- luxury and enjoyment, everything that is pleasant and beautiful--
- and to procure all this, I do my very best. It is true that I
- don't derive my income from my estate in Brie; but I have plenty
- of money, and that is the essential thing. Besides, it is so
- difficult to earn a livelihood nowadays, and the love of luxury is
- so intense that no one knows at night what he may do--or, rather,
- what he won't do--the next day. And last, but not least, the
- people who ought to be despised are so numerous that contempt is
- an impossibility. A Parisian who happened to be so absurdly
- pretentious as to refuse to shake hands with such of his
- acquaintances as were not irreproachable characters, might walk
- for hours on the Boulevards without finding an occasion to take
- his hands out of his pockets."
-
- M. de Coralth talked well enough, and yet, in point of fact, all
- this was sheer bravado on his part. He knew better than any one
- else, on what a frail and uncertain basis his brilliant existence
- was established. Certainly, society does show great indulgence to
- people of doubtful reputation. It shuts its eyes and refuses to
- look or listen. But this is all the more reason why it should be
- pitiless when a person's guilt is positively established. Thus,
- although he assumed an air of insolent security, the "viscount"
- anxiously watched the effect of his words upon Madame d'Argeles.
- Fortunately for himself, he saw that she was abashed by his
- cynicism; and so he resumed: "Besides, as our friend, the baron,
- would say, we are wasting precious time in discussing improbable,
- and even impossible, suppositions. I was sufficiently well
- acquainted with your heart and your intelligence, my dear madame,
- to be sure that you would not speak a word to my disparagement."
-
- "Indeed! What prevented me from doing so?"
-
- "I did; or perhaps I ought rather to say, your own good sense,
- which closed your mouth when Monsieur Pascal entreated you to
- speak in his defence. I am entitled to considerable indulgence,
- madame, and a great deal ought to be forgiven me. My mother,
- unfortunately, was an honest woman, who did not furnish me with
- the means of gratifying every whim."
-
- Madame d'Argeles recoiled as if a serpent had suddenly crossed her
- path.
-
- "What do you mean?" she faltered.
-
- "You know as well as I do."
-
- "I don't understand you--explain yourself."
-
- With the impatient gesture of a man who finds himself compelled to
- answer an idle question, and assuming an air of hypocritical
- commiseration, he replied: "Well, since you insist upon it, I
- know, in Paris--in the Rue de Helder, to be more exact--a nice
- young fellow, whose lot I have often envied. He has wanted for
- nothing since the day he came into the world. At school, he had
- three times as much money as his richest playfellow. When his
- studies were finished, a tutor was provided--with his pockets full
- of gold--to conduct this favored youth to Italy, Egypt, and
- Greece. He is now studying law; and four times a year, with
- unvarying punctuality, he receives a letter from London containing
- five thousand francs. This is all the more remarkable, as this
- young man has neither a father nor a mother. He is alone in the
- world with his income of twenty thousand francs. I have heard him
- say, jestingly. that some good fairy must be watching over him;
- but I know that he believes himself to be the illegitimate son of
- some great English nobleman. Sometimes, when he has drunk a
- little too much, he talks of going in search of my lord, his
- father."
-
- The effect M. de Coralth had created by these words must have been
- extremely gratifying to him, for Madame d'Argeles had fallen back
- in her chair, almost fainting. "So, my dear madame," he
- continued, "if I ever had any reason to fancy that you intended
- causing me any trouble, I should go to this charming youth and
- say: 'My good fellow, you are strangely deceived. Your money
- doesn't come from the treasure-box of an English peer, but from a
- small gambling den with which I am very well acquainted, having
- often had occasion to swell its revenues with my franc-pieces.'
- And if he mourned his vanished dreams, I should tell him: 'You are
- wrong; for, if the great nobleman is lost, the good fairy remains.
- She is none other than your mother, a very worthy person, whose
- only object in life is your comfort and advancement.' And if he
- doubted my word, I should bring him to his mother's house some
- baccarat night; and there would be a scene of recognition worthy
- of Fargueil's genius."
-
- Any man but M. de Coralth would have had some compassion, for
- Madame d'Argeles was evidently suffering agony. "It is as I
- feared!" she moaned, in a scarcely audible voice.
-
- However, he heard her. "What!" he exclaimed in a tone of intense
- astonishment; "did you really doubt it? No; I can't believe it; it
- would be doing injustice to your intelligence and experience. Are
- people like ourselves obliged to talk in order to understand each
- other? Should I ever have ventured to do what I have done, in your
- house, if I had not known the secret of your maternal tenderness,
- delicacy of feeling, and devotion?"
-
- She was weeping; big tears were rolling down her face, tracing a
- broad furrow through the powder on her cheeks. "He knows
- everything!" she murmured; "he knows everything!"
-
- "By the merest chance, I assure you. As I don't like folks to
- meddle with my affairs, I never meddle with theirs. As I have
- just said, it was entirely the work of chance. One April
- afternoon I came to invite you to a drive in the Bois. I was
- ushered into this very room where we are sitting now, and found
- you writing. I said I would wait until you finished your letter;
- but some one called you, and you hastily left the room. How it
- was that I happened to approach your writing-table I cannot
- explain; but I did approach it, and read your unfinished letter.
- Upon my word it touched me deeply. I can give no better proof of
- the truth of my assertion than the fact that I can repeat it,
- almost word for word, even now. 'DEAR SIR,'--you wrote to your
- London correspondent--'I send you three thousand francs, in
- addition to the five thousand for the regular quarterly payment.
- Forward the money without delay. I fear the poor boy is greatly
- annoyed by his creditors. Yesterday I had the happiness of seeing
- him in the Rue de Helder, and I found him looking pale and
- careworn. When you send him this money, forward at the same time
- a letter of fatherly advice. It is true, he ought to work and win
- an honorable position for himself; but think of the dangers and
- temptation that beset him, alone and friendless, in this corrupt
- city.' There, my dear lady, your letter ended; but the name and
- address were given, and it was easy enough to understand it. You
- remember, perhaps, a little incident that occurred after your
- return. On perceiving that you had forgotten your letter, you
- turned pale and glanced at me. 'Have you read it, and do you
- understand it?' your eyes asked; while mine replied: 'Yes, but I
- shall be silent.'"
-
- "And I shall be silent too," said Madame d'Argeles.
-
- M. de Coralth took her hand and raised it to his lips. "I knew we
- should understand each other," he remarked, gravely. "I am not
- bad at heart, believe me; and if I had possessed money of my own,
- or a mother like you----"
-
- She averted her face, fearing perhaps that M. de Coralth might
- read her opinion of him in her eyes; but after a short pause she
- exclaimed beseechingly: "Now that I am your accomplice, let me
- entreat you to do all you possibly can to prevent last night's
- affair from being noised abroad."
-
- "Impossible."
-
- "If not for M. Ferailleur's sake, for the sake of his poor widowed
- mother."
-
- "Pascal must be put out of the way!"
-
- "Why do you say that? Do you hate him so much then? What has he
- done to you?"
-
- "To me, personally? Nothing--I even feel actual sympathy for him."
-
- Madame d'Argeles was confounded. "What!" she stammered; "it
- wasn't on your own account that you did this?"
-
- "Why, no."
-
- She sprang to her feet, and quivering with scorn and indignation,
- cried: "Ah! then the deed is even more infamous--even more
- cowardly!" But alarmed by the threatening gleam in M. de Coralth's
- eyes, she went no further.
-
- "A truce to these disagreeable truths," said he, coldly. "If we
- expressed our opinions of each other without reserve, in this
- world, we should soon come to hard words. Do you think I acted
- for my own pleasure? Suppose some one had seen me when I slipped
- the cards into the pack. If that had happened, I should have been
- ruined."
-
- "And you think that no one suspects you?"
-
- "No one. I lost more than a hundred louis myself. If Pascal
- belonged to our set, people might investigate the matter, perhaps;
- but to-morrow it will be forgotten."
-
- "And will he have no suspicions?"
-
- "He will have no proofs to offer, in any case."
-
- Madame d'Argeles seemed to resign herself to the inevitable. "I
- hope you will, at least, tell me on whose behalf you acted," she
- remarked.
-
- "Impossible," replied M. de Coralth. And, consulting his watch,
- he added, "But I am forgetting myself; I am forgetting that that
- idiot of a Rochecote is waiting for a sword-thrust. So go to
- sleep, my dear lady, and--till we meet again."
-
- She accompanied him so far as the landing. "It is quite certain
- that he is hastening to the house of M. Ferailleur's enemy," she
- thought. And, calling her confidential servant, "Quick, Job," she
- said; "follow M. de Coralth. I want to know where he is going.
- And, above all, take care that he doesn't see you."
-
-
-
- V.
-
-
- If through the length and breadth of Paris there is a really
- quiet, peaceful street, a refuge for the thoughtfully inclined, it
- is surely the broad Rue d'Ulm, which starts from the Place du
- Pantheon, and finishes abruptly at the Rue des Feuillantines. The
- shops are unassuming, and so few that one can easily count them.
- There is a wine-shop on the left-hand side, at the corner of the
- Rue de la Vieille-Estrapade; then a little toy-shop, then a
- washerwoman's and then a book-binder's establishment; while on the
- right-hand you will find the office of the Bulletin, with a
- locksmith's, a fruiterer's, and a baker's--that is all. Along the
- rest of the street run several spacious buildings, somewhat
- austere in appearance, though some of them are surrounded by large
- gardens. Here stands the Convent of the Sisters of the Cross,
- with the House of Our Lady of Adoration; while further on, near
- the Rue des Feuillantines, you find the Normal School, with the
- office of the General Omnibus Company hard by. At day-time you
- mostly meet grave and thoughtful faces in the street: priests,
- savants, professors, and clerks employed in the adjacent public
- libraries. The only stir is round about the omnibus office; and
- if occasional bursts of laughter are heard they are sure to come
- from the Normal School. After nightfall, a person might suppose
- himself to be at least a hundred leagues from the Boulevard
- Montmartre and the Opera-House, in some quiet old provincial town,
- at Poitiers, for instance. And it is only on listening
- attentively that you can catch even a faint echo of the tumult of
- Paris.
-
- It was in this street--"out of the world," as M. de Coralth
- expressed it--that Pascal Ferailleur resided with his mother.
- They occupied a second floor, a pretty suite of five rooms,
- looking out upon a garden. Their rent was high. Indeed, they
- paid fourteen hundred francs a year. But this was a burden which
- Pascal's profession imposed upon him; for he, of course, required
- a private office and a little waiting-room for his clients. With
- this exception, the mother and son led a straightened, simple
- life. Their only servant was a woman who came at seven o'clock to
- do the heavy work, went home again at twelve, and did not return
- again until the evening, to serve dinner. Madame Ferailleur
- attended to everything, not blushing in the least when she was
- compelled to open the door for some client. Besides, she could do
- this without the least risk of encountering disrespect, so
- imposing and dignified were her manners and her person.
-
- M. de Coralth had shown excellent judgment when he compared her to
- a family portrait. She was, in fact, exactly the person a painter
- would select to represent some old burgher's wife--a chaste and
- loving spouse, a devoted mother, an incomparable housewife--in one
- phrase, the faithful guardian of her husband's domestic happiness.
- She had just passed her fiftieth birthday, and looked fully her
- age. She had suffered. A close observer would have detected
- traces of weeping about her wrinkled eyelids; and the twinge of
- her lips was expressive of cruel anguish, heroically endured.
- Still, she was not severe, nor even too sedate; and the few
- friends who visited her were often really astonished at her wit.
- Besides, she was one of those women who have no history, and who
- find happiness in what others would call duty. Her life could be
- summed up in a single sentence: she had loved; she had mourned.
-
- The daughter of a petty clerk in one of the government
- departments, and merely dowered with a modest portion of three
- thousand francs, she had married a young man as poor as herself,
- but intelligent and industrious, whom she loved, and who adored
- her. This young man on marrying had sworn that he would make a
- fortune; not that he cared for money for himself, but he wished to
- provide his idol with every luxury. His love, enhancing his
- energy, no doubt hastened his success. Attached as a chemist to a
- large manufacturing establishment, his services soon became so
- invaluable to his employers that they gave him a considerable
- interest in the business. His name even obtained an honorable
- place among modern inventors; and we are indebted to him for the
- discovery of one of those brilliant colors that are extracted from
- common coal. At the end of ten years he had become a man of
- means. He loved his wife as fondly as on the day of their
- marriage, and he had a son--Pascal.
-
- Unfortunate fellow! One day, in the full sunshine of happiness and
- success, while he was engaged in a series of experiments for the
- purpose of obtaining a durable, and at the same time perfectly
- harmless, green, the chemicals exploded, smashing the mortar which
- he held, and wounding him horribly about the head and chest. A
- fortnight later he died, apparently calm, but in reality a prey to
- bitter regrets. It was a terrible blow for his poor wife, and the
- thought of her son alone reconciled her to life. Pascal was now
- everything to her--her present and her future; and she solemnly
- vowed that she would make a noble man of him. But alas!
- misfortunes never come singly. One of her husband's friends, who
- acted as administrator to the estate, took a contemptible
- advantage of her inexperience. She went to sleep one night
- possessing an income of fifteen thousand francs, but she awoke to
- find herself ruined--so completely ruined that she did not know
- where to obtain her dinner for that same evening. Had she been
- alone in the world, she would not have grieved much over the
- catastrophe, but she was sadly affected by the thought that her
- son's future was, perhaps, irrevocably blighted, and that, in any
- case, this disaster would condemn him to enter life through the
- cramped and gloomy portals of poverty.
-
- However, Madame Ferailleur was of too courageous and too proud a
- nature not to meet this danger with virile energy. She wasted no
- time in useless lamentations. She determined to repair the harm
- as far as it was in her power to repair it, resolving that her
- son's studies at the college of Louis-the-Great should not be
- interrupted, even if she had to labor with her own hands. And
- when she spoke of manual toil, it was no wild, unmeaning
- exaggeration born of sorrow and a passing flash of courage. She
- found employment as a day-servant and in sewing for large shops,
- until she at last obtained a situation as clerk in the
- establishment where her husband had been a partner. To obtain
- this she was obliged to acquire a knowledge of bookkeeping, but
- she was amply repaid for her trouble; for the situation was worth
- eighteen hundred francs a year, besides food and lodging. Then
- only did her efforts momentarily abate; she felt that her arduous
- task was drawing to a happy close. Pascal's expenses at school
- amounted to about nine hundred francs a year; she did not spend
- more than one hundred on herself; and thus she was able to save
- nearly eight hundred francs year.
-
- It must be admitted that she was admirably seconded in her efforts
- by her son. Pascal was only twelve years old when his mother said
- to him: "I have ruined you, my son. Nothing remains of the
- fortune which your father accumulated by dint of toil and self-
- sacrifice. You will be obliged to rely upon yourself, my boy.
- God grant that in years to come you will not reproach me for my
- imprudence."
-
- The child did not throw himself into her arms, but holding his
- head proudly erect, he answered: "I shall love you even more, dear
- mother, if that be possible. As for the fortune which my father
- left you, I will restore it to you again. I am no longer a
- school-boy, I am a man--as you shall see."
-
- One could not fail to perceive that he had taken a solemn vow.
- Although he possessed a remarkable mind, and the power of
- acquiring knowledge rapidly, he had, so far, worked indifferently,
- and then only by fits and starts, whenever examination time drew
- near. But from that day forward he did not lose a moment. His
- remarks, which were at once comical and touching, were those of
- the head of a family, deeply impressed by a sense of his own
- responsibility. "You see," he said to his companions, who were
- astonished at his sudden thirst for knowledge, "I can't afford to
- wear out my breeches on the college forms, now that my poor mother
- has to pay for them with her work."
-
- His good-humor was not in the least impaired by his resolve not to
- spend a single penny of his pocket money. With a tact unusual at
- his age, or indeed at any other, he bore his misfortunes simply
- and proudly, without any of the servile humility or sullen envy
- which so often accompanies poverty. For three years in succession
- the highest prizes at the competitions rewarded him for his
- efforts; but these successes, far from elating him unduly, seemed
- to afford him but little satisfaction. "This is only glory," he
- thought; and his great ambition was to support himself.
-
- He was soon able to do so, thanks to the kindness of the head-
- master, who offered him his tuition gratis if he would assist in
- superintending some of the lower classes. Thus one day when
- Madame Ferailleur presented herself as usual to make her quarterly
- payment, the steward replied: "You owe us nothing, madame;
- everything has been paid by your son."
-
- She almost fainted; after bearing adversity so bravely, this
- happiness proved too much for her. She could scarcely believe it.
- A long explanation was necessary to convince her of the truth, and
- then big tears, tears of joy this time, gushed from her eyes.
-
- In this way, Pascal Ferailleur paid all the expenses of his
- education until he had won his degree, arming himself so as to
- resist the trials that awaited him, and giving abundant proof of
- energy and ability. He wished to be a lawyer; and the law, he was
- forced to admit, is a profession which is almost beyond the reach
- of penniless young men. But there are no insurmountable obstacles
- for those whose hearts are really set on an object. On the very
- day that Pascal inscribed his name as a student at the law school,
- he entered an advocate's office as a clerk. His duties, which
- were extremely tiresome at first, had the two-fold advantage of
- familiarizing him with the forms of legal procedure, and of
- furnishing him with the means of prosecuting his studies. After
- he had been in the office six months, his employer agreed to pay
- him eight hundred francs a year, which were increased to fifteen
- hundred at the end of the second twelvemonth. In three years,
- when he had passed his final examination qualifying him to
- practise, his patron raised him to the position of head-clerk,
- with a salary of three thousand francs, which Pascal was moreover
- able to increase considerably by drawing up documents for busy
- attorneys, and assisting them in the preparation of their least
- important cases.
-
- It was certainly something wonderful to have achieved such a
- result in so short a time; but the most difficult part of his task
- had still to be accomplished. It was a perilous undertaking to
- abandon an assured position, to cast a certainty aside for the
- chances of life at the bar. It was a grave step--so grave,
- indeed, that Pascal hesitated for a long time. He was threatened
- with the danger that always threatens subordinates who are useful
- to their superiors. He felt that his employer, who was in the
- habit of relieving himself of his heaviest duties by intrusting
- them to him, would not be likely to forgive him for leaving. And
- on starting on his own account, he could ill afford to dispense
- with this lawyer's good-will. The patronage that could scarcely
- fail to follow him from an office where he had served for four
- years was the most substantial basis of his calculations for the
- future. Eventually he succeeded to his satisfaction, though not
- without some difficulty, and only by employing that supreme
- finesse which consists in absolute frankness.
-
- Before his office had been open a fortnight, he had seven or eight
- briefs waiting their turn upon his desk, and his first efforts
- were such as win the approving smile of old judges, and draw from
- them the prediction: "That young man will rise in his profession."
- He had not desired to make any display of his knowledge or talent,
- but merely to win the cases confided to him; and, unlike many
- beginners, he evinced no inclination to shine at his clients'
- expense. Rare modesty, and it served him well. His first ten
- months of practice brought him about eight thousand francs,
- absorbed in part by the expense attaching to a suitable office.
- The second year his fees increased by about one-half, and, feeling
- that his position was now assured, he insisted that his mother
- should resign her clerkship. He proved to her what was indeed the
- truth--that by superintending his establishment, she would save
- more than she made in her present position.
-
- From that time the mother and the son had good reason to believe
- that their heroic energy had conquered fate. Clients became so
- numerous that Pascal found it necessary to draw nearer the
- business centre, and his rent was consequently doubled; but the
- income he derived from his profession increased so rapidly that he
- soon had twelve thousand francs safely invested as a resource
- against any emergency. Madame Ferailleur now laid aside the
- mourning she had worn since her husband's death. She felt that
- she owed it to Pascal; and, besides, after believing there was no
- more happiness left for her on earth, her heart rejoiced at her
- son's success.
-
- Pascal was thus on the high-road to fame, when a complication in
- M. Ferdinand de Coralth's affair, brought that young nobleman to
- his office. The trouble arose from a little stock exchange
- operation which M. Ferdinand had engaged in--an affair which
- savored a trifle of knavery. It was strange, but Pascal rather
- took a liking to M. de Coralth. The honest worker felt interested
- in this dashing adventurer; he was almost dazzled by his brilliant
- vices, his wit, his hardihood, conceit, marvellous assurance, and
- careless impudence; and he studied this specimen of the Parisian
- flora with no little curiosity. M. de Coralth certainly did not
- confide the secret of his life and his resources to Pascal but the
- latter's intelligence should have told him to distrust a man who
- treated the requirements of morality even more than cavalierly,
- and who had infinitely more wants than scruples. However, the
- young advocate seemed to have no suspicions; they exchanged visits
- occasionally, and it was Pascal himself who one day requested the
- viscount to take him to one of those "Reunions in High Life" which
- the newspapers describe in such glowing terms.
-
- Madame Ferailleur was playing a game of whist with a party of old
- friends, according to her custom every Thursday evening, when M.
- de Coralth called to invite the young advocate to accompany him to
- Madame d'Argeles's reception. Pascal considered his friend's
- invitation exceedingly well timed. He dressed himself with more
- than ordinary care, and, as usual before going out, he approached
- his mother to kiss her and wish her good-bye. "How fine you are!"
- she said, smiling.
-
- "I am going to a soiree, my dear mother," he replied; "and it is
- probable that I shall not return until very late. So don't wait
- for me, I beg of you; promise me to go to bed at your usual hour."
-
- "Have you the night-key?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Very well, then; I will not wait for you. When you come in you
- will find your candle and some matches on the buffet in the ante-
- room. And wrap yourself up well, for it is very cold." Then
- raising her forehead to her son's lips, she gayly added: "A
- pleasant evening to you, my boy!"
-
- Faithful to her promise, Madame Ferailleur retired at the usual
- hour; but she could not sleep. She certainly had no cause for
- anxiety, and yet the thought that her son was not at home filled
- her heart with vague misgivings such as she had never previously
- felt under similar circumstances. Possibly it was because she did
- not know where Pascal was going. Possibly M. de Coralth was the
- cause of her strange disquietude, for she utterly disliked the
- viscount. Her woman's instinct warned her that there was
- something unwholesome about this young man's peculiar
- handsomeness, and that it was not safe to trust to his professions
- of friendship. At all events, she lay awake and heard the clock
- of the neighboring Normal School strike each successive hour--two,
- three, and four. "How late Pascal stays," she said to herself.
-
- And suddenly a fear more poignant even than her presentiments
- darted through her mind. She sprang out of bed and rushed to the
- window. She fancied she had heard a terrible cry of distress in
- the deserted street. At that very moment, the insulting word
- "thief" was being hurled in her son's face. But the street was
- silent, and deciding that she had been mistaken, she went back to
- bed laughing at herself for her fears; and at last she fell
- asleep. But judge of her terror in the morning when, on rising to
- let the servant in, she saw Pascal's candle still standing on the
- buffet. Was it possible that he had not returned? She hastened to
- his room--he was not there. And it was nearly eight o'clock.
-
- This was the first time that Pascal had spent a night from home
- without warning his mother in advance; and such an act on the part
- of a man of his character was sufficient proof that something
- extraordinary had occurred. In an instant all the dangers that
- lurk in Paris after nightfall flashed through her mind. She
- remembered all the stories she had read of men decoyed into dark
- corners, of men stabbed at the turn of some deserted street, or
- thrown into the Seine while crossing one of the bridges. What
- should she do? Her first impulse was to run to the Commissary of
- Police's office or to the house of Pascal's friend; but on the
- other hand, she dared not go out, for fear he might return in her
- absence. Thus, in an agony of suspense, she waited--counting the
- seconds by the quick throbbings of her temples, and straining her
- ears to catch the slightest sound.
-
- At last, about half-past eight o'clock, she heard a heavy,
- uncertain footfall on the stairs. She flew to the door and beheld
- her son. His clothes were torn and disordered; his cravat was
- missing, he wore no overcoat, and he was bareheaded. He looked
- very pale, and his teeth were chattering. His eyes stared
- vacantly, and his features had an almost idiotic expression.
- "Pascal, what has happened to you?" she asked.
-
- He trembled from head to foot as the sound of her voice suddenly
- roused him from his stupor. "Nothing," he stammered; "nothing at
- all." And as his mother pressed him with questions, he pushed her
- gently aside and went on to his room.
-
- "Poor child!" murmured Madame Ferailleur, at once grieved and
- reassured; "and he is always so temperate. Some one must have
- forced him to drink."
-
- She was entirely wrong in her surmise, and yet Pascal's sensations
- were exactly like those of an intoxicated man. How he had
- returned home, by what road, and what had happened on the way, he
- could not tell. He had found his way back mechanically, merely by
- force of habit--physical memory, as it might be called. He had a
- vague impression, however, that he had sat down for some time on a
- bench in the Champs-Elysees, that he had felt extremely cold, and
- that he had been accosted by a policeman, who threatened him with
- arrest if he did not move on. The last thing he could clearly
- recollect was rushing from Madame d'Argeles's house in the Rue de
- Berry. He knew that he had descended the staircase slowly and
- deliberately; that the servants in the vestibule had stood aside
- to allow him to pass; and that, while crossing the courtyard, he
- had thrown away the candelabrum with which he had defended
- himself. After that, he remembered nothing distinctly. On
- reaching the street he had been overcome by the fresh air, just as
- a carouser is overcome on emerging from a heated dining-room.
- Perhaps the champagne which he had drank had contributed to this
- cerebral disorder. At all events, even now, in his own room,
- seated in his own arm-chair, and surrounded by familiar objects,
- he did not succeed in regaining the possession of his faculties.
-
- He had barely strength enough to throw himself on to the bed, and
- in a moment he was sleeping with that heavy slumber which so often
- seizes hold of one on the occasion of a great crisis, and which
- has so frequently been observed among persons condemned to death,
- on the night preceding their execution. Four or five times his
- mother came to listen at the door. Once she entered, and seeing
- her son sleeping soundly, she could not repress a smile of
- satisfaction. "Poor Pascal!" she thought; "he can bear no excess
- but excess of work. Heavens! how surprised and mortified he will
- be when he awakes!"
-
- Alas! it was not a trifling mortification, but despair, which
- awaited the sleeper on his wakening; for the past, the present,
- and the future were presented simultaneously and visionlike to his
- imagination. Although he had scarcely regained the full use of
- his faculties, he was, to some extent, at least capable of
- reflection and deliberation, and he tried to look the situation
- bravely in the face. First, as to the past, he had not the shadow
- of a doubt. He realized that he had fallen into a vile trap, and
- the person who had laid it for him was undoubtedly M. de Coralth,
- who, seated at his right, had prepared the "hands" with which he
- had won. This was evident. It seemed equally proven that Madame
- d'Argeles knew the real culprit--possibly she had detected him in
- the act, possibly he had taken her into his confidence. But what
- he could not fathom was M. de Coralth's motive. What could have
- prompted the viscount to commit such an atrocious act? The
- incentive must have been very powerful, since he had naturally
- incurred the danger of detection and of being considered an
- accomplice at the least. And then what influence had closed
- Madame d'Argeles's lips? But after all, what was the use of these
- conjectures? It was an actual, unanswerable, and terrible fact
- that this infamous plot had been successful, and that Pascal was
- dishonored. He was honesty itself, and yet he was accused--more
- than that, CONVICTED--of cheating at cards! He was innocent, and
- yet he could furnish no proofs of his innocence. He knew the real
- culprit, and yet he could see no way of unmasking him or even of
- accusing him. Do what he would, this atrocious, incomprehensive
- calumny would crush him. The bar was closed against him; his
- career was ended. And the terrible conviction that there was no
- escape from the abyss into which he had fallen made his reason
- totter--he felt that he was incapable of deciding on the best
- course, and that he must have a friend's advice.
-
- Full of this idea, he hastily changed his clothes, and hurried
- from his room. His mother was watching for him--inclined to laugh
- at him a little; but a single glance warned her that her son was
- in terrible trouble, and that some dire misfortune had certainly
- befallen him. "Pascal, in heaven's name, what has happened?" she
- cried.
-
- "A slight difficulty--a mere trifle," he replied.
-
- "Where are you going?"
-
- "To the Palais de Justice." And such was really the case, for he
- hoped to meet his most intimate friend there.
-
- Contrary to his usual custom, he took the little staircase on the
- right, leading to the grand vestibule, where several lawyers were
- assembled, earnestly engaged in conversation. They were evidently
- astonished to see Pascal, and their conversation abruptly ceased
- on his approach. They assumed a grave look and turned away their
- heads in disgust. The unfortunate man at once realized the truth,
- and pressed his hand to his forehead, with a despairing gesture,
- as he murmured: "Already!--already!"
-
- However, he passed on, and not seeing his friend, he hurried to
- the little conference hall, where he found five of his fellow-
- advocates. On Pascal's entrance, two of them at once left the
- hall, while two of the others pretended to be very busily engaged
- in examining a brief which lay open on the table. The fifth, who
- did not move, was not the friend Pascal sought, but an old college
- comrade named Dartelle. Pascal walked straight toward him.
- "Well?" he asked.
-
- Dartelle handed him a Figaro, still damp from the printing-press,
- but crumpled and worn, as if it had already passed through more
- than a hundred hands. "Read!" said he.
-
- Pascal read as follows: "There was great sensation and a terrible
- scandal last night at the residence of Madame d'A----, a well-
- known star of the first magnitude. A score of gentlemen of high
- rank and immense wealth were enjoying a quiet game of baccarat,
- when it was observed that M. F---- was winning in a most
- extraordinary manner. He was watched and detected in the very act
- of dexterously slipping some cards into the pack he held. Crushed
- by the overpowering evidence against him, he allowed himself to be
- searched, and without much demur consented to refund the fruit of
- his knavery, to the amount of two thousand louis. The strangest
- thing connected with this scandal is, that M. F----, who is an
- advocate by profession, has always enjoyed an enviable reputation
- for integrity; and, unfortunately, this prank cannot be attributed
- to a momentary fit of madness, for the fact that he had provided
- himself with these cards in advance proves the act to have been
- premeditated. One of the persons present was especially
- displeased. This was the Viscount de C----, who had introduced M.
- F---- to Madame d'A----. Extremely annoyed by this contretemps,
- he took umbrage at an offensive remark made by M. de R----, and it
- was rumored that these gentlemen would cross swords at daybreak
- this morning.
-
-
- "LATER INTELLIGENCE.--We learn at the moment of going to press
- that an encounter has just taken place between M. de R---- and M.
- de C----. M. de R---- received a slight wound in the side, but
- his condition is sufficiently satisfactory not to alarm his
- friends."
-
-
- The paper slipped from Pascal's hand. His features were almost
- unrecognizable in his passion and despair. "It is an infamous
- lie!" he said, hoarsely. "I am innocent; I swear it upon my
- honor!" Dartelle averted his face, but not quickly enough to
- prevent Pascal from noticing the look of withering scorn in his
- eyes. Then, feeling that he was condemned, that his sentence was
- irrevocable, and that there was no longer any hope: "I know the
- only thing that remains for me to do!" he murmured.
-
- Dartelle turned, his eyes glistening with tears. He seized
- Pascal's hands and pressed them with sorrowful tenderness, as if
- taking leave of a friend who is about to die. "Courage!" he
- whispered.
-
- Pascal fled like a madman. "Yes," he repeated, as he rushed along
- the Boulevard Saint-Michel, "that is the only thing left me to
- do."
-
- When he reached home he entered his office, double-locked the
- door, and wrote two letters--one to his mother, the other to the
- president of the order of Advocates. After a moment's thought he
- began a third, but tore it into pieces before he had completed it.
- Then, without an instant's hesitation, and like a man who had
- fully decided upon his course, he took a revolver and a box of
- cartridges from a drawer in his desk. "Poor mother!" he murmured;
- "it will kill her--but my disgrace would kill her too. Better
- shorten the agony."
-
- He little fancied at that supreme moment that each of his
- gestures, each contraction of his features, were viewed by the
- mother whose name he faltered. Since her son had left her to go
- to the Palais de Justice, the poor woman had remained almost crazy
- with anxiety; and when she heard him return and lock himself in
- his office--a thing he had never done before--a fearful
- presentiment was aroused in her mind. Gliding into her son's
- bedroom, she at once approached the door communicating with his
- office. The upper part of this portal was of glass; it was
- possible to see what was occurring in the adjoining room. When
- Madame Ferailleur perceived Pascal seat himself at his desk and
- begin to write, she felt a trifle reassured, and almost thought of
- going away. But a vague dread, stronger than reason or will,
- riveted her to the spot. A few moments later, when she saw the
- revolver in her son's hand, she understood everything. Her blood
- froze in her veins; and yet she had sufficient self-control to
- repress the cry of terror which sprang to her lips. She realized
- that the danger was terrible, imminent, extreme. Her heart,
- rather than her bewildered reason, told her that her son's life
- hung on a single thread. The slightest sound, a word, a rap on
- the door might hasten the unfortunate man's deed.
-
- An inspiration from heaven came to the poor mother. Pascal had
- contented himself with locking the door leading to the ante-room.
- He had forgotten this one, or neglected it, not thinking that
- anybody would approach his office through his bedroom. But his
- mother perceived that this door opened toward her. So, turning
- the knob with the utmost caution, she flung it suddenly open, and
- reaching her son's side with a single bound, she clasped him
- closely in her arms. "Pascal, wretched boy! what would you do?"
-
- He was so surprised that his weapon fell from his hand, and he
- sank back almost fainting in his arm-chair. The idea of denying
- his intention never once occurred to him; besides, he was unable
- to articulate a word. But on his desk there lay a letter
- addressed to his mother which would speak for him.
-
- Madame Ferailleur took it, tore the envelope open, and read:
- "Forgive me--I'm about to die. It must be so. I cannot survive
- dishonor; and I am dishonored."
-
- "Dishonored!--you!" exclaimed the heartbroken mother. "My God!
- what does this mean? Speak. I implore you: tell me all--you
- must. I command you to do so. I command you!"
-
- He complied with this at once supplicating and imperious behest,
- and related in a despairing voice the events which had wrought his
- woe. He did not omit a single particular, but tried rather to
- exaggerate than palliate the horrors of his situation. Perhaps he
- found a strange satisfaction in proving to himself that there was
- no hope left; possibly he believed his mother would say: "Yes, you
- are right; and death is your only refuge!"
-
- As Madame Ferailleur listened, however, her eyes dilated with fear
- and horror, and she scarcely realized whether she were awake or in
- the midst of some frightful dream. For this was one of those
- unexpected catastrophes which are beyond the range of human
- foresight or even imagination, and which her mind could scarcely
- conceive or admit. But SHE did not doubt him, even though his
- friends had doubted him. Indeed, if he had himself told her that
- he was guilty of cheating at cards, she would have refused to
- believe him. When his story was ended, she exclaimed: "And you
- wished to kill yourself? Did you not think, senseless boy, that
- your death would give an appearance of truth to this vile
- calumny?"
-
- With a mother's wonderful, sublime instinct, she had found the
- most powerful reason that could be urged to induce Pascal to live.
- "Did you not feel, my son, that it showed a lack of courage on
- your part to brand yourself and your name with eternal infamy, in
- order to escape your present sufferings? This thought ought to
- have stayed your hand. An honest name is a sacred trust which no
- one has a right to abuse. Your father bequeathed it to you, pure
- and untarnished, and so you must preserve it. If others try to
- cover it with opprobrium, you must live to defend it."
-
- He lowered his head despondently, and in a tone of profound
- discouragement, he replied: "But what can I do? How can I escape
- from the web which has been woven around me with such fiendish
- cunning? If I had possessed my usual presence of mind at the
- moment of the accusation, I might have defended and justified
- myself, perhaps. But now the misfortune is irreparable. How can
- I unmask the traitor, and what proofs of his guilt can I cast in
- his face?"
-
- "All the same, you ought not to yield without a struggle,"
- interrupted Madame Ferailleur, sternly. "It is wrong to abandon a
- task because it is difficult; it must be accepted, and, even if
- one perish in the struggle, there is, at least, the satisfaction
- of feeling that one has not failed in duty."
-
- "But, mother----"
-
- "I must not keep the truth from you, Pascal! What! are you lacking
- in energy? Come, my son, rise and raise your head. I shall not
- let you fight alone. I will fight with you."
-
- Without speaking a word, Pascal caught hold of his mother's hands
- and pressed them to his lips. His face was wet with tears. His
- overstrained nerves relaxed under the soothing influence of
- maternal tenderness and devotion. Reason, too, had regained her
- ascendency. His mother's noble words found an echo in his own
- heart, and he now looked upon suicide as an act of madness and
- cowardice. Madame Ferailleur felt that the victory was assured,
- but this did not suffice; she wished to enlist Pascal in her
- plans. "It is evident," she resumed, "that M. de Coralth is the
- author of this abominable plot. But what could have been his
- object? Has he any reason to fear you, Pascal? Has he confided to
- you, or have you discovered, any secret that might ruin him if it
- were divulged?"
-
- "No, mother."
-
- "Then he must be the vile instrument of some even more despicable
- being. Reflect, my son. Have you wounded any of your friends?
- Are you sure that you are in nobody's way? Consider carefully.
- Your profession has its dangers; and those who adopt it must
- expect to make bitter enemies."
-
- Pascal trembled. It seemed to him as if a ray of light at last
- illumined the darkness--a dim and uncertain ray, it is true, but
- still a gleam of light.
-
- "Who knows!" he muttered; "who knows!"
-
- Madame Ferailleur reflected a few moments, and the nature of her
- reflections brought a flush to her brow. "This is one of those
- cases in which a mother should overstep reserve," said she. "If
- you had a mistress, my son----"
-
- "I have none," he answered, promptly. Then his own face flushed,
- and after an instant's hesitation, he added: "But I entertain the
- most profound and reverent love for a young girl, the most
- beautiful and chaste being on earth--a girl who, in intelligence
- and heart, is worthy of you, my own mother."
-
- Madame Ferailleur nodded her head gravely, as much as to say that
- she had expected to find a woman at the bottom of the mystery.
- "And who is this young girl?" she inquired. "What is her name?"
-
- "Marguerite."
-
- "Marguerite who?"
-
- Pascal's embarrassment increased. "She has no other name," he
- replied, hurriedly, "and she does not know her parents. She
- formerly lived in our street with her companion, Madame Leon, and
- an old female servant. It was there that I saw her for the first
- time. She now lives in the house of the Count de Chalusse, in the
- Rue de Courcelles."
-
- "In what capacity?"
-
- "The count has always taken care of her--she owes her education to
- him. He acts as her guardian; and although she has never spoken
- to me on the subject, I fancy that the Count de Chalusse is her
- father."
-
- "And does this girl love you, Pascal?"
-
- "I believe so, mother. She has promised me that she will have no
- other husband than myself."
-
- "And the count?"
-
- "He doesn't know--he doesn't even suspect anything about it. Day
- after day I have been trying to gather courage to tell you
- everything, and to ask you to go to the Count de Chalusse. But my
- position is so modest as yet. The count is immensely rich, and he
- intends to give Marguerite an enormous fortune--two millions, I
- believe----"
-
- Madame Ferailleur interrupted him with a gesture. "Look no
- further," she said; "you have found the explanation."
-
- Pascal sprang to his feet with crimson cheeks, flaming eyes, and
- quivering lips. "It may be so," he exclaimed; "it may be so! The
- count's immense fortune may have tempted some miserable scoundrel.
- Who knows but some one may have been watching Marguerite, and have
- discovered that I am an obstacle?"
-
- "Something told me that my suspicions were correct," said Madame
- Ferailleur. "I had no proofs, and yet I felt sure of it."
-
- Pascal was absorbed in thought. "And what a strange coincidence,"
- he eventually remarked. "Do you know, the last time I saw
- Marguerite, a week ago, she seemed so sad and anxious that I felt
- alarmed. I questioned her, but at first she would not answer.
- After a little while, however, as I insisted, she said: 'Ah, well,
- I fear the count is planning a marriage for me. M. de Chalusse
- has not said a word to me on the subject, but he has recently had
- several long conferences in private with a young man whose father
- rendered him a great service in former years. And this young man,
- whenever I meet him, looks at me in such a peculiar manner.'"
-
- "What is his name?" asked Madame Ferailleur.
-
- "I don't know--she didn't mention it; and her words so disturbed
- me that I did not think of asking. But she will tell me. This
- evening, if I don't succeed in obtaining an interview, I will
- write to her. If your suspicions are correct, mother, our secret
- is in the hands of three persons, and so it is a secret no longer----"
-
- He paused suddenly to listen. The noise of a spirited altercation
- between the servant and some visitor, came from the ante-room. "I
- tell you that he IS at home," said some one in a panting voice,
- "and I must see him and speak with him at once. It is such an
- urgent matter that I left a card-party just at the most critical
- moment to come here."
-
- "I assure you, monsieur, that M. Ferailleur has gone out."
-
- "Very well; I will wait for him, then. Take me to a room where I
- can sit down."
-
- Pascal turned pale, for he recognized the voice of the individual
- who had suggested searching him at Madame d'Argeles's house.
- Nevertheless, he opened the door; and a man, with a face like a
- full moon, and who was puffing and panting like a locomotive, came
- forward with the assurance of a person who thinks he may do
- anything he chooses by reason of his wealth. "Zounds!" he
- exclaimed. "I knew perfectly well that you were here. You don't
- recognize me, perhaps, my dear sir. I am Baron Trigault--I came
- to----"
-
- The words died away on his lips, and he became as embarrassed as
- if he had not possessed an income of eight hundred thousand francs
- a year. The fact is he had just perceived Madame Ferailleur. He
- bowed to her, and then, with a significant glance at Pascal he
- said: "I should like to speak to you in private, monsieur, in
- reference to a matter--"
-
- Great as was Pascal's astonishment, he showed none of it on his
- face. "You can speak in my mother's presence," he replied,
- coldly; "she knows everything."
-
- The baron's surprise found vent in a positive distortion of his
- features. "Ah!" said he, in three different tones; "ah! ah!" And
- as no one had offered him a seat, he approached an arm-chair and
- took possession of it, exclaiming, "You will allow me, I trust?
- Those stairs have put me in such a state!"
-
- In spite of his unwieldy appearance, this wealthy man was endowed
- with great natural shrewdness and an unusually active mind. And
- while he pretended to be engaged in recovering his breath he
- studied the room and its occupants. A revolver was lying on the
- floor beside a torn and crumpled letter, and tears were still
- glittering in the eyes of Madame Ferailleur and her son. A keen
- observer needed no further explanation of the scene.
-
- "I will not conceal from you, monsieur," began the baron, "that I
- have been led here by certain compunctions of conscience." And,
- misinterpreting a gesture which Pascal made, "I mean what I say,"
- he continued; "compunctions of conscience. I have them
- occasionally. Your departure this morning, after that deplorable
- scene, caused certain doubts and suspicions to arise in my mind;
- and I said to myself, 'We have been too hasty; perhaps this young
- man may not be guilty.'"
-
- "Monsieur!" interrupted Pascal, in a threatening tone.
-
- "Excuse me, allow me to finish, if you please. Reflection, I must
- confess, only confirmed this impression, and increased my doubts.
- 'The devil!' I said to myself again; 'if this young man is
- innocent, the culprit must be one of the habitues of Madame
- d'Argeles's house--that is to say, a man with whom I play twice a
- week, and whom I shall play with again next Monday.' And then I
- became uneasy, and here I am!" Was the absurd reason which the
- baron gave for his visit the true one? It was difficult to decide.
- "I came," he continued, "thinking that a look at your home would
- teach me something; and now I have seen it, I am ready to take my
- oath that you are the victim of a vile conspiracy."
-
- So saying he noisily blew his nose, but this did not prevent him
- from observing the quiet joy of Pascal and his mother. They were
- amazed. But although these words were calculated to make them
- feel intensely happy, they still looked at their visitor with
- distrust. It is not natural for a person to interest himself in
- other people's misfortunes, unless he has some special motive for
- doing so; and what could this singular man's object be?
-
- However, he did not seem in the slightest degree disconcerted by
- the glacial reserve with which his advances were received. "It is
- clear that you are in some one's way," he resumed, "and that this
- some one has invented this method of ruining you. There can be no
- question about it. The intention became manifest to my mind the
- moment I read the paragraph concerning you in the Figaro. Have
- you seen it? Yes? Well, what do you think of it? I would be
- willing to swear that it was written from notes furnished by your
- enemy. Moreover, the particulars are incorrect, and I am going to
- write a line of correction which I shall take to the office
- myself." So saying he transported his unwieldy person to Pascal's
- desk, and hastily wrote as follows:
-
-
- "MR. EDITOR,
-
- "As a witness of the scene that took place at Madame d'A----s's
- house last night, allow me to make an important correction. It is
- only too true that extra cards were introduced into the pack, but
- that they were introduced by M. F---- is not proven, since he was
- NOT SEEN to do it. I know that appearances are against him, but
- he nevertheless possesses my entire confidence and esteem.
- "BARON TRIGAULT."
-
-
- Meanwhile Madame Ferailleur and her son had exchanged significant
- glances. Their impressions were the same. This man could not be
- an enemy. When the baron had finished his letter, and had read it
- aloud, Pascal, who was deeply moved, exclaimed: "I do not know how
- to express my gratitude to you, monsieur; but if you really wish
- to serve me, pray don't send that note. It would cause you a
- great deal of trouble and annoyance, and I should none the less be
- obliged to relinquish the practice of my profession--besides, I am
- especially anxious to be forgotten for a time."
-
- "So be it--I understand you; you hope to discover the traitor, and
- you do not wish to put him on his guard. I approve of your
- prudence. But remember my words: if you ever need a helping hand,
- rap at my door; and when you hold the necessary proofs, I will
- furnish you with the means of rendering your justification even
- more startling than the affront." He prepared to go, but before
- crossing the threshold, he turned and said: "In future I shall
- watch the fingers of the player who sits on my left hand. And if
- I were in your place, I would obtain the notes from which that
- newspaper article was written. One never knows the benefit that
- may be derived, at a certain moment, from a page of writing."
-
- As he started off, Madame Ferailleur sprang from her chair.
- "Pascal," she exclaimed, "that man knows something, and your
- enemies are his; I read it in his eyes. He, too, distrusts M. de
- Coralth."
-
- "I understood him, mother, and my mind is made up. I must
- disappear. From this moment Pascal Ferailleur no longer exists."
-
-
-
- That same evening two large vans were standing outside Madame
- Ferailleur's house. She had sold her furniture without reserve,
- and was starting to join her son, who had already left for Le
- Havre, she said, in view of sailing to America.
-
-
-
- VI.
-
-
- "There are a number of patients waiting for me. I will drop in
- again about midnight. I still have several urgent visits to
- make." Thus had Dr. Jodon spoken to Mademoiselle Marguerite; and
- yet, when he left the Hotel de Chalusse, after assuring himself
- that Casimir would have some straw spread over the street, the
- doctor quietly walked home. The visits he had spoken of merely
- existed in his imagination; but it was a part of his role to
- appear to be overrun with patients. To tell the truth, the only
- patient he had had to attend to that week was a superannuated
- porter, living in the Rue de la Pepiniere, and whom he visited
- twice a day, for want of something better to do. The remainder of
- his time was spent in waiting for patients who never came, and in
- cursing the profession of medicine, which was ruined, he declared,
- by excessive competition, combined with certain rules of decorum
- which hampered young practitioners beyond endurance.
-
- However, if Dr. Jodon had devoted one-half of the time he spent in
- cursing and building castles in the air to study, he might have,
- perhaps, raised his little skill to the height of his immense
- ambition. But neither work nor patience formed any part of his
- system. He was a man of the present age, and wished to rise
- speedily with as little trouble as possible. A certain amount of
- display and assurance, a little luck, and a good deal of
- advertising would, in his opinion, suffice to bring about this
- result. It was with this conviction, indeed, that he had taken up
- his abode in the Rue de Courcelles, situated in one of the most
- aristocratic quarters of Paris. But so far, events had shown his
- theory to be incorrect. In spite of the greatest economy, very
- cleverly concealed, he had seen the little capital which
- constituted his entire fortune dwindle away. He had originally
- possessed but twenty thousand francs, a sum which in no wise
- corresponded with his lofty pretensions. He had paid his rent
- that very morning; and he could not close his eyes to the fact
- that the time was near at hand when he would be unable to pay it.
- What should he do then? When he thought of this contingency, and
- it was a subject that filled his mind to the exclusion of all
- other matters, he felt the fires of wrath and hatred kindle in his
- soul. He utterly refused to regard himself as the cause of his
- own misfortunes; on the contrary, following the example of many
- other disappointed individuals, he railed at mankind and
- everything in general--at circumstances, envious acquaintances,
- and enemies, whom he certainly did not possess.
-
- At times he was capable of doing almost anything to gratify his
- lust for gold, for the privations which he had endured so long
- were like oil cast upon the flame of covetousness which was ever
- burning in his breast. In calmer moments he asked himself at what
- other door he could knock, in view of hastening the arrival of
- Fortune. Sometimes he thought of turning dentist, or of trying to
- find some capitalist who would join him in manufacturing one of
- those patent medicines which are warranted to yield their
- promoters a hundred thousand francs a year. On other occasions he
- dreamed of establishing a monster pharmacy, or of opening a
- private hospital. But money was needed to carry out any one of
- these plans, and he had no money. There was the rub. However the
- time was fast approaching when he must decide upon his course; he
- could not possibly hold out much longer.
-
- His third year of practice in the Rue de Courcelles had not
- yielded him enough to pay his servant's wages. For he had a
- servant, of course. He had a valet for the same reason as he had
- a suite of rooms of a superficially sumptuous aspect. Faithful to
- his system, or, rather, to his master's system, he had sacrificed
- everything to show. The display of gilding in his apartments was
- such as to make a man of taste shut his eyes to escape the sight
- of it. There were gorgeous carpets and hangings, frescoed
- ceilings, spurious objects of virtu, and pier-tables loaded with
- ornaments. An unsophisticated youth from the country would
- certainly have been dazzled; but it would not do to examine these
- things too closely. There was more cotton than silk in the velvet
- covering of the furniture; and if various statuettes placed on
- brackets at a certain height had been closely inspected, it would
- have been found that they were of mere plaster, hidden beneath a
- coating of green paint, sprinkled with copper filings. This
- plaster, playing the part of bronze, was in perfect keeping with
- the man, his system, and the present age.
-
- When the doctor reached home, his first question to his servant
- was as usual: "Has any one called?"
-
- "No one."
-
- The doctor sighed, and passing through his superb waiting-room, he
- entered his consulting sanctum, and seated himself in the chimney
- corner beside an infinitesimal fire. He was even more thoughtful
- than usual. The scene which he had just witnessed at the Count de
- Chalusse's house recurred to his mind, and he turned it over and
- over again in his brain, striving to find some way by which he
- might derive an advantage from the mystery. For he was more than
- ever convinced that there was a mystery. He had been engrossed in
- these thoughts for some time, when his meditations were disturbed
- by a ring at the bell. Who could be calling at this hour?
-
- The question was answered by his servant, who appeared and
- informed him that a lady, who was in a great hurry, was waiting in
- the reception-room. "Very well," was his reply; "but it is best
- to let her wait a few moments." For he had at least this merit: he
- never deviated from his system. Under no circumstances whatever
- would he have admitted a patient immediately; he wished him to
- wait so that he might have an opportunity of reflecting on the
- advantages of consulting a physician whose time was constantly
- occupied.
-
- However, when ten minutes or so had elapsed, he opened the door,
- and a tall lady came quickly forward, throwing back the veil which
- had concealed her face. She must have been over forty-five; and
- if she had ever been handsome, there was nothing to indicate it
- now. She had brown hair, thickly sprinkled with gray, but very
- coarse and abundant, and growing low over her forehead; her nose
- was broad and flat; her lips were thick, and her eyes were dull
- and expressionless. However, her manners were gentle and rather
- melancholy; and one would have judged her to be somewhat of a
- devotee. Still for the time being she seemed greatly agitated.
- She seated herself at the doctor's invitation; and without waiting
- for him to ask any questions: "I ought to tell you at once,
- monsieur," she began, "that I am the Count de Chalusse's house-
- keeper."
-
- In spite of his self-control, the doctor bounded from his chair.
- "Madame Leon?" he asked, in a tone of intense surprise.
-
- She bowed, compressing her thick lips. "I am known by that name--
- yes, monsieur. But it is only my Christian name. The one I have
- a right to bear would not accord with my present position.
- Reverses of fortune are not rare in these days; and were it not
- for the consoling influences of religion, one would not have
- strength to endure them."
-
- The physician was greatly puzzled. "What can she want of me?" he
- thought.
-
- Meanwhile, she had resumed speaking: "I was much reduced in
- circumstances--at the end of my resources, indeed--when M. de
- Chalusse--a family friend--requested me to act as companion to a
- young girl in whom he was interested--Mademoiselle Marguerite. I
- accepted the position; and I thank God every day that I did so,
- for I feel a mother's affection for this young girl, and she loves
- me as fondly as if she were my own daughter." In support of her
- assertion, she drew a handkerchief from her pocket, and succeeded
- in forcing a few tears to her eyes. "Under these circumstances,
- doctor," she continued, "you cannot fail to understand that the
- interests of my dearly beloved Marguerite bring me to you. I was
- shut up in my own room when M. de Chalusse was brought home, and I
- did not hear of his illness until after your departure. Perhaps
- you might say that I ought to have waited until your next visit;
- but I had not sufficient patience to do so. One cannot submit
- without a struggle to the torture of suspense, when the future of
- a beloved daughter is at stake. So here I am." She paused to take
- breath, and then added, "I have come, monsieur, to ask you to tell
- me the exact truth respecting the count's condition."
-
- The doctor was expecting something very different, but
- nevertheless he replied with all due gravity and self-possession.
- "It is my painful duty to tell you, madame, that there is scarcely
- any hope, and that I expect a fatal termination within twenty-four
- hours, unless the patient should regain consciousness."
-
- The housekeeper turned pale. "Then all is lost," she faltered,
- "all is lost!" And unable to articulate another word she rose to
- her feet, bowed, and abruptly left the room.
-
- Before the grate, with his mouth half open, and his right arm
- extended in an interrupted gesture, the doctor stood speechless
- and disconcerted. It was only when the outer door closed with a
- bang that he seemed restored to consciousness. And as he heard
- the noise he sprang forward as if to recall his visitor. "Ah!" he
- exclaimed, with an oath, "the miserable old woman was mocking me!"
- And urged on by a wild, irrational impulse, he caught up his hat
- and darted out in pursuit. Madame Leon was considerably in
- advance of him, and was walking very quickly; still, by quickening
- his pace, he might have overtaken her. However, he did not join
- her, for he scarcely knew what excuse to offer for such a strange
- proceeding; he contented himself by cautiously following her at a
- little distance. Suddenly she stopped short. It was in front of
- a tobacconist's shop, where there was a post-office letter-box.
- The shop was closed, but the box was there with its little slit
- for letters to be dropped into it. Madame Leon evidently
- hesitated. She paused, as one always does before venturing upon a
- decisive act, from which there will be no return, whatever may be
- the consequences. An observer never remains twenty minutes before
- a letter-box without witnessing this pantomime so expressive of
- irresolution. At last, however, she shrugged her shoulders with a
- gesture which eloquently expressed the result of her
- deliberations; and drawing a letter from her bosom, she dropped it
- into the box, and then hastened on more quickly than before.
-
- "There is not the slightest doubt," thought the doctor, "that
- letter had been prepared in advance, and whether it should be sent
- or not depended on the answer I gave."
-
- We have already said that M. Jodon was not a wealthy man, and yet
- he would willingly have given a hundred-franc note to have known
- the contents of this letter, or even the name of the person to
- whom it was addressed. But his chase was almost ended. Madame
- Leon had reached the Hotel de Chalusse, and now went in. Should
- he follow her? His curiosity was torturing him to such a degree
- that he had an idea of doing so; and it required an heroic effort
- of will to resist the temptation successfully. But a gleam of
- common sense warned him that this would be a terrible blunder.
- Once already during the evening his conduct had attracted
- attention; and he began to realize that there was a better way of
- winning confidence than by intruding almost forcibly into other
- people's affairs. Accordingly he thoughtfully retraced his steps,
- feeling intensely disgusted with himself. "What a fool I am!" he
- grumbled. "If I had kept the old woman in suspense, instead of
- blurting out the truth, I might have learned the real object of
- her visit; for she had an object. But what was it?"
-
- The doctor spent the two hours that remained to him before making
- his second visit in trying to discover it. But, although nothing
- prevented him from exploring the boundless fields of improbable
- possibilities, he could think of nothing satisfactory. There was
- only one certain point, that Madame Leon and Mademoiselle
- Marguerite were equally interested in the question as to whether
- the count would regain consciousness or not. As to their
- interests in the matter, the doctor felt confident that they were
- not identical; he was persuaded that a secret enmity existed
- between them, and that the housekeeper had visited him without
- Mademoiselle Marguerite's knowledge. For he was not deceived by
- Madame Leon, or by her pretended devotion to Mademoiselle
- Marguerite. Her manner, her smooth words, her tone of pious
- resignation, and the allusion to the grand name she had the right
- to bear, were all calculated to impose upon one; but she had been
- too much disconcerted toward the last to remember her part. Dr.
- Jodon lacked the courage to return to his sumptuous rooms, and it
- was in a little cafe that he thus reflected upon the situation,
- while drinking some execrable beer brewed in Paris out of a glass
- manufactured in Bavaria.
-
- At last midnight sounded--the hour had come. Still the doctor did
- not move. Having been obliged to wait himself, he wished, in
- revenge, to make the others wait, and it was not until the cafe
- closed that he again walked up the Rue de Courcelles. Madame Leon
- had left the gate ajar, and the doctor had no difficulty in making
- his way into the courtyard. As in the earlier part of the
- evening, the servants were assembled in the concierge's lodge; but
- the careless gayety which shone upon their faces a few hours
- before had given place to evident anxiety respecting their future
- prospects. Through the windows of the lodge they could be seen
- standing round the two choice spirits of the household, M.
- Bourigeau, the concierge, and M. Casimir, the valet, who were
- engaged in earnest conversation. And if the doctor had listened,
- he would have heard such words as "wages," and "legacies," and
- "remuneration for faithful service," and "annuities" repeated over
- and over again.
-
- But M. Jodon did not listen. Thinking he should find some servant
- inside, he entered the house. However, there was nobody to
- announce his presence; the door closed noiselessly behind him, the
- heavy carpet which covered the marble steps stifled the sound of
- his footsteps, and he ascended the first flight without seeing any
- one. The door opening into the count's room was open, the room
- itself being brilliantly lighted by a large fire, and a lamp which
- stood on a corner of the mantel-shelf. Instinctively the doctor
- paused and looked in. There had been no change since his first
- visit. The count was still lying motionless on his pillows; his
- face was swollen, his eyelids were closed, but he still breathed,
- as was shown by the regular movement of the covering over his
- chest. Madame Leon and Mademoiselle Marguerite were his only
- attendants. The housekeeper, who sat back a little in the shade,
- was half reclining in an arm-chair with her hands clasped in her
- lap, her lips firmly compressed, and her eyes fixed upon vacancy.
- Pale but calm, and more imposing and more beautiful than ever,
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was kneeling beside the bed, eagerly
- watching for some sign of renewed life and intelligence on the
- count's face.
-
- A little ashamed of his indiscretion, the doctor retreated seven
- or eight steps down the stairs, and then ascended them again,
- coughing slightly, so as to announce his approach. This time he
- was heard. for Mademoiselle Marguerite came to the door to meet
- him. "Well?" he inquired.
-
- "Alas!"
-
- He advanced toward the bed, but before he had time to examine his
- patient Mademoiselle Marguerite handed him a scrap of paper. "The
- physician who usually attends M. de Chalusse has been here in your
- absence, monsieur," said she. "This is his prescription, and we
- have already administered a few drops of the potion."
-
- M. Jodon, who was expecting this blow, bowed coldly.
-
- "I must add," continued Mademoiselle Marguerite, "that the doctor
- approved of all that had been done; and I beg you will unite your
- skill with his in treating the case."
-
- Unfortunately all the medical skill of the faculty would have
- availed nothing here. After another examination, Dr. Jodon
- declared that it would be necessary to wait for the action of
- nature, but that he must be informed of the slightest change in
- the sick man's condition. "And I will tell my servant to wake me
- at once if I am sent for," he added.
-
- He was already leaving the room, when Madame Leon barred his
- passage. "Isn't it true, doctor, that one attentive person would
- suffice to watch over the count?" she asked.
-
- "Most assuredly," he answered.
-
- The housekeeper turned toward Mademoiselle Marguerite. "Ah, you
- see, my dear young lady," she said, "what did I tell you? Listen
- to me; take a little rest. Watching is not suitable work for one
- of your age----"
-
- "It is useless to insist," interrupted the young girl, resolutely.
- "I shall remain here. I shall watch over him myself."
-
- The housekeeper made no reply; but it seemed to the doctor that
- the two women exchanged singular glances. "The devil!" he
- muttered, as he took his departure; "one might think that they
- distrusted each other!"
-
- Perhaps he was right; but at all events he had scarcely left the
- house before Madame Leon again urged her dear young lady to take a
- few hours' rest. "What can you fear?" she insisted, in her
- wheedling voice. "Sha'n't I be here? Do you suppose your old Leon
- capable of losing herself in sleep, when your future depends upon
- a word from that poor man lying there?"
-
- "Pray, cease."
-
- "Ah, no! my dear young lady; my love for you compels me "
-
- "Oh, enough!" interrupted Mademoiselle Marguerite; "enough, Leon!"
-
- Her tone was so determined that the housekeeper was compelled to
- yield; but not without a deep sigh, not without an imploring
- glance to Heaven, as if calling upon Providence to witness the
- purity of her motives and the usefulness of her praiseworthy
- efforts. "At least, my dear lady, wrap yourself up warmly. Shall
- I go and bring you your heavy travelling shawl?"
-
- "Thanks, my dear Leon--Annette will bring it."
-
- "Then, pray, send for it. But we are not going to watch alone?
- What should we do if we needed anything?"
-
- "I will call," replied Marguerite.
-
- This was unnecessary, for Dr. Jodon's departure from the house had
- put an abrupt termination to the servants' conference; and they
- were now assembled on the landing, anxious and breathless, and
- peering eagerly into the sick-room.
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite went toward them. "Madame Leon and myself
- will remain with the count," she said. "Annette"--this was the
- woman whom she liked best of all the servants "Casimir and a
- footman will spend the night in the little side salon. The others
- may retire."
-
- Her orders were obeyed. Two o'clock sounded from the church-tower
- near by, and then the solemn and terrible silence was only broken
- by the hard breathing of the unconscious man and the implacable
- ticktack of the clock on the mantel-shelf, numbering the seconds
- which were left for him to live. From the streets outside, not a
- sound reached this princely abode, which stood between a vast
- courtyard and a garden as large as a park. Moreover, the straw
- which had been spread over the paving-stones effectually deadened
- the rumble of the few vehicles that passed. Enveloped in a soft,
- warm shawl, Madame Leon had again taken possession of her arm-
- chair, and while she pretended to be reading a prayer-book, she
- kept a close watch over her dear young lady, as if she were
- striving to discover her in-most thoughts. Mademoiselle
- Marguerite did not suspect this affectionate espionage. Besides,
- what would it have mattered to her? She had rolled a low arm-chair
- near the bedside, seated herself in it, and her eyes were fixed
- upon M. de Chalusse. Two or three times she started violently,
- and once even she said to Madame Leon: "Come--come and see!"
-
- It seemed to her that there was a faint change in the patient's
- face; but it was only a fancy--she had been deceived by the
- shadows that played about the room, caused by the capricious flame
- in the grate. The hours were creeping on, and the housekeeper,
- wearying at last of her fruitless watch, dropped asleep; her head
- fell forward on to her breast, her prayer-book slipped from her
- hands, and finally she began to snore. But Mademoiselle
- Marguerite did not perceive this, absorbed as she was in thoughts
- which, by reason of their very profundity, had ceased to be
- sorrowful. Perhaps she felt she was keeping a last vigil over her
- happiness, and that with the final breath of this dying man all
- her girlhood's dreams and all her dearest hopes would take flight
- for evermore. Undoubtedly her thoughts flew to the man to whom
- she had promised her life--to Pascal, to the unfortunate fellow
- whose honor was being stolen from him at that very moment, in a
- fashionable gaming-house.
-
- About five o'clock the air became so close that she felt a sudden
- faintness, and opened the window to obtain a breath of fresh air.
- The noise aroused Madame Leon from her slumbers. She rose,
- yawned, and rather sullenly declared that she felt very queer, and
- would certainly fall ill if she did not take some refreshment. It
- became necessary to summon M. Casimir, who brought her a glass of
- Madeira and some biscuits. "Now I feel better," she murmured,
- after her repast. "My excessive sensibility will be the death of
- me." And so saying, she dropped asleep again.
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite had meanwhile returned to her seat; but
- her thoughts gradually became confused, her eyelids grew heavy,
- and although she struggled, she at last fell asleep in her turn,
- with her head resting on the count's bed. It was daylight when a
- strange and terrible shock awoke her. It seemed to her as if an
- icy hand, some dead person's hand, was gently stroking her head,
- and tenderly caressing her hair. She at once sprang to her feet.
- The sick man had regained consciousness; his eyes were open and
- his right arm was moving. Mademoiselle Marguerite darted to the
- bell-rope and pulled it violently, and as a servant appeared in
- answer to the summons, she cried: "Run for the physician who lives
- near here--quick!--and tell him that the count is conscious."
-
- In an instant, almost, the sick-room was full of servants, but the
- girl did not perceive it. She had approached M. de Chalusse, and
- taking his hand, she tenderly asked: "You hear me, do you not,
- monsieur? Do you understand me?"
-
- His lips moved; but only a hollow, rattling sound, which was
- absolutely unintelligible, came from his throat. Still, he
- understood her; as it was easy to see by his gestures--despairing
- and painful ones, for paralysis had not released its hold on its
- victim, and it was only with great difficulty that he could
- slightly move his right arm. He evidently desired something. But
- what?
-
- They mentioned the different articles in the room--everything
- indeed that they could think of. But in vain, until the
- housekeeper suddenly exclaimed: "He wishes to write."
-
- That was, indeed, what he desired. With the hand that was
- comparatively free, with the hoarse rattle that was his only
- voice, M. de Chalusse answered, "Yes, yes!" and his eyes even
- turned to Madame Leon with an expression of joy and gratitude.
- They raised him on his pillows, and brought him a small writing-
- desk, with some paper, and a pen that had been dipped in ink. But
- like those around him, he had himself over-estimated his strength;
- if he could move his hand, he could not CONTROL its movements.
- After a terrible effort and intense suffering, however, he
- succeeded in tracing a few words, the meaning of which it was
- impossible to understand. It was only with the greatest
- difficulty that these words could be deciphered--"My entire
- fortune--give--friends--against----" This signified nothing.
-
- In despair, he dropped the pen, and his glance and his hand turned
- to that part of the room opposite his bed. "Monsieur means his
- escritoire, perhaps?"
-
- "Yes, yes," the sick man hoarsely answered.
-
- "Perhaps the count wishes that it should be opened?"
-
- "Yes, yes!" was the reply again.
-
- "My God!" exclaimed Mademoiselle Marguerite, with a gesture of
- despair; "what have I done? I have broken the key. I feared the
- responsibility which would fall upon us all."
-
- The expression of the count's face had become absolutely
- frightful. It indicated utter discouragement, the most bitter
- suffering, the most horrible despair. His soul was writhing in a
- body from which life had fled. Intelligence, mind, and will were
- fast bound in a corpse which they could not electrify. The
- consciousness of his own powerlessness caused him a paroxysm of
- frantic rage; his hands clinched, the veins in his throat swelled,
- his eyes almost started from their sockets, and in a harsh, shrill
- voice that had nothing human in it, he exclaimed: "Marguerite!--
- despoiled!--take care!--your mother!" And this was all--it was the
- supreme effort that broke the last link that bound the soul to
- earth.
-
- "A priest!" cried Madame Leon!" A priest! In the name of Heaven,
- go for a priest!"
-
- "Rather for a notary," suggested M. Casimir. "You see he wishes
- to make a will."
-
- But at that moment the physician entered, pale and breathless. He
- walked straight to the bedside, glanced at the motionless form,
- and solemnly exclaimed: "The Count de Chalusse is dead!"
-
- There was a moment's stupor--the stupor which always follows
- death, especially when death comes suddenly and unexpectedly. A
- feeling of mingled wonder, selfishness, and fear pervaded the
- group of servants. "Yes, it is over!" muttered the doctor; "it is
- all over!"
-
- And as he was familiar with these painful scenes, and had lost
- none of his self-possession, he furtively studied Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's features and attitude. She seemed thunderstruck.
- With dry, fixed eyes and contracted features, she stood rooted to
- her place, gazing at the lifeless form as if she were expecting
- some miracle--as if she still hoped to hear those rigid lips
- reveal the secret which he had tried in vain to disclose, and
- which he had carried with him to the grave.
-
- The physician was the only person who observed this. The other
- occupants of the room were exchanging looks of distress. Some of
- the women had fallen upon their knees, and were sobbing and
- praying in the same breath. But Madame Leon's sobs could be heard
- above the rest. They were at first inarticulate moans, but
- suddenly she sprang toward Mademoiselle Marguerite, and clasping
- her in her arms, she cried: "What a misfortune! My dearest child,
- what a loss!" Utterly incapable of uttering a word, the poor girl
- tried to free herself from this close embrace, but the housekeeper
- would not be repulsed, and continued: "Weep, my dear young lady,
- weep! Do not refuse to give vent to your sorrow."
-
- She herself displayed so little self-control that the physician
- reprimanded her with considerable severity, whereat her emotion
- increased, and with her handkerchief pressed to her eyes, she
- sobbed: "Yes, doctor, yes; you are right; I ought to moderate my
- grief. But pray, doctor, remove my beloved Marguerite from this
- scene, which is too terrible for her young and tender heart.
- Persuade her to retire to her own room, so that she may ask God
- for strength to bear the misfortune which has befallen her."
-
- The poor girl had certainly no intention of leaving the room, but
- before she could say so, M. Casimir stepped forward. "I think,"
- he dryly observed, "that mademoiselle had better remain here."
-
- "Eh?" said Madame Leon, looking up suddenly. "And why, if you
- please?"
-
- "Because--because----"
-
- Anger had dried the housekeeper's tears. "What do you mean?" she
- asked. "Do you pretend to prevent mademoiselle from doing as she
- chooses in her own house?"
-
- M. Casimir gave vent to a contemptuous whistle, which, twenty-four
- hours earlier, would have been punished with a heavy blow from the
- man who was now lying there--dead. "Her own house!" he answered;
- "her own house! Yesterday I shouldn't have denied it; but to-day
- it's quite another thing. Is she a relative? No, she isn't. What
- are you talking about, then? We are all equals here."
-
- He spoke so impudently that even the doctor felt indignant.
- "Scoundrel!" said he.
-
- But the valet turned toward him with an air which proved that he
- was well acquainted with the doctor's servant, and, consequently,
- with all the secrets of the master's life. "Call your own valet a
- scoundrel, if you choose," he retorted, "but not me. Your duties
- here are over, aren't they? So leave us to manage our own affairs.
- Thank heaven, I know what I'm talking about. Everybody knows that
- caution must be exercised in a dead man's house, especially when
- that house is full of money, and when, instead of relatives, there
- are--persons who--who are there nobody knows how or why. In case
- any valuables were missed, who would be accused of taking them?
- Why, the poor servants, of course. Ah, they have broad shoulders!
- Their trunks would be searched; and even if nothing were found,
- they would be sent to prison all the same. In the meantime other
- people would escape with the booty. No, Lisette! No one will stir
- from this room until the arrival of the justice----"
-
- Madame Leon was bursting with rage. "All right!" she interrupted;
- "I'm going to send for the count's particular friend, General----"
-
- "I don't care a fig for your general."
-
- "Wretch!"
-
- It was Mademoiselle Marguerite who put an end to this indecent
- dispute. Its increasing violence had aroused her from her stupor.
- Casimir's impudence brought a flush to her forehead, and stepping
- forward with haughty resolution, she exclaimed: "You forget that
- one never raises one's voice in the chamber of death." Her words
- were so true, and her manner so majestic, that M. Casimir was
- silenced. Then, pointing to the door, she coldly added: "Go for
- the justice of the peace, and don't set foot here again, except in
- his company."
-
- He bowed, stammered an unintelligible apology, and left the room.
- "She always gets the best of me," he growled, as he went
- downstairs. "But seals shall be put on everything."
-
- When he entered the porter's lodge, M. Bourigeau was just getting
- up, having slept all night, while his wife watched. "Quick,"
- ordered M. Casimir; "make haste and finish dressing, and run for
- the justice of the peace--we must have him here at once.
- Everything must be done regularly and in order, upstairs."
-
- The concierge was in despair. "Heavens!" he exclaimed; "so the
- master's dead! What a misfortune!"
-
- "You may well say so; and this is the second time such a thing has
- happened to me. I remember now what a shrewd fellow named Chupin
- once said to me. 'If I were a servant,' he remarked, 'before
- entering a man's service, I'd make him insure his life for my
- benefit in one of those new-fangled companies, so that I might
- step into a handsome fortune if he took it into his head to die.'
- But make haste, Bourigeau."
-
- "That's a famous idea, but scarcely practicable," growled the
- concierge.
-
- "I don't know whether it is or not. But at all events I'm
- terribly annoyed. The count was giving me enormous wages, and I
- had got him nicely into my ways. Well, after all, I shall only
- have to begin again!"
-
- M. Bourigeau had not yet attained to the heights of such serene
- philosophy, and as he buttoned his overcoat, he groaned: "Ah!
- you're not situated as I am, Casimir. You've only yourself to
- look out for. I have my furniture; and if I don't succeed in
- finding a position where I can have two rooms, I shall be obliged
- to sell part of it. What a blessed nuisance!"
-
- As soon as he was dressed he started off on his mission; and M.
- Casimir, who dared not return to the house, began walking slowly
- to and fro in front of the lodge. He had made some thirty turns
- or so, and was beginning to feel impatient, when he saw Victor
- Chupin approaching. "You are always on hand at the right moment,"
- remarked M. Casimir. "It's all over!"
-
- Chupin turned eagerly. "Then our bargain holds?" he exclaimed.
- "You understand what I mean--the funeral, you know."
-
- "It isn't certain that I shall have anything to do with it; but
- call again in three hours from now."
-
- "All right, I'll be here."
-
- "And M. Fortunat?" asked Casimir.
-
- "He received what he called a 'violent shock' last evening, but
- he's better this morning. He instructed me to tell you that he
- should look for you between twelve and one--you know where."
-
- "I'll endeavor to be there, although it may be difficult for me to
- get away. If I go, however, I'll show him the letter that caused
- the count's illness; for the count threw it away, after tearing it
- into several pieces, and I found some of the bits which escaped
- his notice as well as mademoiselle's. It's a strange letter, upon
- my word!"
-
- Chupin gazed at the valet with a look of mingled wonder and
- admiration. "By Jove!" he exclaimed, "how fortunate a man must be
- to secure a valet like you!"
-
- His companion smiled complacently, but all of a sudden he
- remarked: "Make haste and go. I see Bourigeau in the distance,
- bringing the justice of the peace."
-
-
-
- VII.
-
-
- The magistrate who was now approaching the Chalusse mansion in the
- concierge's company, exemplified in a remarkable manner all the
- ideas that are awakened in one's mind by the grand yet simple
- title of "Justice of the Peace." He was the very person you would
- like to think of as the family magistrate; as the promoter of
- friendly feeling; as the guardian of the rights of the absent, the
- young, and the weak; as the just arbiter in unfortunate
- differences between those who are closely related; a sage of wide
- experience and boundless benevolence; a judge whose paternal
- justice dispenses with all pomp and display, and who is allowed by
- French statutes to hold his court by his own fireside, providing
- the doors stand open. He was considerably over fifty, tall, and
- very thin, with bent shoulders. His clothes were rather old-
- fashioned in cut, but by no means ridiculous. The expression of
- his face was gentleness itself; but it would not have done to
- presume upon this gentleness, for his glance was keen and
- piercing--like the glance of all who are expert in diving into
- consciences, and discovering the secrets hidden there. Moreover,
- like all men who are accustomed to deliberate in public, his
- features were expressionless. He could see and hear everything,
- suspect and understand everything, without letting a muscle of his
- face move. And yet the habitues of his audience-chamber, and his
- clerks, pretended that they could always detect the nature of his
- impressions. A ring which he wore upon one of his fingers served
- as a barometer for those who knew him. If a difficult case, or
- one that embarrassed his conscience, presented itself, his eyes
- fixed themselves obstinately upon this ring. If he were satisfied
- that everything was right, he looked up again, and began playing
- with the ring, slipping it up and down between the first and
- second joint of his finger; but if he were displeased, he abruptly
- turned the bezel inside.
-
- In appearance, he was sufficiently imposing to intimidate even M.
- Casimir. The proud valet bowed low as the magistrate approached,
- and with his heart in his mouth, and in an obsequious voice he
- said: "It was I who took the liberty of sending for you,
- monsieur."
-
- "Ah!" said the magistrate, who already knew as much about the
- Hotel de Chalusse, and the events of the past twelve hours, as M.
- Casimir himself; for on his way to the house, he had turned
- Bourigeau inside out like a glove, by means of a dozen gentle
- questions.
-
- "If monsieur wishes I will explain," resumed M. Casimir.
-
- "Nothing! It is quite unnecessary. Usher us in."
-
- This "us" astonished the valet; but before they reached the house
- it was explained to him. He discovered a man of flourishing and
- even jovial mien who was walking along in the magistrate's shadow
- carrying a large black portfolio under his arm. This was
- evidently the clerk. He seemed to be as pleased with his
- employment as he was with himself; and as he followed M. Casimir,
- he examined the adornments of the mansion, the mosaics in the
- vestibule, the statuary and the frescoed walls with an appraiser's
- eye. Perhaps he was calculating how many years' salary it would
- require to pay for the decorating of this one staircase.
-
- On the threshold of the death room the magistrate paused. There
- had been some change during M. Casimir's absence. The doctor had
- left. The bed had been rearranged, and several candles were
- burning on a table covered with a white cloth. Madame Leon had
- gone to her own room, accompanied by two servants, to fetch a
- vessel of holy water and a branch of withered palm. She was now
- engaged in repeating the prayers for the dead, pausing from time
- to time to dip the palm branch in the holy water, and sprinkle the
- bed. Both windows had been opened in spite of the cold. On the
- marble hearth stood a chafing-dish full of embers from which rose
- spiral rings of smoke, filling the room with a pungent odor as a
- servant poured some vinegar and sugar on to the coals.
-
- As the magistrate appeared, every one rose up. Then, after
- bestowing prolonged scrutiny upon the room and its occupants, he
- respectfully removed his hat, and walked in. "Why are so many
- people here?" he inquired.
-
- "I suggested that they should remain," replied M. Casimir,
- "because--"
-
- "You are--suspicious," interrupted the magistrate.
-
- His clerk had already drawn a pen and some paper from his
- portfolio, and was engaged in reading the decision, rendered by
- the magistrate at the request of one Bourigeau, and in virtue of
- which, seals were about to be affixed to the deceased nobleman's
- personal effects. Since the magistrate had entered the room, his
- eyes had not once wandered from Mademoiselle Marguerite, who was
- standing near the fireplace, looking pale but composed. At last
- he approached her, and in a tone of deep sympathy: "Are you
- Mademoiselle Marguerite?" he asked.
-
- She raised her clear eyes, rendered more beautiful than ever, by
- the tears that trembled on her lashes, and in a faltering voice,
- replied: "Yes, monsieur."
-
- "Are you a relative? Are you connected in any way with the Count
- de Chalusse? Have you any right to his property?"
-
- "No, monsieur."
-
- "Excuse me, mademoiselle, but these questions are indispensable.
- Who intrusted you to the care of M. de Chalusse, and by what
- right? Was it your father or your mother?"
-
- "I have neither father nor mother, monsieur. I am alone in the
- world--utterly alone."
-
- The magistrate glanced keenly round the room. "Ah! I understand,"
- said he, at last; "advantage has been taken of your isolation to
- treat you with disrespect, to insult you, perhaps."
-
- Every head drooped, and M. Casimir bitterly regretted that he had
- not remained below in the courtyard. Mademoiselle Marguerite
- looked at the magistrate in astonishment, for she was amazed by
- his penetration. She was ignorant of his conversation with
- Bourigeau on the road, and did not know that through the
- concierge's ridiculous statements and accusations, the magistrate
- had succeeded in discovering at least a portion of the truth.
-
- "I shall have the honor of asking for a few moments' conversation
- with you presently, mademoiselle," he said. "But first, one
- question. I am told that the Count de Chalusse entertained a very
- lively affection for you. Are you sure that he has not taken care
- to provide for your future? Are you sure that he has not left a
- will?"
-
- The girl shook her head. "He made one in my favor some time ago,"
- she replied. "I saw it; he gave it to me to read; but it was
- destroyed a fortnight after my arrival here, and in compliance
- with my request."
-
- Madame Leon had hitherto been dumb with fear, but, conquering her
- weakness, she now decided to draw near and take part in the
- conversation. "How can you say that, my dear young lady?" she
- exclaimed. "You know that the count--God rest his soul!--was an
- extremely cautious man. I am certain that there is a will
- somewhere."
-
- The magistrate's eyes were fixed on his ring. "It would be well
- to look, perhaps, before affixing the seals. You have a right to
- require this; so, if you wish----"
-
- But she made no reply.
-
- "Oh, yes!" insisted Madame Leon; "pray look, monsieur."
-
- "But where should we be likely to find a will?"
-
- "Certainly in this room--in this escritoire, or in one of the
- deceased count's cabinets."
-
- The magistrate had learnt the story of the key from Bourigeau, but
- all the same he asked: "Where is the key to this escritoire?"
-
- "Alas! monsieur," replied Mademoiselle Marguerite, "I broke it
- last night when M. de Chalusse was brought home unconscious. I
- hoped to avert what has, nevertheless, happened. Besides, I knew
- that his escritoire contained something over two millions in gold
- and bank-notes."
-
- Two millions--there! The occupants of the room stood aghast. Even
- the clerk was so startled that he let a blot fall upon his paper.
- Two millions! The magistrate was evidently reflecting. "Hum!" he
- murmured, meditatively. Then, as if deciding on his course, he
- exclaimed:
-
- "Let a locksmith be sent for."
-
- A servant went in search of one; and while they were waiting for
- his return, the magistrate sat down beside his clerk and talked to
- him in a low voice. At last the locksmith appeared, with his bag
- of tools hanging over his shoulder, and set to work at once. He
- found his task a difficult one. His pick-locks would not catch,
- and he was talking of filing the bolt, when, by chance, he found
- the joint, and the door flew open. But the escritoire was empty.
- There were only a few papers, and a bottle about three-quarters
- full of a crimson liquid on the shelf. Had M. de Chalusse rose
- and shook off his winding sheet, the consternation would not have
- been greater. The same instinctive fear thrilled the hearts of
- everybody present. An enormous fortune had disappeared. The same
- suspicions would rest upon them all. And each servant already saw
- himself arrested, imprisoned, and dragged before a law court.
-
- However, anger speedily followed bewilderment, and a furious
- clamor arose. "A robbery has been committed!" cried the servants,
- in concert. "Mademoiselle had the key. It is wrong to suspect
- the innocent!"
-
- Revolting as this exhibition was, it did not modify the
- magistrate's calmness. He had witnessed too many such scenes in
- the course of his career, and, at least, a score of times he had
- been compelled to interpose between children who had come to blows
- over their inheritance before their father's body was even cold.
- "Silence!" he commanded sternly. And as the tumult did not cease,
- as the servants continued to cry, "The thief must be found. We
- shall have no difficulty in discovering the culprit," the
- magistrate exclaimed, still more imperiously: "Another word, and
- you all leave the room."
-
- They were silenced; but there was a mute eloquence about their
- looks and gestures which it was impossible to misunderstand.
- Every eye was fixed upon Mademoiselle Marguerite with an almost
- ferocious expression. She knew it only too well; but, sublime in
- her energy, she stood, with her head proudly erect, facing the
- storm, and disdaining to answer these vile imputations. However
- she had a protector near by--the magistrate in person. "If this
- treasure has been diverted from the inheritance," said he, "the
- thief will be discovered and punished. But I wish to have one
- point explained--who said that Mademoiselle Marguerite had the key
- of the escritoire?"
-
- "I did," replied a footman. "I was in the dining-room yesterday
- morning when the count gave it to her."
-
- "For what purpose did he give it to her?"
-
- "That she might obtain this vial--I recognized it at once. She
- brought it down to him."
-
- "Did she return the key?"
-
- "Yes; she gave it to him when she handed him the vial, and I saw
- him put it in his pocket."
-
- The magistrate pointed to the bottle which was standing on the
- shelf. "Then the count himself must have put the vial back in its
- place," said he. "Further comment is unnecessary; for, if the
- money had then been missing, he could not have failed to discover
- the fact." No one had any reply to make to this quiet defence,
- which was, at the same time, a complete vindication. "And,
- besides," continued the magistrate, "who told you that this
- immense sum would be found here? Did you know it? Which one of you
- knew it?" And as nobody still ventured any remark, he added in an
- even more severe tone, and without seeming to notice Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's look of gratitude, "It is by no means a proof of
- honesty to be so extremely suspicious. Would it not have been
- easier to suppose that the deceased had placed the money somewhere
- else, and that it will yet be found?"
-
- The clerk had been even less disturbed than the magistrate. He
- also was blase, having witnessed too many of those frightful and
- shameless dramas which are enacted at a dead man's bedside, to be
- surprised at anything. If he had deigned to glance at the
- escritoire, it was only because he was curious to see how small a
- space would suffice to contain two millions; and then he had begun
- to calculate how many years he would be obliged to remain a clerk
- before he could succeed in amassing such a fabulous sum. However,
- hearing his superior express the intention of continuing the
- search for the will, and the missing treasure, he abruptly
- abandoned his calculation, and exclaimed, "Then, I suppose, I can
- commence my report, monsieur?"
-
- "Yes," replied the magistrate, "write as follows:" And in a
- monotonous voice he began to dictate the prescribed formula, an
- unnecessary proceeding, for the clerk was quite as familiar with
- it as the magistrate himself:--"On the 16th of October, 186-, at
- nine o'clock in the morning, in compliance with the request of the
- servants of the deceased Louis-Henri-Raymond de Durtal, Count de
- Chalusse, and in the interest of his presumptive heirs, and all
- others connected with him, and in accordance with the requirements
- of clauses 819 (Code Napoleon) and 909 (Code of Procedure), we,
- justice of the peace, accompanied by our clerk, visited the
- residence of the deceased aforesaid, in the Rue de Courcelles,
- where, having entered a bedroom opening on to the courtyard, and
- lighted by two windows looking toward the south, we found the body
- of the deceased aforesaid, lying on his bed, and covered with a
- sheet. In this room were----" He paused in his dictation, and
- addressing the clerk, "Take down the names of all present," said
- he. "That will require some little time, and, meanwhile, I will
- continue my search."
-
- They had, in fact, only examined the shelf of the escritoire, and
- the drawers were still to be inspected. In the first which he
- opened, the magistrate found ample proofs of the accuracy of the
- information which had been furnished him by Mademoiselle
- Marguerite. The drawer contained a memorandum which established
- the fact that the Credit Foncier had lent M. de Chalusse the sum
- of eight hundred and fifty thousand francs, which had been
- remitted to him on the Saturday preceding his death. Beside this
- document lay a second memorandum, signed by a stockbroker named
- Pell, setting forth that the latter had sold for the count
- securities of various descriptions to the amount of fourteen
- hundred and twenty-three thousand francs, which sum had been paid
- to the count on the preceding Tuesday, partly in bank-notes and
- partly in gold. It was thus evident that M. de Chalusse had
- received a grand total of two million two hundred and seventy-
- three thousand francs within the past six days.
-
- In the drawer which was next opened, the magistrate only found a
- number of deeds, bonds, leases, and mortgages; but they proved
- that public rumor, far from exaggerating the figures of the
- count's fortune, had diminished it, and this made it difficult to
- explain why he had contracted a loan. The third and last drawer
- contained twenty-eight thousand francs, in packages of twenty-
- franc pieces. Finally, in a small casket, the magistrate found a
- packet of letters, yellow with age and bound together with a broad
- piece of blue velvet; as well as three or four withered bouquets,
- and a woman's glove, which had been worn by a hand of marvellous
- smallness. These were evidently the relics of some great passion
- of many years before; and the magistrate looked at them for a
- moment with a sigh.
-
- His own interest prevented him from noticing Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's agitation. She had almost fainted on perceiving
- these souvenirs of the count's past life so suddenly exhumed.
- However, the examination of the escritoire being over, and the
- clerk having completed his task of recording the names of all the
- servants, the magistrate said, in a loud voice, "I shall now
- proceed to affix the seals; but, before doing so, I shall take a
- portion of the money found in this desk, and set it apart for the
- expenses of the household, in accordance with the law. Who will
- take charge of this money?"
-
- "Oh, not I!" exclaimed Madame Leon.
-
- "I will take charge of it," said M. Casimir.
-
- "Then here are eight thousand francs, for which you will be held
- accountable."
-
- M. Casimir being a prudent man, counted the money himself, and
- after doing so, "Who will attend to the count's obsequies?" he
- inquired.
-
- "You, and without loss of time."
-
- Proud of his new importance, the valet hastily left the room, his
- self-complacency increased by the thought that he was to breakfast
- with M. Isidore Fortunat, and would afterward share a fat
- commission with Victor Chupin.
-
- However, the magistrate had already resumed his dictation: "And at
- this moment we have affixed bands of white tape, sealed at either
- end with red wax, bearing the impress of our seal as justice of
- the peace, to wit: In the aforesaid chamber of the deceased:
- First, A band of tape, covering the keyhole of the lock of the
- escritoire, which had been previously opened by a locksmith
- summoned by us, and closed again by the said locksmith----" And so
- the magistrate and his clerk went from one piece of furniture to
- another, duly specifying in the report each instance in which the
- seals were affixed.
-
- From the count's bedroom they passed into his study, followed by
- Mademoiselle Marguerite, Madame Leon, and the servants. By noon
- every article of furniture in which M. de Chalusse would have been
- likely to deposit his valuables or a will, had been searched, and
- nothing, absolutely nothing, had been found. The magistrate had
- pursued his investigation with the feverish energy which the most
- self-possessed of men are apt to display under such circumstances,
- especially when influenced by the conviction that the object they
- are seeking is somewhere within their reach, perhaps under their
- very hand. Indeed, he was persuaded--he was sure--he would, in
- fact, have sworn that the Count de Chalusse had taken all the
- precautions natural in childless men, who have no near relatives
- to inherit their fortune, or who have placed their interest and
- affections beyond their family circle. And when he was obliged to
- abandon his search, his gesture indicated anger rather than
- discouragement; for apparent evidence had not shaken his
- conviction in the least. So he stood motionless, with his eyes
- riveted on his ring, as if waiting some miraculous inspiration
- from it. "For the count's only fault, I am sure, was in being too
- cautious," he muttered. "This is frequently the case, and it
- would be quite in keeping with the character of this man, judging
- from what I know of him."
-
- Madame Leon lifted her hands to heaven. "Ah, yes! such was,
- indeed, his nature," she remarked, approvingly. "Never, no never,
- have I seen such a suspicious and distrustful person as he was.
- Not in reference to money--no, indeed--for he left that lying
- about everywhere; but about his papers. He locked them up with
- the greatest care, as if he feared that some terrible secret might
- evaporate from them. It was a mania with him. If he had a letter
- to write, he barricaded his door, as if he were about to commit
- some horrible crime. More than once have I seen him----" The
- words died away on her lips, and she remained motionless and
- abashed, like a person who has just escaped some great peril. One
- word more, and involuntarily, without even knowing it, she would
- have confessed her besetting sin, which was listening at, and
- peering through, the keyholes of the doors that were closed
- against her. Still, she deluded herself with the belief that this
- slight indiscretion of her overready tongue had escaped the
- magistrate's notice.
-
- He certainly did not seem to be conscious of it, for he was giving
- his attention entirely to Mademoiselle Marguerite, who seemed to
- have regained the cold reserve and melancholy resignation habitual
- to her. "You see, mademoiselle," he remarked, "that I have done
- all that is in my power to do. We must now leave the search to
- chance, and to the person who takes the inventory. Who knows what
- surprise may be in store for us in this immense house, of which we
- have only explored three rooms?"
-
- She shook her head gently and replied: "I can never be
- sufficiently grateful for your kindness, monsieur, and for the
- great service you rendered me in crushing that infamous
- accusation. As regards the rest, I have never expected anything--
- I do not expect anything now."
-
- She believed what she said, and her tone of voice proved this so
- unmistakably that the magistrate was surprised and somewhat
- disturbed. "Come, come, my young lady," he said, with almost
- paternal kindness of manner, "you ought not to despond. Still,
- you must have certain reasons for speaking as you do; and as I am
- free for an hour, we are going to have a plain talk, as if we were
- father and daughter."
-
- On hearing these words, the clerk rose with a cloud on his jovial
- face. He impatiently jingled his bunch of keys; for as the seals
- are successively affixed, each key is confided to the clerk, to
- remain in his hands until the seals are removed.
-
- "I understand," said the magistrate. "Your stomach, which is more
- exacting in its demands than mine, is not satisfied with a cup of
- chocolate till dinner-time. So, go and get your lunch; on your
- return, you will find me here. You may now conclude the report,
- and request these parties to sign it."
-
- Urged on by hunger, the clerk hastily mumbled over the remainder
- of the formula, called all the names that he had inserted in the
- report, and each of the servants advanced in turn, signed his or
- her name, or made a cross, and then retired. Madame Leon read in
- the judge's face that she also was expected to withdraw; and she
- was reluctantly leaving the room, when Mademoiselle Marguerite
- detained her to ask: "Are you quite sure that nothing has come for
- me to-day?"
-
- "Nothing, mademoiselle; I went in person to inquire of the
- concierge."
-
- "Did you post my letter last night?"
-
- "Oh! my dear young lady, can you doubt it?"
-
- The young girl stifled a sigh, and then, with a gesture of
- dismissal, she remarked, "M. de Fondege must be sent for."
-
- "The General?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "I will send for him at once," replied the housekeeper; and
- thereupon she left the room, closing the door behind her with a
- vicious slam.
-
-
-
- VIII.
-
-
- The justice of the peace and Mademoiselle Marguerite were at last
- alone in M. de Chalusse's study. This room, which the count had
- preferred above all others, was a spacious, magnificent, but
- rather gloomy apartment, with lofty walls and dark, richly carved
- furniture. Its present aspect was more than ever solemn and
- lugubrious, for it gave one a chill to see the bands of white tape
- affixed to the locks of the cabinets and bookcases. When the
- magistrate had installed himself in the count's arm-chair, and the
- girl had taken a seat near him, they remained looking at each
- other in silence for a few moments. The magistrate was asking
- himself how he should begin. Having fathomed Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's extreme sensitiveness and reserve, he said to himself
- that if he offended or alarmed her, she would refuse him her
- confidence, in which case he would be powerless to serve her as he
- wished to do. He had, in fact, an almost passionate desire to be
- of service to her, feeling himself drawn toward her by an
- inexplicable feeling of sympathy, in which esteem, respect, and
- admiration alike were blended, though he had only known her for a
- few hours. Still, he must make a beginning. "Mademoiselle," he
- said, at last, "I abstained from questioning you before the
- servants--and if I take the liberty of doing so now, it is not,
- believe me, out of any idle curiosity; moreover, you are not
- compelled to answer me. But you are young--and I am an old man;
- and it is my duty--even if my heart did not urge me to do so--to
- offer you the aid of my experience----"
-
- "Speak, monsieur," interrupted Marguerite. "I will answer your
- questions frankly, or else not answer them at all."
-
- "To resume, then," said he, "I am told that M. de Chalusse has no
- relatives, near or remote. Is this the truth?"
-
- "So far as I know--yes, monsieur. Still, I have heard it said
- that a sister of his, Mademoiselle Hermine de Chalusse, abandoned
- her home twenty-five or thirty years ago, when she was about my
- age, and that she has never received her share of the enormous
- fortune left by her parents."
-
- "And has this sister never given any sign of life?"
-
- "Never! Still, monsieur, I have promised you to be perfectly
- frank. That letter which the Count de Chalusse received
- yesterday, that letter which I regard as the cause of his death--
- well, I have a presentiment that it came from his sister. It
- could only have been written by her or--by that other person whose
- letters--and souvenirs--you found in the escritoire."
-
- "And--this other person--who can she be?" As the young girl made
- no reply, the magistrate did not insist, but continued: "And you,
- my child, who are you?"
-
- She made a gesture of sorrowful resignation, and then, in a voice
- faltering with emotion, she answered: "I do not know, monsieur.
- Perhaps I am the count's daughter. I should be telling an untruth
- if I said that was not my belief. Yes, I believe it, but I have
- never been certain of it. Sometimes I have believed, sometimes I
- have doubted it. On certain days I have said to myself, 'Yes, it
- must be so!' and I have longed to throw my arms around his neck.
- But at other times I have exclaimed: 'No, it isn't possible!' and
- I have almost hated him. Besides, he never said a word on the
- subject--never a decisive word, at least. When I saw him for the
- first time, six years ago, I judged by the manner in which he
- forbade me to call him 'father,' that he would never answer any
- question I might ask on the subject."
-
- If there was a man in the world inaccessible to idle curiosity, it
- was certainly this magistrate, whose profession condemned him to
- listen every day to family grievances, neighborly quarrels,
- complaints, accusations, and slander. And yet as he listened to
- Mademoiselle Marguerite, he experienced that strange disquietude
- which seizes hold of a person when a puzzling problem is
- presented. "Allow me to believe that many decisive proofs may
- have escaped your notice on account of your inexperience," he
- said.
-
- But interrupting him with a gesture, she sadly remarked: "You are
- mistaken; I am not inexperienced."
-
- He could not help smiling at what he considered her self-conceit.
- "Poor child!" said he; "how old are you? Eighteen?"
-
- She shook her head. "Yes, by my certificate of birth I am only
- eighteen; but by the sufferings I have endured I am, perhaps,
- older than you are, monsieur, despite your white hair. Those who
- have lived such a life as I have, are never young; they are old in
- suffering, even in their childhood. And if by experience you mean
- lack of confidence, a knowledge of good and evil, distrust of
- everything and everybody, mine, young girl though I be, will no
- doubt equal yours." She paused, hesitated for a moment, and then
- continued: "But why should I wait for you to question me? It is
- neither sincere nor dignified on my part to do so. The person who
- claims counsel owes absolute frankness to his adviser. I will
- speak to you as if I were communing with my own soul. I will tell
- you what no person has ever known--no one, not even Pascal. And
- believe me, my past life was full of bitter misery, although you
- find me here in this splendid house. But I have nothing to
- conceal; and if I have cause to blush, it is for others, not for
- myself."
-
- Perhaps she was impelled by an irresistible desire to relieve her
- overburdened heart, after long years of self-restraint; perhaps
- she no longer felt sure of herself, and desired some other advice
- than the dictates of her conscience, in presence of the calamity
- which had befallen her. At all events, too much engrossed in her
- own thoughts to heed the magistrate's surprise, or hear the words
- he faltered, she rose from her seat, and, with her hands pressed
- tightly on her throbbing brow, she began to tell the story of her
- life.
-
- "My first recollections," she said, "are of a narrow, cheerless
- courtyard, surrounded by grim and massive walls, so high that I
- could scarcely see the top of them. At noontime in summer the sun
- visited one little corner, where there was a stone bench; but in
- winter it never showed itself at all. There were five or six
- small, scrubby trees, with moss-grown trunks and feeble branches,
- which put forth a few yellow leaves at springtime. We were some
- thirty children who assembled in this courtyard--children from
- five to eight years old, all clad alike in brown dresses, with a
- little blue handkerchief tied about our shoulders. We all wore
- blue caps on week-days, and white ones on Sundays, with woollen
- stockings, thick shoes, and a black ribbon, with a large metal
- cross dangling from our necks. Among us moved the good sisters,
- silent and sad, with their hands crossed in their large sleeves,
- their faces as white as their snowy caps, and their long strings
- of beads, set off with numerous copper medals, clanking when they
- walked like prisoners' chains. As a rule, each face wore the same
- expression of resignation, unvarying gentleness, and inexhaustible
- patience. But there were some who wore it only as one wears a
- mask--some whose eyes gleamed at times with passion, and who
- vented their cold, bitter anger upon us defenceless children.
- However, there was one sister, still young and very fair, whose
- manner was so gentle and so sad that even I, with my mere
- infantile intelligence, felt that she must have some terrible
- sorrow. During play-time she often took me on her knee and
- embraced me with convulsive tenderness, murmuring: 'Dear little
- one! darling little one!' Sometimes her endearments were irksome
- to me, but I never allowed her to see it, for fear of making her
- still more sad; and in my heart I was content and proud to suffer
- for and with her. Poor sister! I owe her the only happy hours of
- my infancy. She was called Sister Calliste. I do not know what
- has become of her, but often, when my heart fails me, I think of
- her, and even now I cannot mention her name without tears."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was indeed weeping--big tears which she
- made no attempt to conceal were coursing down her cheeks. It cost
- her a great effort to continue: "You have already understood,
- monsieur, what I myself did not know for several years. I was in
- a foundling asylum, and I was a foundling myself. I cannot say
- that we lacked anything; and I should be ungrateful if I did not
- say and feel that these good sisters were charity personified.
- But, alas! their hearts had only a certain amount of tenderness to
- distribute between thirty poor little girls, and so each child's
- portion was small; the caresses were the same for all, and I
- longed to be loved differently, to have kind words and caresses
- for myself alone. We slept in little white beds with snowy
- curtains, in a clean, well-ventilated dormitory, in the centre of
- which stood a statue of the Virgin, who seemed to smile on us all
- alike. In winter we had a fire. Our clothes were warm and neat;
- our food was excellent. We were taught to read and write, to sew
- and embroider. There was a recreation hour between all the
- exercises. Those who were studious and good were rewarded; and
- twice a week we were taken into the country for a long walk. It
- was during one of these excursions that I learned from the talk of
- the passers-by, what we were, and what we were called. Sometimes,
- in the afternoon, we were visited by elegantly-attired ladies, who
- were accompanied by their own children, radiant with health and
- happiness. The good sisters told us that these were 'pious
- ladies,' or 'charitable ladies,' whom we must love and respect,
- and whom we must never forget to mention in our prayers. They
- always brought us toys and cakes. Sometimes the establishment was
- visited by priests and grave old gentlemen, whose sternness of
- manner alarmed us. They peered into every nook and corner, asked
- questions about everything, assured themselves that everything was
- in its place, and some of them even tasted our soup. They were
- always satisfied; and the lady superior led them through the
- building, and bowed to them, exclaiming: 'We love them so much,
- the poor little dears! 'And the gentlemen replied: 'Yes, yes, my
- dear sister, they are very fortunate.' And the gentlemen were
- right. Poor laborers' children are often obliged to endure
- privations which we knew nothing of; they are often obliged to
- make their supper off a piece of dry bread--but, then, the crust
- is given them by their mother, with a kiss."
-
- The magistrate, who was extremely ill at ease, had not yet
- succeeded in finding a syllable to offer in reply. Indeed,
- Mademoiselle Marguerite had not given him an opportunity to speak,
- so rapidly had this long-repressed flood of recollections poured
- from her lips. When she spoke the word "mother," the magistrate
- fancied she would show some sign of emotion.
-
- But he was mistaken. On the contrary, her voice became harsher,
- and a flash of anger, as it were, darted from her eyes.
-
- "I suffered exceedingly in that asylum," she resumed. "Sister
- Calliste left the establishment, and all the surroundings chilled
- and repelled me. My only few hours of happiness were on Sundays,
- when we attended church. As the great organ pealed, and as I
- watched the priests officiating at the altar in their gorgeous
- vestments, I forgot my own sorrows. It seemed to me that I was
- ascending on the clouds of incense to the celestial sphere which
- the sisters so often talked to us about, and where they said each
- little girl would find her mother."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite hesitated for an instant, as if she were
- somewhat unwilling to give utterance to her thoughts; but at last,
- forcing herself to continue, she said: "Yes, I suffered
- exceedingly in that foundling asylum. Almost all my little
- companions were spiteful, unattractive in person, sallow, thin,
- and afflicted with all kinds of diseases, as if they were not
- unfortunate enough in being abandoned by their parents. And--to
- my shame, monsieur, I must confess it--these unfortunate little
- beings inspired me with unconquerable repugnance, with disgust
- bordering on aversion. I would rather have pressed my lips to a
- red-hot iron than to the forehead of one of these children. I did
- not reason on the subject, alas! I was only eight or nine years
- old; but I felt this antipathy in every fibre of my being. The
- others knew it too; and, in revenge, they ironically styled me
- 'the lady,' and left me severely alone. But sometimes, during
- playtime, when the good sisters' backs were turned, the children
- attacked me, beat me, and scratched my face and tore my clothes.
- I endured these onslaughts uncomplainingly, for I was conscious
- that I deserved them. But how many reprimands my torn clothes
- cost me! How many times I received only a dry crust for my supper,
- after being soundly scolded and called 'little careless.' But as I
- was quiet, studious, and industrious, a quicker learner than the
- majority of my companions, the sisters were fond of me. They said
- that I was a promising girl, and that they would have no
- difficulty in finding me a nice home with some of the rich and
- pious ladies who have a share in managing institutions of this
- kind. The only fault the sisters found with me was that I was
- sullen. But such was not really the case; I was only sad and
- resigned. Everything around me so depressed and saddened me that
- I withdrew into myself, and buried all my thoughts and aspirations
- deep in my heart. If I had naturally been a bad child, I scarcely
- know what would have been the result of this. I have often asked
- myself the question in all sincerity, but I have been unable to
- reply, for one cannot be an impartial judge respecting one's self.
- However, this much is certain, although childhood generally leaves
- a train of pleasant recollections in a young girl's life, mine was
- only fraught with torture and misery, desperate struggles, and
- humiliation. I was unwilling to be confirmed because I did not
- wish to wear a certain dress, which a 'benevolent lady' had
- presented for the use of the asylum, and which had belonged to a
- little girl of my own age who had died of consumption. The
- thought of arraying myself in this dress to approach the holy
- table frightened and revolted me as much as if I had been
- sentenced to drape myself in a winding-sheet. And yet it was the
- prettiest dress of all--white muslin beautifully embroidered. It
- had been ardently coveted by the other children, and had been
- given to me as a sort of reward of merit. And I dared not explain
- the cause of my unconquerable repugnance. Who would have
- understood me? I should only have been accused of undue
- sensitiveness and pride, absurd in one of my humble position. I
- was then only twelve years old; but no one knew the struggle in my
- mind save the old priest, my confessor. I could confess
- everything to him; he understood me, and did not reproach me.
- Still he answered: 'You must wear this dress, my child, for your
- pride must be broken. Go--I shall impose no other penance on
- you.' I obeyed him, full of superstitious terror; for it seemed to
- me that this was a frightful omen which would bring me misfortune,
- my whole life through. And I was confirmed in the dead girl's
- embroidered dress."
-
- During the five-and-twenty years that he had held the position of
- justice of the peace, the magistrate had listened to many
- confessions, wrung from wretched souls by stern necessity, or
- sorrow, but never had his heart been moved as it now was, by this
- narrative, told with such uncomplaining anguish, and in a tone of
- such sincerity. However she resumed her story. "The confirmation
- over, our life became as gloomily monotonous as before; we read
- the same pious books and did the same work at the same hours as
- formerly. It seemed to me that I was stifling in this atmosphere.
- I gasped for breath, and thought that anything would be preferable
- to this semblance of existence, which was not real life. I was
- thinking of applying for the 'good situation,' which had so often
- been mentioned to me, when one morning I was summoned into the
- steward's office--a mysterious and frightful place to us children.
- He himself was a stout, dirty man, wearing large blue spectacles
- and a black silk skullcap; and from morning until night, summer
- and winter, he sat writing at a desk behind a little grating, hung
- with green curtains. Round the room were ranged the registers, in
- which our names were recorded and our appearances described,
- together with the boxes containing the articles found upon us,
- which were carefully preserved to assist in identifying us should
- occasion arise. I entered this office with a throbbing heart. In
- addition to the stout gentleman and the Lady Superior, I found
- there a thin, wiry man, with cunning eyes, and a portly woman,
- with a coarse but rather good-natured face. The superior at once
- informed me that I was in the presence of M. and Madame Greloux,
- bookbinders, who had come to the asylum in search of two
- apprentices, and she asked me if I should like to be one of them.
- Ah! monsieur, it seemed to me that heaven had opened before me and
- I boldly replied: 'Yes.' The gentleman in the black skullcap
- immediately emerged from his place behind the grating to explain
- my obligations and duties to me at length, especially insisting
- upon the point, that I ought to be grateful--I, a miserable
- foundling, reared by public charity--for the generosity which this
- good gentleman and lady showed in offering to take charge of me
- and employ me in their workshop. I must confess that I could not
- clearly realize in what this great generosity which he so highly
- praised consisted, nor did I perceive any reason why I should be
- particularly grateful. Still, to all the conditions imposed upon
- me, I answered, 'Yes, yes, yes!' so heartily that Madame Greloux
- seemed greatly pleased. 'It is evident that the child will be
- glad to get away,' she said to herself. Then the superior began
- to enumerate the obligations my employers would incur, repeating
- again and again that I was one of the very best girls in the
- asylum--pious, obedient, and industrious, reading and writing to
- perfection, and knowing how to sew and embroider as only those who
- are taught in such institutions can. She made Madame Greloux
- promise to watch over me as she would have watched over her own
- daughter; never to leave me alone; to take me to church, and allow
- me an occasional Sunday afternoon, so that I might pay a visit to
- the asylum. The gentleman with the spectacles and the skullcap
- then reminded the bookbinder of the duties of an employer toward
- his apprentices, and turning to a bookcase behind him, he even
- took down a large volume from which he read extract after extract,
- which I listened to without understanding a word, though I was
- quite sure that the book was written in French. At last, when the
- man and his wife had said 'Amen' to everything, the gentleman with
- the spectacles drew up a document which we all signed in turn. I
- belonged to a master?"
-
- She paused. Here her childhood ended. But almost immediately she
- resumed: "My recollections of these people are not altogether
- unpleasant. They were harassed and wearied by their efforts to
- support their son in a style of living far above their position;
- but, despite their sacrifices, their son had no affection for
- them, and on this account I pitied them. However, not only was
- the husband gloomy and quick-tempered, but his wife also was
- subject to fits of passion, so that the apprentices often had a
- hard time of it. Still, between Madame Greloux's tempests of
- wrath there were occasional gleams of sunshine. After beating us
- for nothing, she would exclaim, with quite as little reason, 'Come
- and kiss me, and don't pout any more. Here are four sous; go and
- buy yourself some cakes.'"
-
- The justice started in his arm-chair. Was it, indeed,
- Mademoiselle Marguerite who was speaking, the proud young girl
- with a queenlike bearing, whose voice rang out like crystal? Was
- it she indeed, who imitated the harsh, coarse dialect of the lower
- classes with such accuracy of intonation? Ah! at that moment, as
- her past life rose so vividly before her, it seemed to her as if
- she were still in the years gone by, and she fancied she could
- still hear the voice of the bookbinder's wife.
-
- She did not even notice the magistrate's astonishment. "I had
- left the asylum," she continued, "and that was everything to me.
- I felt that a new and different life was beginning, and that was
- enough. I flattered myself that I might win a more earnest and
- sincere affection among these honest, industrious toilers, than I
- had found in the asylum; and to win it and deserve it, I neglected
- nothing that good-will could suggest, or strength allow. My
- patrons no doubt fathomed my desire, and naturally enough, perhaps
- unconsciously, they took advantage of my wish to please. I can
- scarcely blame them. I had entered their home under certain
- conditions in view of learning a profession; they gradually made
- me their servant--it was praiseworthy economy on their part. What
- I had at first done of my own freewill and from a wish to please,
- at last became my daily task, which I was rigidly required to
- fulfil. Compelled to rise long before any one else in the house,
- I was expected to have everything in order by the time the others
- made their appearance with their eyes still heavy with sleep. It
- is true that my benefactors rewarded me after their fashion. On
- Sundays they took me with them on their excursions into the
- country, so as to give me a rest, they said, after the week's
- work. And I followed them along the dusty highways in the hot
- sunshine, panting, perspiring, and tottering under the weight of a
- heavy basket of provisions, which were eaten on the grass or in
- the woods, and the remnants of which fell to me. Madame Greloux's
- brother generally accompanied us; and his name would have lingered
- in my memory, even if it had not been a peculiar one. He was
- called Vantrasson. He was a tall, robust man. with eyes that
- made me tremble whenever he fixed them upon me. He was a soldier;
- intensely proud of his uniform; a great talker, and enchanted with
- himself. He evidently thought himself irresistible. It was from
- that man's mouth that I heard the first coarse word at which my
- unsophisticated heart took offence. It was not to be the last
- one. He finally told me that he had taken a fancy to me, and I
- was obliged to complain to Madame Greloux of her brother's
- persecutions. But she only laughed at me, and said: 'Nonsense!
- He's merely talking to hear himself talk.' Yes, that was her
- answer. And yet she was an honest woman, a devoted wife, and a
- fond mother. Ah! if she had had a daughter. But with a poor
- apprentice, who has neither father nor mother, one need not be
- over-fastidious. She had made a great many promises to the lady
- superior, but she fancied that the utterance of a few commonplace
- words of warning relieved her of all further obligations. 'And so
- much the worse for those who allow themselves to be fooled,' she
- always added in conclusion.
-
- "Fortunately, my pride, which I had so often been reproached with,
- shielded me. My condition might be humble, but my spirit was
- lofty. It was a blessing from God, this pride of mine, for it
- saved me from temptation, while so many fell around me. I slept,
- with the other apprentices, in the attic, where we were entirely
- beyond the control of those who should have been our guardians.
- That is to say, when the day's toil was over, and the work-shop
- closed, we were free--abandoned to our own instincts, and the most
- pernicious influences. And neither evil advice nor bad example
- was wanting. The women employed in the bindery in nowise
- restrained themselves in our presence, and we heard them tell
- marvellous stories that dazzled many a poor girl. They did not
- talk as they did from any evil design, or out of a spirit of
- calculation, but from pure thoughtlessness, and because they were
- quite devoid of moral sense. And they never tired of telling us
- of the pleasures of life, of fine dinners at restaurants, gay
- excursions to Joinville-le-Pont, and masked balls at Montparnasse
- or the Elysee Montmartre. Ah! experience is quickly gained in
- these work-shops. Sometimes those who went off at night with
- ragged dresses and worn-out shoes, returned the next morning in
- superb toilettes to say that they resigned their situations, as
- they were not made for work, and intended to live like ladies.
- They departed radiant, but often before a month was over they came
- back, emaciated, hollow-eyed, and despairing, and humbly begged
- for a little work."
-
- She paused, so crushed by the weight of these sad memories as to
- lose consciousness of the present. And the judge also remained
- silent, not daring to question her. And, besides, what good would
- it do? What could she tell him about these poor little apprentices
- that he did not know already? If he was surprised at anything, it
- was that this beautiful young girl, who had been left alone and
- defenceless, had possessed sufficient strength of character to
- escape the horrible dangers that threatened her.
-
- However, it was not long before Mademoiselle Marguerite shook off
- the torpor which had stolen over her. "I ought not to boast of my
- strength, sir," she resumed. "Besides my pride, I had a hope to
- sustain me--a hope which I clung to with the tenacity of despair.
- I wished to become expert at my profession, for I had learned that
- skilled workers were always in demand, and could always command
- good wages. So when my household duties were over, I still found
- time to learn the business, and made such rapid progress that I
- astonished even my employer. I knew that I should soon be able to
- make five or six francs a day; and this prospect was pleasant
- enough to make me forget the present, well-nigh intolerable as it
- sometimes was. During the last winter that I spent with my
- employers, their orders were so numerous and pressing that they
- worked on Sundays as well as on week days, and it was with
- difficulty that I obtained an hour twice a month to pay a visit to
- the good sisters who had cared for me in my childhood. I had
- never failed in this duty, and indeed it had now become my only
- pleasure. My employer's conscience compelled him to pay me a
- trifle occasionally for the additional toil he imposed upon me,
- and the few francs I thus received I carried to the poor children
- at the asylum. After living all my life on public charity, I was
- able to give in my turn; and this thought gratified my pride, and
- increased my importance in my own eyes. I was nearly fifteen, and
- my term of apprenticeship had almost expired, when one bright day
- in March, I saw one of the lay sisters of the asylum enter the
- work-room. She was in a flutter of excitement; her face was
- crimson, and she was so breathless from her hurried ascent of the
- stairs that she gasped rather than said to me: 'Quick! come--
- follow me! Some one is waiting for you!' 'Who?--where?'--'Make
- haste! Ah! my dear child, if you only knew----' I hesitated; but
- Madame Greloux pushed me toward the door, exclaiming: 'Be off, you
- little stupid!' I followed the sister without thinking of changing
- my dress--without even removing the kitchen apron I wore.
- Downstairs, at the front door, stood the most magnificent carriage
- I had ever seen in my life. Its rich silk cushions were so
- beautiful that I scarcely dared to enter it; and I was all the
- more intimidated by a footman in gorgeous livery, who respectfully
- opened the door at our approach. 'You must get into the
- carriage,' said the sister; 'it was sent for you.' I obeyed her,
- and before I had recovered from my astonishment we had reached the
- asylum, and I was ushered into the office where the contract which
- bound me as an apprentice had been signed. As soon as I entered,
- the superior took me by the hand and led me toward a gentleman who
- was sitting near the window. 'Marguerite,' said she, 'salute
- Monsieur le Comte de Chalusse.'"
-
-
-
- IX.
-
-
- For some little time there had been a noise of footsteps and a
- subdued murmur of voices in the vestibule. Annoyed by this
- interruption, although he perfectly understood its cause, the
- magistrate rose and hastily opened the door. He was not mistaken.
- His clerk had returned from lunch, and the time of waiting seemed
- extremely long to him. "Ah! it's you," said the magistrate.
- "Very well! begin your inventory. It won't be long before I join
- you." And closing the door he resumed his seat again.
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was so absorbed in her narrative that she
- scarcely noticed this incident, and he had not seated himself
- before she resumed. "In all my life, I had never seen such an
- imposing looking person as the Count de Chalusse. His manner,
- attire, and features could not fail to inspire a child like me
- with fear and respect. I was so awed that I had scarcely enough
- presence of mind to bow to him. He glanced at me coldly, and
- exclaimed: 'Ah! is this the young girl you were speaking of?' The
- count's tone betrayed such disagreeable surprise that the superior
- was dismayed. She looked at me, and seemed indignant at my more
- than modest attire. 'It's a shame to allow a child to leave home
- dressed in this fashion,' she angrily exclaimed. And she almost
- tore my huge apron off me, and then with her own hands began to
- arrange my hair as if to display me to better advantage. 'Ah!
- these employers,' she exclaimed, 'the best of them are bad. How
- they do deceive you. It's impossible to place any confidence in
- their promises. Still, one can't always be at their heels.'
-
- "But the superior's efforts were wasted, for M. de Chalusse had
- turned away and had begun talking with some gentlemen near by.
- For the office was full that morning. Five or six gentlemen, whom
- I recognized as the directors of the asylum, were standing round
- the steward in the black skullcap. They were evidently talking
- about me. I was certain of this by the glances they gave me,
- glances which, however, were full of kindness. The superior
- joined the group and began speaking with unusual vivacity, while
- standing in the recess of a window, I listened with all my might.
- But I must have overestimated my intelligence, for I could gain no
- meaning whatever from the phrases which followed each other in
- rapid succession; though the words 'adoption,' 'emancipation,'
- 'dowry,' 'compensation,' 'reimbursement for sums expended,'
- recurred again and again. I was only certain of one point: the
- Count de Chalusse wished something, and these gentlemen were
- specifying other things in exchange. To each of their demands he
- answered: 'Yes, yes--it's granted. That's understood.' But at
- last he began to grow impatient, and in a voice which impressed
- one with the idea that he was accustomed to command, he exclaimed,
- 'I will do whatever you wish. Do you desire anything more?' The
- gentlemen at once became silent, and the superior hastily declared
- that M. de Chalusse was a thousand times too good, but that one
- could expect no less of him, the last representative of one of the
- greatest and oldest families of France.
-
- "I cannot describe the surprise and indignation that were raging
- in my soul. I divined--I felt that it was MY fate, MY future, MY
- life that were being decided, and I was not even consulted on the
- matter. They were disposing of me as if they were sure in advance
- of my consent. My pride revolted at the thought, but I could not
- find a word to say in protest. Crimson with shame, confused and
- furious, I was wondering how I could interfere, when suddenly the
- consultation ceased and the gentlemen at once surrounded me. One
- of them, a little old man with a vapid smile and twinkling eyes,
- tapped me on the cheek, and said: 'So she is as good as she is
- pretty!' I could have struck him; but all the others laughed
- approvingly, with the exception of M. de Chalusse, whose manner
- became more and more frigid, and whose lips wore a constrained
- smile, as if he had resolved to keep his temper despite all
- provocation. It seemed to me that he was suffering terribly, and
- I afterward learned that I had not been mistaken. Far from
- imitating the old gentleman's manner, he bowed to me very gravely,
- with an air of deference that quite abashed me, and went away
- after saying that he would return the next day to conclude the
- arrangements.
-
- "I was at last left alone with the superior, whom I longed to
- question, but she gave me no time to do so, for with extreme
- volubility she began to tell me of my surprising good fortune,
- which was an unanswerable and conclusive proof of the kindness and
- protection of Providence. 'The count,' she said, 'was to become
- my guardian. He would certainly give me a dowry; and by and by,
- if I were grateful to him for his goodness, he would adopt me, a
- poor, fatherless and motherless girl, and I should bear the great
- name of Durtal de Chalusse, and inherit an immense fortune.' In
- conclusion, she said that there was no limit to the count's
- generosity, that he had consented to reimburse the asylum the
- money that had been spent on me, that he had offered to dower, I
- do not know how many poor girls, and that he had promised to build
- a chapel for the use of the establishment. This was all true,
- incredible as it might seem. That very morning, M. de Chalusse
- had called at the asylum, declared that he was old and childless,
- a bachelor without any near relatives, and that he wished to adopt
- a poor orphan. They had given him a list of all the children in
- the institution, and he had chosen me. 'A mere chance, my dear
- Marguerite,' repeated the superior. 'A mere chance--or rather a
- true miracle.' It did, indeed, seem a miracle, but I was more
- surprised than elated. I longed to be alone, so as to deliberate
- and reflect, for I knew that I was free to accept or decline this
- dazzling offer.
-
- "I timidly asked permission to return to my employers to inform
- them of what had happened and consult with them; but my request
- was refused. The superior told me that I must deliberate and
- decide alone; and that when once my decision was taken, there
- could be no change. So I remained at the asylum, and dined at the
- superior's table; and during the night I occupied the room of a
- sister who was absent. What surprised me most of all was the
- deference with which I was treated. The sisters all seemed to
- consider me a person of great importance. And yet I hesitated.
-
- "My indecision may seem absurd and hypocritical; but it was really
- sincere. My present situation was certainly by no means an
- enviable one. But the worst was over; my term as an apprentice
- had nearly expired, and my future seemed assured. My future! What
- could it be with the Count de Chalusse? It was painted in such
- brilliant colors that it frightened me. Why had the count chosen
- me in preference to any of the other girls? Was it really chance
- which had decided him in his choice? On reflecting, the miracle
- seemed to me to have been prepared in advance, and I fancied that
- it must conceal some mystery. More than this, the thought of
- yielding myself up to a stranger terrified me. Forty-eight hours
- had been granted me to consider my decision, and till the very
- last instant I remained in doubt. Who knows? Perhaps it would
- have been better for me if I had returned to my humble life. At
- all events, I should have been spared a great deal of sorrow and
- humiliation. But I lacked the courage; and when the time expired,
- I consented to the new arrangement.
-
- "Should I live a thousand years I shall never forget the day I
- left the foundling asylum to become the Count de Chalusse's ward.
- It was a Saturday, and I had given my answer to the superior on
- the evening before. The next morning I received a visit from my
- former employers, who, having been informed of the great change in
- my prospects, had come to bid me good-bye. The cancelling of my
- apprenticeship had at first caused some trouble, but eventually
- the count's gold silenced their objections. Still, they were
- sorry to part with me, as I plainly saw. Their eyes were moist
- with tears. They were sorry to lose the poor little servant who
- had served them so faithfully. At the same time, however, I
- noticed evident constraint in their manner. They no longer said
- 'thee' and 'thou' to me; they no longer spoke roughly; but they
- said 'you,' and addressed me as 'mademoiselle.' Poor people! they
- awkwardly apologized for having ventured to accept my services,
- declaring in the same breath that they should never be able to
- replace me at the same price. Madame Greloux, moreover, declared
- that she should never forgive herself for not having sharply
- reproved her brother for his abominable conduct. He was a good-
- for-nothing fellow, she said, as was proved by the fact that he
- had dared to raise his eyes to me. For the first time in my life,
- I felt that I was sincerely loved; and I was so deeply touched
- that if my decision had not been written and signed, I should
- certainly have returned to live with these worthy people. But it
- was too late. A sister came to tell me that the superior wished
- to see me. I bade Father and Mother Greloux farewell and went
- downstairs.
-
- "In the superior's room, a lady and two shop-girls, laden with
- boxes and parcels, were waiting for me. It was a dressmaker who
- had come with some clothes suited to my new station in life. I
- was told that she had been sent by the Count de Chalusse. This
- great nobleman thought of everything; and, although he had thirty
- servants to do his bidding, he never disdained to occupy himself
- with the pettiest details. So, for the first time, I was arrayed
- in rustling silk and clinging cashmere. My toilette was no
- trifling affair. All the good sisters clustered round me, and
- tried to beautify me with the same care and patience as they would
- have displayed in adorning the Virgin's statue for a fete-day. A
- secret instinct warned me that they were overdoing the matter, and
- that they were making me look ridiculous; but I did not mind. I
- allowed them to please themselves I could still feel Madame
- Greloux's tears on my hand, and the scene seemed to me as
- lugubrious as the last toilette of a prisoner under sentence of
- death. When they had completed their task, I heard a buzz of
- admiration round me. If the sisters were worthy of belief, they
- had never seen such a wonderful transformation. Those who were in
- the class-rooms or thee sewing-room, were summoned to view and
- admire me, and some of the elder children were also admitted.
- Perhaps I was intended as an example for the latter, for I heard
- the lady superior say to them, 'You see, my dear children, the
- result of good behavior. Be diligent and dutiful, like our dear
- Marguerite, and God will reward you as He has rewarded her.' And,
- meantime, miserable in my finery, I waited--waited for M. de
- Chalusse, who was coming to take me away.
-
- "At the appointed hour he appeared, with the same air of haughty
- reserve, that had so awed me on the occasion of our first meeting.
- He scarcely deigned to look at me, and although I watched him with
- poignant anxiety, I could read neither blame nor approval on his
- face. 'You see that your wishes have been scrupulously obeyed,
- Monsieur le Comte,' said the superior. 'I thank you,' he replied;
- 'and I shall prove the extent of my gratitude to the poor children
- under your charge.' Then, turning to me: 'Marguerite,' he said,
- 'take leave of--your mothers, and tell them that you will never
- forget their kindness.'"
-
- The girl paused, for her emotion had rendered her words almost
- unintelligible. But, with an effort, she speedily conquered her
- weakness.
-
- "It was only then," she continued, "that I realized how much I
- loved these poor nuns, whom I had sometimes almost cursed. I felt
- now how close the ties were, that bound me to this hospitable
- roof, and to these unfortunate children, my companions in misery
- and loneliness. It seemed to me as if my heart were breaking; and
- the superior, who was generally so impassible, appeared scarcely
- less moved than myself. At last, M. de Chalusse took me by the
- hand and led me away. In the street there was a carriage waiting
- for us, not such a beautiful one as that which had been sent to
- fetch me from my workshop, but a much larger one, with trunks and
- boxes piled on its roof. It was drawn by four gray horses. I
- felt more dead than alive, as I entered the carriage and took the
- seat which the count pointed out. He sat down opposite to me.
- All the sisters had assembled at the door of the asylum, and even
- the superior wept without making any attempt to hide her tears.
- 'Farewell!' they all cried; 'farewell, farewell, dear child! Don't
- forget your old friends. We shall pray for your happiness.' Alas!
- God could not have heard their prayers. At a sign from M. de
- Chalusse, a footman closed the door, the postilions cracked their
- whips, and the heavy vehicle rolled away.
-
- "The die was cast. Henceforth, an impassable gulf was to separate
- me from this asylum, whither I had been carried in my infancy half
- dead, and wrapped in swaddling clothes, from which every mark that
- could possibly lead to identification had been carefully cut away.
- Whatever my future might prove, I felt that my past was gone
- forever. But I was too greatly agitated even to think; and
- crouching in a corner of the carriage, I watched M. de Chalusse
- with the poignant anxiety a slave displays as he studies his new
- master. Ah! monsieur, what a wondrous change! A mask seemed to
- have fallen from the count's face; his lips quivered, a tender
- light beamed in his eyes, and he drew me to him, exclaiming: 'Oh,
- Marguerite! my beloved Marguerite! At last--at last!' He sobbed--
- this old man, whom I had thought as cold and as insensible as
- marble; he crushed me in his close embrace, he almost smothered me
- with kisses. And I was frightfully agitated by the strange,
- indefinable feeling, kindled in my heart; but I no longer trembled
- with fear. An inward voice whispered that this was but the
- renewal of a former tie--one which had somehow been mysteriously
- broken. However, as I remembered the superior's assertion that it
- was a miracle in my favor--a wonderful interposition of
- Providence, I had courage enough to ask: 'So it was not chance
- that guided you in your choice?'
-
- "My question seemed to take him by surprise. 'Poor Marguerite!'
- he murmured, 'dearly beloved child! for years I have been laboring
- to bring about this chance!' Instantly all the romantic stories I
- had heard in the asylum recurred to my mind. And Heaven knows
- there are plenty of these stories transmitted by the sisters from
- generation to generation, till they have become a sort of Golden
- Legend for poor foundlings. That sad formula, 'Father and mother
- unknown,' which figures on certificates of birth, acts as a
- dangerous stimulant for unhealthy imaginations, and leaves an open
- door for the most extravagant hopes. And thus influenced, I fixed
- my eyes on the face of the Count de Chalusse, striving to discover
- some resemblance in his features to my own. But he did not seem
- to notice my intent gaze, and following his train of thought, he
- muttered: 'Chance! It was necessary that they should think so, and
- they did think so. And yet the cleverest detectives in Paris,
- from old Tabaret to Fortunat, both masters in the art of following
- up a clue, had exhausted their resources in helping me in my
- despairing search.' The agony of suspense I was enduring had
- become intolerable; and unable to restrain myself longer, I
- exclaimed, with a wildly throbbing heart: 'Then, you are my
- father, Monsieur le Comte?' He pressed his hand to my lips with
- such violence that he hurt me, and then, in a voice quivering with
- excitement, he replied: 'Imprudent girl! What can you mean? Forget
- that unfortunate idea. Never utter the name of father--you hear
- me--never! I forbid it!' He had become extremely pale, and he
- looked anxiously around him, as if he feared that some one had
- overheard me--as if he had forgotten that we were alone in a
- carriage which was dashing onward at full speed!
-
- "I was stupefied and alarmed by the sudden terror which M. de
- Chalusse had displayed and could not control. What could it all
- mean? What sorrowful recollections, what mysterious apprehensions,
- had my words aroused in the count's mind? I could not understand
- or imagine why he should regard my question as strange or
- unnatural. On the contrary, I thought it perfectly natural,
- dictated as it had been by circumstances, and by the count's own
- words and manner. And, in spite of my confusion and agitation,
- the inexplicable voice which we call presentiment whispered in my
- heart: 'He has forbidden you to CALL him father, but he has not
- said that he is not your father.' However, I had not time to
- reflect or to question M. de Chalusse any more, though at that
- moment I should have had the courage to do so; afterward I did not
- dare.
-
- "Our carriage had drawn up outside the railway station, and the
- next instant we alighted. Then, for the first time, I learned the
- magical power of money, I, a poor girl--reared by public charity--
- and who for three years had worked for my daily bread. M. de
- Chalusse found the servants, who were to accompany us, awaiting
- him. They had thought of everything, and made every possible
- arrangement for our comfort. I had scarcely time to glance round
- me before we were on the platform in front of a train, which was
- ready to start. I perceived the very carriage that had brought us
- to the station already fastened on a low open truck, and I was
- advancing to climb into it, when M. de Chalusse stopped me. 'Not
- there,' said he, 'come with me.' I followed him, and he led me to
- a magnificent saloon carriage, much higher and roomier than the
- others, and emblazoned with the Chalusse coat-of-arms. 'This is
- our carriage, dear Marguerite, he said. I got in. The whistle
- sounded; and the train started off."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was growing very tired. Big drops of
- perspiration stood out on her forehead, she panted for breath, and
- her voice began to fail her.
-
- The magistrate was almost frightened. "Pray rest a little,
- mademoiselle," he entreated, "there is no hurry."
-
- But she shook her head and replied: "It is better to go on. I
- should never have courage to begin again if I paused." And
- thereupon she continued: "I had never gone farther than
- Versailles. This journey was at first as delightful as a glimpse
- into fairy-land. Our carriage was one of those costly whims which
- some millionaires indulge in. It consisted of a central saloon--a
- perfect chef-d'oeuvre of taste and luxury--with two compartments
- at either end, furnished with comfortable sleeping accommodation.
- And all this, the count seemed never weary of repeating, was mine--
- mine alone. Leaning back on the velvet cushions, I gazed at the
- changing landscape, as the train rushed madly on. Leaning over
- me, M. de Chalusse named all the towns and villages we passed:
- Brunoy, Melun, Fontainebleau, Villeneuve, Sens, Laroche. And each
- time the train stopped the servants came to ask if we wished for
- anything. When we reached Lyons, in the middle of the night, we
- found a delicious supper awaiting us. It was served as soon as we
- alighted, and in due time we were warned that the train was ready
- to start, and then we resumed our journey. You can imagine,
- perhaps, how marvellous all this seemed to a poor little
- apprentice, whose only ambition a week before was to earn five
- francs a day. What a change indeed! At last the count made me
- retire to one of the compartments, where I soon fell asleep,
- abandoning my efforts to distinguish what was dreamlike in my
- situation from reality. However, when I woke up I became terribly
- anxious. I asked myself what was awaiting me at the end of this
- long journey. M. de Chalusse's manner continued kind, and even
- affectionate; but he had regained his accustomed reserve and self-
- control, and I realized that it would be useless on my part to
- question him. At last, after a thirty hours' journey by rail, we
- again entered the count's berline, drawn by post-horses, and
- eventually M. de Chalusse said to me: 'Here is Cannes--we are at
- our journey's end.'
-
- "In this town, which is one of the most charming that overlook the
- blue waters of the Mediterranean, the count owned a palace
- embowered among lovely orange-trees, only a few steps from the
- sea, and in full view of the myrtle and laurel groves which deck
- the isles of Sainte Marguerite. He told me that he proposed
- spending a few months here in seclusion, so as to give me time to
- accustom myself to my new position and the luxury that surrounded
- me. I was, indeed, extremely awkward, and my excessive timidity
- was increased by my pride. I did not know what to say, or what to
- do. I did not know how to use my hands, nor how to walk, nor how
- to carry myself. Everything embarrassed and frightened me; and I
- was conscious of my awkwardness, without being able to remedy it.
- I saw my blunders, and knew that I spoke a different language to
- that which was spoken around me. And yet the memory of Cannes
- will ever be dear to me. For there I first met the only friend I
- have now left in this world. I did not exchange a word with him,
- but by the quickened throbbings of my heart, when our eyes met, I
- felt that he would exert a powerful influence over my life, and
- events have since proved that I was not deceived. At that time,
- however, he was a stranger to me; and nothing on earth would have
- induced me to make inquiries concerning him. It was only by
- chance I learned that he lived in Paris, that his name was Pascal,
- and that he had come south as a companion to a sick friend.
-
- "By a single word the count could have insured the happiness of my
- life and his own, but he did not speak it. He was the kindest and
- most indulgent of guardians, and I was often affected to tears by
- his tenderness. But, although my slightest wish was law, he did
- not grant me his confidence. The secret--the mystery that stood
- between us--was like a wall of ice. Still, I was gradually
- becoming accustomed to my new life, and my mind was regaining its
- equilibrium, when one evening the count returned home more
- agitated and excited, if possible, than on the day of my departure
- from the asylum. He summoned his valet, and, in a tone that
- admitted no reply, he exclaimed, 'I wish to leave Cannes at once--
- I must start in less than an hour--so procure some post-horses
- instantly.' And in answer to my inquiring glance, he said: 'It
- must be. It would be folly to hesitate. Each moment increases
- the peril that threatens us.'
-
- "I was very young, inexperienced, and totally ignorant of life;
- but my sufferings, my loneliness, and the prospect of being
- compelled to rely upon myself, had imparted to my mind that
- precocious maturity which is so often observed among the children
- of the poor. Knowing from the very first that there was some
- mystery connected with the count's life, I had studied him with a
- child's patient sagacity--a sagacity which is all the more
- dangerous, as it is unsuspected--and I had come to the conclusion
- that a constant dread rendered his life a burden. Could it be for
- himself that he trembled, this great nobleman, who was so powerful
- by reason of his exalted rank, his connections, and his wealth?
- Certainly not. Was it for me, then? Undoubtedly it was. But why?
- It had not taken me long to discover that he was concealing me,
- or, at least, that he endeavored by all means in his power to
- prevent my presence in his house from being known beyond a very
- limited circle of friends. Our hurried departure from Cannes
- confirmed me in my impression.
-
- "It might have been truly called a flight. We left that same
- evening at eleven o'clock, in a pouring rain, with the first
- horses that could be procured. Our only attendant was the count's
- valet--not Casimir, the man who insulted me a little while ago--
- but another man, an old and valued servant, who has since died,
- unfortunately, and who possessed his master's entire confidence.
- The other servants were dismissed with a princely gratuity, and
- told to disperse two days after our departure. We did not return
- to Paris, but journeyed toward the Italian frontier, and on
- arriving at Nice in the dead of night, we drove directly to the
- quay. The postilions unharnessed the horses, and we remained in
- the carriage. The valet, however, hastened off, and more than two
- hours elapsed before he returned. He declared that he had found
- it very difficult to procure what he wished for, but that at last,
- by a prodigal outlay of money, he had succeeded in overcoming all
- obstacles. What M. de Chalusse desired was a vessel ready for
- sea, and the bark which the valet had chartered now came up to the
- quay. Our carriage was put on board, we went below, and before
- daybreak we were under way.
-
- "Three days later we were in Genoa, registered under a false name
- in a second class hotel. While we were on the open sea, the count
- had seemed to be less agitated, but now he was far from calm, and
- the precautions he took proved that he still feared pursuit. A
- malefactor flying from justice could not have taken greater pains
- to mislead the detectives on his track. And facts proved
- conclusively that I was the sole cause of the count's
- apprehension. On one occasion I even heard him discussing with
- his valet the feasibility of clothing me in masculine attire. And
- it was only the difficulty of obtaining a suitable costume that
- prevented him from carrying this project into execution. I ought
- to mention, however, that the servant did not share his master's
- anxiety, for three or four times I overheard him saying: 'The
- count is too good to worry himself so much about such bad stock.
- Besides, she won't overtake us. It isn't certain that she has
- even followed us. How can she know anything about it?' She! Who
- was she? This is what I racked my brain to discover, but without
- success. I must confess, monsieur, that being of a practical
- nature, and not in the least degree romantic, I arrived at the
- conclusion that the peril chiefly existed in the count's
- imagination, or that he greatly exaggerated it. Still he suffered
- none the less on that account, as was shown by the fact that the
- following month was spent in hurried journeys from one Italian
- city to another.
-
- "It was the end of May before M. de Chalusse would consent to
- return to France; and then we went direct to Lyons. We had spent
- a couple of days there, when the count informed me that prudence
- required us to separate for a time--that our safety demanded this
- sacrifice. And without giving me time to say a word, he began to
- explain the advantages that would accrue from such an arrangement.
- I was extremely ignorant, and he wished me to profit by our
- temporary separation to raise my knowledge to a level with my new
- social position. He had, accordingly, made arrangements for me to
- enter the convent of Sainte-Marthe, an educational establishment
- which is as celebrated in the department of the Rhone as the
- Convent des Oiseaux is in Paris. He added that it would not be
- prudent for him to visit me; and he made me solemnly promise that
- I would never mention his name to any of my schoolmates. I was to
- send any letters I might write to an address which he would give
- me, and he would sign his answers with a fictitious name. He also
- told me that the lady superior of Sainte-Marthe knew his secret,
- and that I could confide in her. He was so restless and so
- miserably unhappy on the day when he acquainted me with these
- plans, that I really believed him insane. Nevertheless, I replied
- that I would obey him, and to tell the truth, I was not ill
- pleased at the thought of the change. My life with M. de Chalusse
- was a monotonous and cheerless one. I was almost dying of ennui,
- for I had been accustomed to work, bustle, and confusion with the
- Greloux, and I felt delighted at the prospect of finding myself
- among companions of my own age.
-
- "Unfortunately, M. de Chalusse had forgotten one circumstance,
- which made my two years' sojourn at Sainte-Marthe a lingering and
- cruel agony. At first I was kindly treated by my schoolmates. A
- new pupil is always welcome, for her arrival relieves the monotony
- of convent-life. But it was not long before my companions wished
- to know my name; and I had none other than Marguerite to give
- them. They were astonished and wished to know who my parents
- were. I could not tell an untruth; and I was obliged to confess
- that I knew nothing at all respecting my father or my mother.
- After that 'the bastard'--for such was the name they gave me--was
- soon condemned to isolation. No one would associate with me
- during play-time. No one would sit beside me in the school-room.
- At the piano lesson, the girl who played after me pretended to
- wipe the keyboard carefully before commencing her exercises. I
- struggled bravely against this unjust ostracism; but all in vain.
- I was so unlike these other girls in character and disposition,
- and I had, moreover, been guilty of a great imprudence. I had
- been silly enough to show my companions the costly jewels which M.
- de Chalusse had given me, but which I never wore. And on two
- occasions I had proved to them that I had more money at my
- disposal than all the other pupils together. If I had been poor,
- they would, perhaps, have treated me with affected sympathy; but
- as I was rich, I became an enemy. It was war; and one of those
- merciless wars which sometimes rage so furiously in convents,
- despite their seeming quiet.
-
- "I should surprise you, monsieur, if I told you what refined
- torture these daughters of noblemen invented to gratify their
- petty spite. I might have complained to the superior, but I
- scorned to do so. I buried my sorrow deep in my heart, as I had
- done years before; and I firmly resolved never to show ought but a
- smiling, placid face, so as to prove to my enemies that they were
- powerless to disturb my peace of mind. Study became my refuge and
- consolation; and I plunged into work with the energy of despair.
- I should probably still live at Sainte-Marthe now, had it not been
- for a trivial circumstance. One day I had a quarrel with my most
- determined enemy, a girl named Anais de Rochecote. I was a
- thousand times right; and I would not yield. The superior dared
- not tell me I was wrong. Anais was furious, and wrote I don't
- know what falsehoods to her mother. Madame de Rochecote thereupon
- interested the mothers of five or six other pupils in her
- daughter's quarrel, and one evening these ladies came in a body,
- and nobly and courageously demanded that the 'bastard' should be
- expelled. It was impossible, outrageous, monstrous, they
- declared, that their daughters should be compelled to associate
- with a girl like me--a nameless girl, who humiliated the other
- girls with her ill-gotten wealth. The superior tried to take my
- part; but these ladies declared they would take their daughters
- from the convent if I were not sent away. There was no help for
- it: I was sacrificed. Summoned by telegraph, M. de Chalusse
- hastened to Lyons, and two days later I left Sainte-Marthe with
- jeers and opprobrious epithets ringing in my ears."
-
-
-
- X.
-
-
- Once before, that very morning, the magistrate had witnessed a
- display of the virile energy with which misfortune and suffering
- had endowed this proud but naturally timid girl. But he was none
- the less surprised at the sudden explosion of hatred which he now
- beheld; for it was hatred. The way in which Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's voice had quivered as she pronounced the name of
- Anais de Rochecote proved, unmistakably, that hers was one of
- those haughty natures that never forget an insult. All signs of
- fatigue had now disappeared. She had sprung from her chair, and
- remembrance of the shameful, cowardly affront she had received had
- brought a vivid flush to her cheeks and a bright gleam to her
- eyes.
-
- "This atrocious humiliation happened scarcely a year ago,
- monsieur," she resumed; "and there is but little left for me to
- tell you. My expulsion from Sainte-Marthe made M. de Chalusse
- frantic with indignation. He knew something that I was ignorant
- of--that Madame de Rochecote, who enacted the part of a severe and
- implacable censor, was famed for the laxity of her morals. The
- count's first impulse was to wreak vengeance on my persecutors;
- for, in spite of his usual coolness, M. de Chalusse had a furious
- temper at times. It was only with the greatest difficulty that I
- dissuaded him from challenging General de Rochecote, who was
- living at the time. However, it now became necessary to make some
- other arrangements for me. M. de Chalusse offered to find another
- school, promising to take such precautions as would insure my
- peace of mind. But I interrupted him before he had spoken a dozen
- words, declaring I would rather return to the book-binders than
- chance another such experiment. And what I said I meant. A
- subterfuge--a fictitious name, for instance--could alone shield me
- from persecution similar to what I had endured at Sainte-Marthe.
- But I knew that I was incapable of playing such a part--I felt
- that I should somehow confess everything. My firmness imparted
- some resolution to M. de Chalusse. He exclaimed, with an oath,
- that I was right--that he was weary of all this deception and
- concealment, and that he would make arrangements to have me near
- him. 'Yes,' he concluded, embracing me, 'the die is cast, come
- what may!'
-
- "However, these measures required a certain delay; and, in the
- meantime, he decided to install me in Paris, which is the only
- place where one can successfully hide from prying eyes. He
- purchased a small but convenient house, surrounded by a garden, in
- the neighborhood of the Luxembourg Palace, and here he installed
- me, with two old women and a trusty man-servant. As I needed a
- chaperon, he went in quest of one, and found Madame Leon."
-
- On hearing this name, the magistrate gave the young girl a
- searching look, as if he hoped to discover what estimate she had
- formed of the housekeeper's character, as well as what degree of
- confidence she had granted her. But Mademoiselle Marguerite's
- face remained unaltered in expression.
-
- "After so many trials," she resumed, "I thought I should now find
- rest and peace. Yes, I believed so; and the few months I spent in
- that quiet house will be the happiest of my life--I am sure of it.
- Judge of my surprise when, on going down into the little garden on
- the second day after my arrival, I saw the young man whom I had
- met at Cannes, and whose face had lingered in my memory for more
- than two years as the type of all that was best and noblest in the
- human countenance. He was standing near the gate. A cloud passed
- before my eyes. What mysterious freak of fate had caused him to
- pause there at that particular moment? This much is certain, he
- recognized me as I had recognized him. He bowed, smiling
- somewhat, and I fled indoors again, indignant with myself for not
- being angry at his audacity. I made many plans that day, but the
- next morning, at the same hour, I hid myself behind a Venetian
- blind, and saw him pause at the gate, and gaze at the garden with
- evident anxiety. I soon learned that he lived near by, with his
- widowed mother; and twice a day, when he went to the Palais de
- Justice and returned, he passed my home."
-
- Her cheeks were crimson now, her eyes were lowered, and she was
- evidently embarrassed. But suddenly, as if ashamed of her
- blushes, she proudly raised her head, and said, in a firmer voice:
- "Shall I tell you our simple story? Is it necessary? I should not
- have concealed anything that has passed from my mother, if I had
- been so happy as to possess a mother. A few moments' conversation
- now and then, the exchange of a few letters, the pressure of a
- hand through the garden gate, and that is all. Still, I have been
- guilty of a grave and irreparable fault: I have disobeyed the one
- rule of my life--frankness; and I am cruelly punished for doing
- so. I did not tell all this to M. de Chalusse--in fact, I dared
- not. I was ashamed of my cowardice; from day to day I vowed that
- I would confess everything, and yet I procrastinated. I said to
- myself every night, 'It shall be done to-morrow; but when the
- morrow came I said, 'I will give myself another day--just one more
- day.' Indeed, my courage failed me when I thought of the count's
- aristocratic prejudices; and besides, I knew how ambitious he was
- for my future. On the other hand, moreover, Pascal was always
- pleading: 'Don't speak now. My circumstances are constantly
- improving. The day is not far off when I shall be able to offer
- you wealth and fame. When that day comes I will go to your
- guardian and ask him for your hand; but in Heaven's name don't
- speak now.' I understood Pascal's motives well enough. The
- count's immense fortune frightened him, and he feared that he
- would be accused of being a fortune-hunter. So I waited, with
- that secret anguish which still haunts those who have been unhappy
- even when their present is peaceful, and their future seems
- bright. I kept my secret, saying to myself that such happiness
- was not meant for me, that it would soon take flight.
-
- "It took flight all too soon. One morning I heard a carriage draw
- up outside our door, and the next moment the Count de Chalusse
- entered the sitting-room. 'Everything is ready to receive you at
- the Hotel de Chalusse, Marguerite,' said he, 'come!' He
- ceremoniously offered me his arm, and I accompanied him. I could
- not even leave a message for Pascal, for I had never made a
- confidante of Madame Leon. Still, a faint hope sustained me. I
- thought that the precautions taken by M. de Chalusse would
- somewhat dispel the uncertainty of my position, and furnish me at
- least with some idea of the vague danger which threatened me. But
- no. His efforts, so far as I could discover, had been confined to
- changing his servants. Our life in this grand house was the same
- as it had been at Cannes--even more secluded, if that were
- possible. The count had aged considerably. It was evident that
- he was sinking beneath the burden of some ever-present sorrow. 'I
- am condemning you to a cheerless and melancholy youth,' he
- sometimes said to me, 'but it will not last forever--patience,
- patience!' Did he really love me? I think so. But his affection
- showed itself in a strange manner. Sometimes his voice was so
- tender that my heart was touched. At others there was a look of
- hatred in his eyes which terrified me. Occasionally he was severe
- almost to brutality, and then the next moment he would implore me
- to forgive him, order the carriage, take me with him to his
- jewellers', and insist upon me accepting some costly ornaments.
- Madame Leon declares that my jewels are worth more than twenty
- thousand francs. At times I wondered if his capricious affection
- and sternness were really intended for myself. It often seemed to
- me that I was only a shadow--the phantom of some absent person, in
- his eyes. It is certain that he often requested me to dress
- myself or to arrange my hair in a certain fashion, to wear such
- and such a color, or to use a particular perfume which he gave me.
- Frequently, when I was moving about the house, he suddenly
- exclaimed: 'Marguerite! I entreat you, remain just where you are!'
-
- "I obeyed him, but the illusion had already vanished. A sob or an
- oath would come from his lips, and then in an angry voice he would
- bid me leave the room."
-
- The magistrate did not raise his eyes from his talismanic ring; it
- might have been supposed that it had fascinated him. Still, his
- expression denoted profound commiseration, and he shook his head
- thoughtfully. The idea had occurred to him that this unfortunate
- young girl had been the victim, not precisely of a madman, but of
- one of those maniacs who have just enough reason left to invent
- the tortures they inflict upon those around them.
-
- Speaking more slowly than before, as if she were desirous of
- attracting increased attention on the magistrate's part,
- Mademoiselle Marguerite now continued: "If I reminded M. de
- Chalusse of a person whom he had formerly loved, that person may
- have been my mother. I say, MAY HAVE BEEN, because I am not
- certain of it. All my efforts to discover the truth were
- unavailing. M. de Chalusse seemed to take a malicious pleasure in
- destroying all my carefully-arranged theories, and in upsetting
- the conjectures which he had encouraged himself only twenty-four
- hours previously. Heaven only knows how anxiously I listened to
- his slightest word! And it can be easily understood why I did so.
- My strange and compromising connection with him drove me nearly
- frantic. It was not strange that people's suspicions were
- aroused. True, he had changed all his servants before my arrival
- here; but he had requested Madame Leon to remain with me, and who
- can tell what reports she may have circulated? It has often
- happened that when returning from mass on Sundays, I have
- overheard persons say, 'Look! there is the Count de Chalusse's
- mistress!' Oh! not a single humiliation has been spared me--not a
- single one! However, on one point I did not feel the shadow of a
- doubt. The count had known my mother. He frequently alluded to
- her, sometimes with an outburst of passion which made me think
- that he had once adored, and still loved her; sometimes, with
- insults and curses which impressed me with the idea that she had
- cruelly injured him. But most frequently he reproached her for
- having unhesitatingly sacrificed me to insure her own safety. He
- said she could have had no heart; and that it was an unheard of,
- incomprehensible, and monstrous thing that a woman could enjoy
- luxury and wealth, undisturbed by remorse, knowing that her
- innocent and defenceless child was exposed all the while to the
- hardships and temptations of abject poverty. I was also certain
- that my mother was a married woman, for M. de Chalusse alluded to
- her husband more than once. He hated him with a terrible hatred.
- One evening, when he was more communicative than usual, he gave me
- to understand that the great danger he dreaded for me came either
- from my mother or her husband. He afterward did his best to
- counteract this impression; but he did not succeed in convincing
- me that his previous assertion was untrue."
-
- The magistrate looked searchingly at Mademoiselle Marguerite.
- "Then those letters which we found just now in the escritoire are
- from your mother, mademoiselle?" he remarked.
-
- The girl blushed. She had previously been questioned respecting
- these letters, and she had then made no reply. Now, she hesitated
- for a moment, and then quietly said: "Your opinion coincides with
- mine, monsieur."
-
- Thereupon, as if she wished to avoid any further questioning on
- the subject, she hurriedly continued: "At last a new and even
- greater trouble came--a positive calamity, which made me forget
- the disgrace attached to my birth. One morning at breakfast,
- about a month ago, the count informed me that he expected two
- guests to dinner that evening. This was such an unusual
- occurrence that I was struck speechless with astonishment. 'It is
- extraordinary, I admit,' he added, gayly; 'but it is nevertheless
- true. M. de Fondege and the Marquis de Valorsay will dine here
- this evening. So, my dear Marguerite, look your prettiest in
- honor of our old friend.' At six o'clock the two gentlemen
- arrived together. I was well acquainted with M. de Fondege--the
- general, as he was commonly called. He was the count's only
- intimate friend, and often visited us. But I had never before
- seen the Marquis de Valorsay, nor had I ever heard his name until
- M. de Chalusse mentioned it that morning. I don't pretend to
- judge him. I will only say that as soon as I saw him, the dislike
- I felt for him bordered on aversion. My false position rendered
- his close scrutiny actually painful to me, and his attentions and
- compliments pleased me no better. At dinner he addressed his
- conversation exclusively to me, and I particularly remember a
- certain picture he drew of a model household, which positively
- disgusted me. In his opinion, a husband ought to content himself
- with being his wife's prime minister--the slave of her slightest
- caprice. He intended, if he married, to allow the Marquise de
- Valorsay perfect freedom, with an unlimited amount of money, the
- handsomest carriages, and the most magnificent diamonds in Paris--
- everything, indeed, that could gratify her vanity, and render her
- existence a fairylike dream. 'With such ideas on her husband's
- part the marchioness will be very difficult to please if she is
- not contented with her lot,' he added, glancing covertly at me.
- This exasperated me beyond endurance, and I dryly replied: 'The
- mere thought of such a husband would drive me to the shelter of a
- convent.' He seemed considerably disconcerted; and I noticed that
- the general, I mean M. de Fondege, gave him a mischievous look.
-
- "However, when the gentlemen had gone, M. de Chalusse scolded me
- severely. He said that my sentimental philosophy was quite out of
- place in a drawing-room, and that my ideas of life, marriage, and
- duty could only have been gained in a foundling asylum. As I
- attempted to reply, he interrupted me to sound the praises of the
- Marquis de Valorsay, who not only came of an ancient family, and
- possessed immense, unencumbered estates, but was a talented,
- handsome man into the bargain; in short, one of those favored
- mortals whom all young girls sigh for. The scales fell from my
- eyes. I instantly understood that M. de Chalusse had selected the
- Marquis de Valorsay to be my husband, and thus the marquis had
- designedly explained his matrimonial programme for my benefit. It
- was a snare to catch the bird. I felt indignant that he should
- suppose me so wanting in delicacy of feeling and nobility of
- character as to be dazzled by the life of display and facile
- pleasure which he had depicted. I had disliked him at first, and
- now I despised him; for it was impossible to misunderstand the
- shameless proposal concealed beneath his half-jesting words. He
- offered me my liberty in exchange for my fortune. That is only a
- fair contract, one might say. Perhaps so; but if he were willing
- to do this for a certain amount of money, what would he not do for
- a sum twice or thrice as large? Such were my impressions, though I
- asked myself again and again if I were not mistaken. No; the
- events that followed only confirmed my suspicions. Three days
- later the marquis came again. His visit was to the count, and
- they held a long conference in this study. Having occasion to
- enter the room, after the marquis's departure, I noticed on the
- table a number of title deeds which he had probably brought for
- the count's inspection. On the following week there was another
- conference, and this time a lawyer was present. Any further
- doubts I might have felt were dispelled by Madame Leon, who was
- always well informed--thanks to her habit of listening at the
- keyholes. 'They are talking of marrying you to the Marquis de
- Valorsay--I heard them,' she remarked to me.
-
- "However, the information did not terrify me. I had profited by
- the time allowed me for reflection, and I had decided upon the
- course I should pursue. I am timid, but I am not weak; and I was
- determined to resist M. de Chalusse's will in this matter, even if
- it became necessary for me to leave his house, and renounce all
- hopes of the wealth he had promised me. Still I said nothing to
- Pascal of my mental struggle and final determination. I did not
- wish to bind him by the advice which he would certainly have given
- me. I had his troth, and that sufficed. And it was with a thrill
- of joy that I said to myself: 'What does it matter if M. de
- Chalusse should be so angered by my refusal to obey him as to
- drive me from his house? It will rather be so much the better;
- Pascal will protect me.'
-
- "But resistance is only possible when you are attacked; and M. de
- Chalusse did not even allude to the subject--perhaps because
- affairs had not yet been satisfactorily arranged between the
- marquis and himself--possibly because he wished to deprive me of
- the power to oppose him by taking me unawares. It would have been
- great imprudence on my part to broach the subject myself, and so I
- waited calmly and resignedly, storing up all my energy for the
- decisive hour. I willingly confess that I am not a heroine of
- romance--I do not look upon money with the contempt it deserves.
- I was resolved to wed solely in accordance with the dictates of my
- heart; but I wished, and HOPED, that M. de Chalusse would give me,
- not a fortune, but a modest dowry. He had become more
- communicative than usual on money matters, and took no pains to
- conceal the fact that he was engaged in raising the largest
- possible amount of ready cash. He received frequent visits from
- his stockbroker, and sometimes when the latter had left him, he
- showed me rolls of bank-notes and packages of bonds, saying, as he
- did so: 'You see that your future is assured, my dear Marguerite.'
-
- "I am only doing the count justice when I say that my future was a
- subject of constant anxiety to him during the last few months of
- his life. Less than a fortnight after he had taken me from the
- asylum, he drew up a will, in which he adopted me and made me his
- sole legatee. But he afterward destroyed this document on the
- plea that it did not afford me sufficient security; and a dozen
- others shared the same fate. For his mind was constantly occupied
- with the subject, and he seemed to have a presentiment that his
- death would be a sudden one. I am forced to admit that he seemed
- less anxious to endow me with his fortune than to frustrate the
- hopes of some persons I did not know. When he burned his last
- will in my presence, he remarked: 'This document is useless: they
- would contest it, and probably succeed in having it set aside. I
- have thought of a better way; I have found an expedient which will
- provide for all emergencies.' And as I ventured some timid
- objection--for it was repugnant to my sense of honor to act as an
- instrument of vengeance or injustice, or assist, even passively,
- in despoiling any person of his rightful inheritance--he harshly,
- almost brutally, replied: 'Mind your own business! I will
- disappoint the folks who are waiting for my property as they
- deserve to be disappointed. They covet my estates do they! Very
- well, they shall have them. I will leave them my property, but
- they shall find it mortgaged to its full value.'
-
- "Unfortunate man! all his plans have failed. The heirs whom he
- hated so bitterly, and whom I don't even know, whose existence
- people have not even suspected, can now come, and they will find
- the wealth he was determined to deprive them of intact. He
- dreamed of a brilliant destiny for me--a proud name, and the rank
- of a marchioness--and he has not even succeeded in protecting me
- from the most shameful insults. I have been accused of theft
- before his body was even cold. He wished to make me rich,
- frightfully rich, and he has not left me enough to buy my bread--
- literally, not enough to buy bread. He was in constant terror
- concerning my safety, and he died without even telling me what
- were the mysterious dangers which threatened me; without even
- telling me something which I am morally certain of--that he was my
- father. He raised me against my will to the highest social
- position--he placed that wonderful talisman, gold, in my hand; he
- showed me the world at my feet; and suddenly he allowed me to fall
- even to lower depths of misery than those in which he found me.
- Ah! M. de Chalusse, it would have been far better for me if you
- had left me in the foundling asylum to have earned my own bread.
- And yet, I freely forgive you."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite reflected for a moment, questioning her
- memory to ascertain if she had told everything--if she had
- forgotten any particulars of importance. And as it seemed to her
- that she had nothing more to add, she approached the magistrate,
- and, with impressive solemnity of tone and manner, exclaimed: "My
- life up to the present hour is now as well known to you as it is
- to myself. You know what even the friend, who is my only hope,
- does not know as yet. And now, when I tell him what I really am,
- will he think me unworthy of him?"
-
- The magistrate sprang to his feet, impelled by an irresistible
- force. Two big tears, the first he had shed for years, trembled
- on his eyelashes, and coursed down his furrowed cheeks. "You are
- a noble creature, my child," he replied, in a voice faltering with
- emotion; "and if I had a son, I should deem myself fortunate if he
- chose a wife like you."
-
- She clasped her hands, with a gesture of intense joy and relief,
- and then sank into an arm-chair, murmuring: "Oh, thanks, monsieur,
- thanks!" For she was thinking of Pascal; and she had feared he
- might shrink from her when she fully revealed to him her wretched,
- sorrowful past, of which he was entirely ignorant. But the
- magistrate's words had reassured her.
-
-
-
- XI.
-
-
- The clock on the mantel-shelf struck half-past four. The
- magistrate and Mademoiselle Marguerite could hear stealthy
- footsteps in the hall, and a rustling near the door. The servants
- were prowling round about the study, wondering what was the reason
- of this prolonged conference. "I must see how the clerk is
- progressing with the inventory." said the magistrate. "Excuse me
- if I absent myself for a moment; I will soon return." And so
- saying he rose and left the room.
-
- But it was only a pretext. He really wished to conceal his
- emotion and regain his composure, for he had been deeply affected
- by the young girl's narrative. He also needed time for
- reflection, for the situation had become extremely complicated
- since Mademoiselle Marguerite had informed him of the existence of
- heirs--of those mysterious enemies who had poisoned the count's
- peace. These persons would, of course, require to know what had
- become of the millions deposited in the escritoire, and who would
- be held accountable for the missing treasure? Mademoiselle
- Marguerite, unquestionably. Such were the thoughts that flitted
- through the magistrate's mind as he listened to his clerk's
- report. Nor was this all; for having solicited Mademoiselle
- Marguerite's confidence, he must now advise her. And this was a
- matter of some difficulty.
-
- However, when he returned to the study he was quite self-possessed
- and impassive again, and he was pleased to see that on her side
- the unfortunate girl had, to some extent, at least, recovered her
- wonted composure. "Let us now discuss the situation calmly," he
- began. "I shall convince you that your prospects are not so
- frightful as you imagine. But before speaking of the future, will
- you allow me to refer to the past?" The girl bowed her consent.
- "Let us first of all consider the subject of the missing millions.
- They were certainly in the escritoire when M. de Chalusse replaced
- the vial; but now they are not to be found, so that the count must
- have taken them away with him."
-
- "That thought occurred to me also."
-
- "Did the treasure form a large package?"
-
- "Yes, it was large; but it could have been easily concealed under
- the cloak which M. de Chalusse wore."
-
- "Very good! What was the time when he left the house?"
-
- "About five o'clock."
-
- "When was he brought back?"
-
- "At about half-past six."
-
- "Where did the cabman pick him up?"
-
- "Near the church of Notre Dame de Lorette, so he told me."
-
- "Do you know the driver's number?"
-
- "Casimir asked him for it, I believe."
-
- Had any one inquired the reason of this semi-official examination,
- the magistrate would have replied that Mademoiselle Marguerite's
- interests alone influenced him in the course he was taking. This
- was quite true; and yet, without being altogether conscious of the
- fact, he was also impelled by another motive. This affair
- interested, almost fascinated, him on account of its mysterious
- surroundings, and influenced by the desire for arriving at the
- truth which is inherent in every human heart, he was anxious to
- solve the riddle. After a few moments' thoughtful silence, he
- remarked: "So the point of departure in our investigation, if
- there is an investigation, will be this: M. de Chalusse left the
- house with two millions in his possession; and while he was
- absent, he either disposed of that enormous sum--or else it was
- stolen from him."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite shuddered. "Oh! stolen," she faltered.
-
- "Yes, my child--anything is possible. We must consider the
- situation in every possible light. But to continue. Where was M.
- de Chalusse going?"
-
- "To the house of a gentleman who would, he thought, be able to
- furnish the address given in the letter he had torn up."
-
- "What was this gentleman's name?"
-
- "Fortunat."
-
- The magistrate wrote the name down on his tablets, and then,
- resuming his examination, he said: "Now, in reference to this
- unfortunate letter which, in your opinion, was the cause of the
- count's death, what did it say?"
-
- "I don't know, monsieur. It is true that I helped the count in
- collecting the fragments, but I did not read what was written on
- them."
-
- "That is of little account. The main thing is to ascertain who
- wrote the letter. You told me that it could only have come from
- the sister who disappeared thirty years ago, or else from your
- mother."
-
- "That was, and still is, my opinion."
-
- The magistrate toyed with his ring; and a smile of satisfaction
- stole over his face. "Very well!" he exclaimed, "in less than
- five minutes I shall be able to tell you whether the letter was
- from your mother or not. My method is perfectly simple. I have
- only to compare the handwriting with that of the letters found in
- the escritoire."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite sprang up, exclaiming: "What a happy
- idea!"
-
- But without seeming to notice the girl's surprise, he added:
- "Where are the remnants of this letter which you and the count
- picked up in the garden?"
-
- "M. de Chalusse placed them in his pocket."
-
- "They must be found. Tell the count's valet to look for them."
-
- The girl rang; but M. Casimir, who was supposed to be engaged in
- making preparations for the funeral, was not in the house.
- However, another servant and Madame Leon offered their services,
- and certainly displayed the most laudable zeal, but their search
- was fruitless; the fragments of the letter could not be found.
- "How unfortunate!" muttered the magistrate, as he watched them
- turn the pockets of the count's clothes inside out. "What a
- fatality! That letter would probably have solved the mystery."
-
- Compelled to submit to this disappointment, he returned to the
- study; but he was evidently discouraged. Although he did not
- consider the mystery insoluble, far from it, he realized that time
- and research would be required to arrive at a solution, and that
- the affair was quite beyond his province. One hope alone
- remained.
-
- By carefully studying the last words which M. de Chalusse had
- written and spoken he might arrive at the intention which had
- dictated them. Experience had wonderfully sharpened his
- penetration, and perhaps he might discover a hidden meaning which
- would throw light upon all this doubt and uncertainty.
- Accordingly, he asked Mademoiselle Marguerite for the paper upon
- which the count had endeavored to pen his last wishes; and in
- addition he requested her to write on a card the dying man's last
- words in the order they had been uttered. But on combining the
- written and the spoken words the only result obtained was as
- follows:--"My entire fortune--give--friends--against--Marguerite--
- despoiled--your mother--take care." These twelve incoherent words
- revealed the count's absorbing and poignant anxiety concerning his
- fortune and Marguerite's future, and also the fear and aversion
- with which Marguerite's mother inspired him. But that was all;
- the sense was not precise enough for any practical purpose.
- Certainly the word "give" needed no explanation. It was plain
- that the count had endeavored to write, "I give my entire
- fortune." The meaning of the word "despoiled" was also clear. It
- had evidently been wrung from the half-unconscious man by the
- horrible thought that Marguerite--his own daughter,
- unquestionably--would not have a penny of all the millions he had
- intended for her. "Take care" also explained itself. But there
- were two words which seemed absolutely incomprehensible to the
- magistrate, and which he vainly strove to connect with the others
- in an intelligible manner. These were the words "friends" and
- "against," and they were the most legibly written of all. For the
- thirtieth time the magistrate was repeating them in an undertone,
- when a rap came at the door, and almost immediately Madame Leon
- entered the room.
-
- "What is it?" inquired Mademoiselle Marguerite.
-
- Laying a package of letters, addressed to M. de Chalusse, on the
- desk, the housekeeper replied: "These have just come by the post
- for the poor count. Heaven rest his soul!" And then handing a
- newspaper to Mademoiselle Marguerite, she added, in an unctuous
- tone: "And some one left this paper for mademoiselle at the same
- time."
-
- "This paper--for me? You must be mistaken."
-
- "Not at all. I was in the concierge's lodge when the messenger
- brought it; and he said it was for Mademoiselle Marguerite, from
- one of her friends." And with these words she made one of her very
- best courtesies, and withdrew.
-
- The girl had taken the newspaper, and now, with an air of
- astonishment and apprehension, she slowly unfolded it. What first
- attracted her attention was a paragraph on the first page marked
- round with red chalk. The paper had evidently been sent in order
- that she might read this particular passage, and accordingly she
- began to peruse it. "There was a great sensation and a terrible
- scandal last evening at the residence of Madame d'A----, a well
- known star of the first magnitude----"
-
- It was the shameful article which described the events that had
- robbed Pascal of his honor. And to make assurance doubly sure, to
- prevent the least mistake concerning the printed initials, the
- coward who sent the paper had appended the names of the persons
- mixed up in the affair, at full length, in pencil. He had written
- d'Argeles, Pascal Ferailleur, Ferdinand de Coralth, Rochecote.
- And yet, in spite of these precautions, the girl did not at first
- seize the full meaning of the article; and she was obliged to read
- it over again. But when she finally understood it--when the
- horrible truth burst upon her--the paper fell from her nerveless
- hands, she turned as pale as death, and, gasping for breath,
- leaned heavily against the wall for support.
-
- Her features expressed such terrible suffering that the magistrate
- sprang from his chair with a bound. "What has happened?" he
- eagerly asked.
-
- She tried to reply, but finding herself unable to do so, she
- pointed to the paper lying upon the floor, and gasped: "There!
- there!"
-
- The magistrate understood everything at the first glance; and this
- man, who had witnessed so much misery--who had been the confidant
- of so many martyrs--was filled with consternation at thought of
- the misfortunes which destiny was heaping upon this defenceless
- girl. He approached her, and led her gently to an arm-chair, upon
- which she sank, half fainting. "Poor child!" he murmured. "The
- man you had chosen--the man whom you would have sacrificed
- everything for--is Pascal Ferailleur, is he not?"
-
- "Yes, it is he."
-
- "He is an advocate?"
-
- "As I have already told you, monsieur."
-
- "Does he live in the Rue d'Ulm?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- The magistrate shook his head sadly. "It is the same," said he.
- "I also know him, my poor child; and I loved and honored him.
- Yesterday I should have told you that he was worthy of you. He
- was above slander. But now, see what depths love of play has
- brought him to. He is a thief!"
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite's weakness vanished. She sprang from her
- chair, and indignantly faced the magistrate. "It is false!" she
- cried, vehemently; "and what that paper says is false as well!"
-
- Had her reason been affected by so many successive blows? It
- seemed likely; for, livid a moment before, her face had now turned
- scarlet. She trembled nervously from head to foot, and there was
- a gleam of insanity in her big black eyes.
-
- "If she doesn't weep, she is lost," thought the magistrate. And,
- instead of encouraging her to hope, he deemed it best to try and
- destroy what he considered a dangerous illusion. "Alas! my poor
- child," he said sadly, "you must not deceive yourself. The
- newspapers are often hasty in their judgment; but an article like
- that is only published when proof of its truth is furnished by
- witnesses of unimpeachable veracity."
-
- She shrugged her shoulders as if she were listening to some
- monstrous absurdities, and then thoughtfully muttered: "Ah! now
- Pascal's silence is explained: now I understand why he has not yet
- replied to the letter I wrote him last night."
-
- The magistrate persevered, however, and added: "So, after the
- article you have just read, no one can entertain the shadow of a
- doubt."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite hastily interrupted him. "But I have not
- doubted him for a second!" she exclaimed. "Doubt Pascal! I doubt
- Pascal! I would sooner doubt myself. I might commit a
- dishonorable act; I am only a poor, weak, ignorant girl, while he--
- he---- You don't know, then, that he was my conscience? Before
- undertaking anything, before deciding upon anything, if ever I
- felt any doubt, I asked myself, 'What would he do? ' And the mere
- thought of him is sufficient to banish any unworthy idea from my
- heart." Her tone and manner betokened complete and unwavering
- confidence; and her faith imparted an almost sublime expression to
- her face. "If I was overcome, monsieur," she continued, "it was
- only because I was appalled by the audacity of the accusation.
- How was it possible to make Pascal even SEEM to be guilty of a
- dishonorable act? This is beyond my powers of comprehension. I am
- only certain of one thing--that he is innocent. If the whole
- world rose to testify against him, it would not shake my faith in
- him, and even if he confessed that he was guilty I should be more
- likely to believe that he was crazed than culpable!"
-
- A bitter smile curved her lips, she was beginning to judge the
- situation more correctly, and in a calmer tone she resumed:
- "Moreover, what does circumstantial evidence prove? Did you not
- this morning hear all our servants declaring that I was
- accountable for M. de Chalusse's millions? Who knows what might
- have happened if it had not been for your intervention? Perhaps,
- by this time, I should have been in prison."
-
- "This is not a parallel case, my child."
-
- "It IS a parallel case, monsieur. Suppose, for one moment, that I
- had been formally accused--what do you think Pascal would have
- replied if people had gone to him, and said, 'Marguerite is a
- thief?' He would have laughed them to scorn, and have exclaimed,
- 'Impossible!"'
-
- The magistrate's mind was made up. In his opinion, Pascal
- Ferailleur was guilty. Still it was useless to argue with the
- girl, for he felt that he should not be able to convince her.
- However, he determined, if possible, to ascertain her plans in
- order to oppose them, if they seemed to him at all dangerous.
- "Perhaps you are right, my child," he conceded, "still, this
- unfortunate affair must change all your arrangements."
-
- "Rather, it modifies them." Surprised by her calmness, he looked
- at her inquiringly. "An hour ago," she added, "I had resolved to
- go to Pascal and claim his aid and protection as one claims an
- undeniable right or the fulfilment of a solemn promise; but now--"
-
- "Well?" eagerly asked the magistrate.
-
- "I am still resolved to go to him--but as an humble suppliant.
- And I shall say to him, 'You are suffering, but no sorrow is
- intolerable when there are two to bear the burden; and so, here I
- am. Everything else may fail you--your dearest friends may basely
- desert you; but here am I. Whatever your plans may be--whether
- you have decided to leave Europe or to remain in Paris to watch
- for your hour of vengeance, you will need a faithful, trusty
- companion--a confidant--and here I am! Wife, friend, sister--I
- will be which ever you desire. I am yours--yours
- unconditionally.'" And as if in reply to a gesture of surprise
- which escaped the magistrate, she added: "He is unhappy--I am
- free--I love him!"
-
- The magistrate was struck dumb with astonishment. He knew that
- she would surely do what she said; he had realized that she was
- one of those generous, heroic women who are capable of any
- sacrifice for the man they love--a woman who would never shrink
- from what she considered to be her duty, who was utterly incapable
- of weak hesitancy or selfish calculation.
-
- "Fortunately, my dear young lady, your devotion will no doubt be
- useless," he said at last.
-
- "And why?"
-
- "Because M. Ferailleur owes it to you, and, what is more, he owes
- it to himself, not to accept such a sacrifice." Failing to
- understand his meaning, she looked at him inquiringly. "You will
- forgive me, I trust," he continued, "if I warn you to prepare for
- a disappointment. Innocent or guilty, M. Ferailleur is--
- disgraced. Unless something little short of a miracle comes to
- help him, his career is ended. This is one of those charges--one
- of those slanders, if you prefer that term, which a man can never
- shake off. So how can you hope that he will consent to link your
- destiny to his?"
-
- She had not thought of this objection, and it seemed to her a
- terrible one. Tears came to her dark eyes, and in a despondent
- voice she murmured: "God grant that he will not evince such cruel
- generosity. The only great and true misfortune that could strike
- me now would be to have him repel me. M. de Chalusse's death
- leaves me without means--without bread; but now I can almost bless
- my poverty since it enables me to ask him what would become of me
- if he abandoned me, and who would protect me if he refused to do
- so. The brilliant career he dreamed of is ended, you say. Ah,
- well! I will console him, and though we are unfortunate, we may
- yet be happy. Our enemies are triumphant--so be it: we should
- only tarnish our honor by stooping to contend against such
- villainy. But in some new land, in America, perhaps, we shall be
- able to find some quiet spot where we can begin a new and better
- career." It was almost impossible to believe that it was
- Mademoiselle Marguerite, usually so haughtily reserved, who was
- now speaking with such passionate vehemence. And to whom was she
- talking in this fashion? To a stranger, whom she saw for the first
- time. But she was urged on by circumstances, the influence of
- which was stronger than her own will. They had led her to reveal
- her dearest and most sacred feelings and to display her real
- nature free from any kind of disguise.
-
- However, the magistrate concealed the emotion and sympathy which
- filled his heart and refused to admit that the girl's hopes were
- likely to be realized. "And if M. Ferailleur refused to accept
- your sacrifice?" he asked.
-
- "It is not a sacrifice, monsieur."
-
- "No matter; but supposing he refused it, what should you do?"
-
- "What should I do?" she muttered. "I don't know. Still I should
- have no difficulty in earning a livelihood. I have been told that
- I have a remarkable voice. I might, perhaps, go upon the stage."
-
- The magistrate sprang from his arm-chair. "You become an actress,
- YOU?"
-
- "Under such circumstances it would little matter what became of
- me!"
-
- "But you don't suspect--you cannot imagine----"
-
- He was at a loss for words to explain the nature of his objections
- to such a career; and it was Mademoiselle Marguerite who found
- them for him. "I suspect that theatrical life is an abominable
- life for a woman," she said, gravely; "but I know that there are
- many noble and chaste women who have adopted the profession. That
- is enough for me. My pride is a sufficient protection. It
- preserved me as an apprentice; it would preserve me as an actress.
- I might be slandered; but that is not an irremediable misfortune.
- I despise the world too much to be troubled by its opinion so long
- as I have the approval of my own conscience. And why should I not
- become a great artiste if I consecrated all the intelligence,
- passion, energy, and will I might possess, to my art?"
-
- Hearing a knock at the door she paused; and a moment later a
- footman entered with lights, for night was falling. He was
- closely followed by another servant, who said: "Mademoiselle, the
- Marquis de Valorsay is below, and wishes to know if mademoiselle
- will grant him the honor of an interview."
-
-
-
- XII.
-
-
- On hearing M. de Valorsay's name, Mademoiselle Marguerite and the
- magistrate exchanged glances full of wondering conjecture. The
- girl was undecided what course to pursue; but the magistrate put
- an end to her perplexity. "Ask the marquis to come up," he said
- to the servant.
-
- The footman left the room; and, as soon as he had disappeared,
- Mademoiselle Marguerite exclaimed: "What, monsieur! after all I
- have told you, you still wish me to receive him?"
-
- "It is absolutely necessary that you should do so. You must know
- what he wishes and what hope brings him here. Calm yourself, and
- submit to necessity."
-
- In a sort of bewilderment, the girl hastily arranged her
- disordered dress, and caught up her wavy hair which had fallen
- over her shoulders. "Ah! monsieur," she remarked, "don't you
- understand that he still believes me to be the count's heiress? In
- his eyes, I am still surrounded by the glamor of the millions
- which are mine no longer."
-
- "Hush! here he comes!"
-
- The Marquis de Valorsay was indeed upon the threshold, and a
- moment later he entered the room. He was clad with the exquisite
- taste of those intelligent gentlemen to whom the color of a pair
- of trousers is a momentous matter, and whose ambition is satisfied
- if they are regarded as a sovereign authority respecting the cut
- of a waistcoat. As a rule, his expression of face merely denoted
- supreme contentment with himself and indifference as to others,
- but now, strange to say, he looked grave and almost solemn. His
- right leg--the unfortunate limb which had been broken when he fell
- from his horse in Ireland--seemed stiff, and dragged a trifle more
- than usual, but this was probably solely due to the influence of
- the atmosphere. He bowed to Mademoiselle Marguerite with every
- mark of profound respect, and without seeming to notice the
- magistrate's presence.
-
- "You will excuse me, I trust, mademoiselle," said he, "in having
- insisted upon seeing you, so that I might express my deep
- sympathy. I have just heard of the terrible misfortune which has
- befallen you--the sudden death of your father."
-
- She drew back as if she were terrified, and repeated: "My father!"
-
- The marquis did not evince the slightest surprise. "I know," said
- he, in a voice which he tried to make as feeling as possible, "I
- know that M. de Chalusse kept this fact concealed from you; but he
- confided his secret to me."
-
- "To you?" interrupted the magistrate, who was unable to restrain
- himself any longer.
-
- The marquis turned haughtily to this old man dressed in black, and
- in the dry tone one uses in speaking to an indiscreet inferior, he
- replied: "To me, yes, monsieur; and he acquainted me not only by
- word of mouth, but in writing also, with the motives which
- influenced him, expressing his fixed intention, not only of
- recognizing Mademoiselle Marguerite as his daughter, but also of
- adopting her in order to insure her undisputed right to his
- fortune and his name."
-
- "Ah!" said the magistrate as if suddenly enlightened; "ah! ah!"
-
- But without noticing this exclamation which was, at least,
- remarkable in tone, M. de Valorsay again turned to Mademoiselle
- Marguerite, and continued: "Your ignorance on this subject,
- mademoiselle, convinces me that your servants have not deceived me
- in telling me that M. de Chalusse was struck down without the
- slightest warning. But they have told me one thing which I cannot
- believe. They have told me that the count made no provision for
- you, that he left no will, and that--excuse a liberty which is
- prompted only by the most respectful interest--and that, the
- result of this incomprehensible and culpable neglect is that you
- are ruined and almost without means. Can this be possible?"
-
- "It is the exact truth, monsieur," replied Mademoiselle
- Marguerite. "I am reduced to the necessity of working for my
- daily bread."
-
- She spoke these words with a sort of satisfaction, expecting that
- the marquis would betray his disappointed covetousness by some
- significant gesture or exclamation, and she was already prepared
- to rejoice at his confusion. But her expectations were not
- realized. Instead of evincing the slightest dismay or even
- regret, M. de Valorsay drew a long breath, as if a great burden
- had been lifted from his heart, and his eyes sparkled with
- apparent delight. "Then I may venture to speak," he exclaimed,
- with unconcealed satisfaction, "I will speak, rnademoiselle, if
- you will deign to allow me."
-
- She looked at him with anxious curiosity, wondering what was to
- come. "Speak, monsieur," she faltered.
-
- "I will obey you, mademoiselle," he said, bowing again. "But
- first, allow me to tell you how great my hopes have been. M. de
- Chalusse's death is an irreparable misfortune for me as for
- yourself. He had allowed me, mademoiselle, to aspire to the honor
- of becoming a suitor for your hand. If he did not speak to you on
- the subject, it was only because he wished to leave you absolutely
- free, and impose upon me the difficult task of winning your
- consent. But between him and me everything had been arranged in
- principle, and he was to give a dowry of three millions of francs
- to Mademoiselle Marguerite de Chalusse, his daughter."
-
- "I am no longer Mademoiselle de Chalusse, Monsieur le Marquis, and
- I am no longer the possessor of a fortune."
-
- He felt the sharp sting of this retort, for the blood rose to his
- cheeks, still he did not lose his composure. "If you were still
- rich, mademoiselle," he replied, in the reproachful tone of an
- honest man who feels that he is misunderstood, "I should, perhaps,
- have strength to keep the sentiments with which you have inspired
- me a secret in my own heart; but--" He rose, and with a gesture
- which was not devoid of grace, and in a full ringing voice he
- added: "But you are no longer the possessor of millions; and so I
- may tell you, Mademoiselle Marguerite, that I love you. Will you
- be my wife?"
-
- The poor girl was obliged to exercise all her powers of self-
- control to restrain an exclamation of dismay. It was indeed more
- than dismay; she was absolutely terrified by the Marquis de
- Valorsay's unexpected declaration, and she could only falter:
- "Monsieur! monsieur!"
-
- But with an air of winning frankness he continued: "Need I tell
- you who I am, mademoiselle? No; that is unnecessary. The fact
- that my suit was approved of by M. de Chalusse is the best
- recommendation I can offer you. The pure and stainless name I
- bear is one of the proudest in France; and though my fortune may
- have been somewhat impaired by youthful folly, it is still more
- than sufficient to maintain an establishment in keeping with my
- rank."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was still powerless to reply. Her
- presence of mind had entirely deserted her, and her tongue seemed
- to cleave to her palate. She glanced entreatingly at the old
- magistrate, as if imploring his intervention, but he was so
- absorbed in contemplating his wonderful ring, that one might have
- imagined he was oblivious of all that was going on around him.
-
- "I am aware that I have so far not been fortunate enough to please
- you, mademoiselle," continued the marquis. "M. de Chalusse did
- not conceal it from me--I remember, alas! that I advocated in your
- presence a number of stupid theories, which must have given you a
- very poor opinion of me. But you will forgive me, I trust. My
- ideas have entirely changed since I have learned to understand and
- appreciate your vigorous intellect and nobility of soul. I
- thoughtlessly spoke to you in the language which is usually
- addressed to young ladies of our rank of life--frivolous beauties,
- who are spoiled by vanity and luxury, and who look upon marriage
- only as a means of enfranchisement."
-
- His words were disjointed as if emotion choked his utterance. At
- times, it seemed as if he could scarcely command his feelings; and
- then his voice became so faint and trembling that it was scarcely
- intelligible.
-
- However, by allowing him to continue, by listening to what he
- said, Mademoiselle Marguerite was encouraging him, even more--
- virtually binding herself. She understood that this was the case,
- and making a powerful effort, she interrupted him, saying: "I
- assure you, Monsieur le Marquis, that I am deeply touched--and
- grateful--but I am no longer free."
-
- "Pray, mademoiselle, pray do not reply to-day. Grant me a little
- time to overcome your prejudices."
-
- She shook her head, and in a firmer voice, replied: "I have no
- prejudices; but for some time past already, my future has been
- decided, irrevocably decided."
-
- He seemed thunderstruck, and his manner apparently indicated that
- the possibility of a repulse had never entered his mind. His eyes
- wandered restlessly from Mademoiselle Marguerite to the
- countenance of the old magistrate, who remained as impassive as a
- sphinx, and at last they lighted on a newspaper which was lying on
- the floor at the young girl's feet. "Do not deprive me of all
- hope," he murmured.
-
- She made no answer, and understanding her silence, he was about to
- retire when the door suddenly opened and a servant announced:
- "Monsieur de Fondege."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite touched the magistrate on the shoulder to
- attract his attention. "This gentleman is M. de Chalusse's friend
- whom I sent for this morning."
-
- At the same moment a man who looked some sixty years of age
- entered the room. He was very tall, and as straight as the letter
- I, being arrayed in a long blue frock-coat, while his neck, which
- was as red and as wrinkled as that of a turkey-cock, was encased
- in a very high and stiff satin cravat. On seeing his ruddy face,
- his closely cropped hair, his little eyes twinkling under his
- bushy eyebrows, and his formidable mustaches a la Victor Emmanuel,
- you would have immediately exclaimed: "That man is an old
- soldier!"
-
- A great mistake! M. de Fondege had never been in the service, and
- it was only in mockery of his somewhat bellicose manners and
- appearance that some twenty years previously his friends had
- dubbed him "the General." However, the appellation had clung to
- him. The nickname had been changed to a title, and now M. de
- Fondege was known as "the General" everywhere. He was invited and
- announced as "the General." Many people believed that he had
- really been one, and perhaps he fancied so himself, for he had
- long been in the habit of inscribing "General A. de Fondege" on
- his visiting cards. The nickname had had a decisive influence on
- his life. He had endeavored to show himself worthy of it, and the
- manners he had at first assumed, eventually became natural ones.
- He seemed to be the conventional old soldier--irascible and jovial
- at the same time; brusk and kind; at once frank, sensible and
- brutal; as simple as a child, and yet as true as steel. He swore
- the most tremendous oaths in a deep bass voice, and whenever he
- talked his arms revolved like the sails of a windmill. However,
- Madame de Fondege, who was a very angular lady, with a sharp nose
- and very thin lips, assured people that her husband was not so
- terrible as he appeared. He was not considered very shrewd, and
- he pretended to have an intense dislike for business matters. No
- one knew anything precise about his fortune, but he had a great
- many friends who invited him to dinner, and they all declared that
- he was in very comfortable circumstances.
-
- On entering the study this worthy man did not pay the slightest
- attention to the Marquis de Valorsay, although they were intimate
- friends. He walked straight up to Mademoiselle Marguerite, caught
- her in his long arms, and pressed her to his heart, brushing her
- face with his huge mustaches as he pretended to kiss her.
- "Courage, my dear," he growled; "courage. Don't give way. Follow
- my example. Look at me!" So saying he stepped back, and it was
- really amusing to see the extraordinary effort he made to combine
- a soldier's stoicism with a friend's sorrow. "You must wonder at
- my delay, my dear," he resumed, "but it was not my fault. I was
- at Madame de Rochecote's when I was informed that your messenger
- was at home waiting for me. I returned, and heard the frightful
- news. It was a thunderbolt. A friend of thirty years' standing!
- A thousand thunderclaps! I acted as his second when he fought his
- first duel. Poor Chalusse!
-
- A man as sturdy as an oak, and who ought to have outlived us all.
- But it is always so; the best soldiers always file by first at
- dress-parade."
-
- The Marquis de Valorsay had beaten a retreat, the magistrate was
- hidden in a dark corner, and Mademoiselle Marguerite, who was
- accustomed to the General's manner, remained silent, being well
- aware that there was no chance of putting in a word as long as he
- had possession of the floor. "Fortunately, poor Chalusse was a
- prudent man," continued M. de Fondege. "He loved you devotedly,
- my dear, as his testamentary provisions must have shown you."
-
- "His provisions?"
-
- "Yes, most certainly. Surely you don't mean to try and conceal
- anything from one who knows all. Ah! you will be one of the
- greatest catches in Europe, and you will have plenty of suitors."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite sadly shook her head. "You are mistaken,
- General; the count left no will, and has made no provision
- whatever for me."
-
- M. de Fondege trembled, turned a trifle pale, and in a faltering
- voice, exclaimed: "What! You tell me that? Chalusse! A thousand
- thunderclaps! It isn't possible."
-
- "The count was stricken with apoplexy in a cab. He went out about
- five o'clock, on foot, and a little before seven he was brought
- home unconscious. Where he had been we don't know."
-
- "You don't know? you don't know?"
-
- "Alas! no; and he was only able to utter a few incoherent words
- before he died." Thereupon the poor girl began a brief account of
- what had taken place during the last four-and-twenty hours. Had
- she been less absorbed in her narrative she would have noticed
- that the General was not listening to her. He was sitting at the
- count's desk and was toying with the letters which Madame Leon had
- brought into the room a short time previously. One of them
- especially seemed to attract his attention, to exercise a sort of
- fascination over him as it were. He looked at it with hungry
- eyes, and whenever he touched it, his hand trembled, or
- involuntarily clinched. His face, moreover, had become livid; his
- eyes twitched nervously; he seemed to have a difficulty in
- breathing, and big drops of perspiration trickled down his
- forehead. If the magistrate were able to see the General's face,
- he must certainly have been of opinion that a terrible conflict
- was raging in his mind. The struggle lasted indeed for fully five
- minutes, and then suddenly, certain that no one saw him, he caught
- up the letter in question and slipped it into his pocket.
-
- Poor Marguerite was now finishing her story: "You see, monsieur,
- that, far from being an heiress, as you suppose, I am homeless and
- penniless," she said.
-
- The General had risen from his chair, and was striding up and down
- the room with every token of intense agitation. "It's true," he
- said apparently unconscious of his words. "She's ruined--lost--
- the misfortune is complete!" Then, suddenly pausing with folded
- arms in front of Mademoiselle Marguerite: "What are you going to
- do?" he asked.
-
- "God will not forsake me, General," she replied.
-
- He turned on his heel and resumed his promenade, wildly
- gesticulating and indulging in a furious monologue which was
- certainly not very easy to follow. "Frightful! terrible!" he
- growled. "The daughter of an old comrade--zounds!--of a friend of
- thirty years' standing--to be left in such a plight! Never, a
- thousand thunderclaps!--never! Poor child!--a heart of gold, and
- as pretty as an angel! This horrible Paris would devour her at a
- single mouthful! It would be a crime--an abomination! It sha'n't
- be!--the old veterans are here, firm as rocks!"
-
- Thereupon, approaching the poor girl again, he exclaimed in a
- coarse but seemingly feeling voice: "Mademoiselle Marguerite."
-
- "General?"
-
- "You are acquainted with my son, Gustave Fondege, are you not?"
-
- "I think I have heard you speak of him to M. de Chalusse several
- times."
-
- The General tugged furiously at his mustaches as was his wont
- whenever he was perplexed or embarrassed. "My son," he resumed,
- "is twenty-seven. He's now a lieutenant of hussars, and will soon
- be promoted to the rank of captain. He's a handsome fellow, sure
- to make his way in the world, for he's not wanting in spirit. As
- I never attempt to hide the truth, I must confess that he's a
- trifle dissipated; but his heart is all right, and a charming
- little wife would soon turn him from the error of his ways, and
- he'd become the pearl of husbands." He paused, passed his
- forefinger three or four times between his collar and his neck,
- and then, in a half-strangled voice, he added: "Mademoiselle
- Marguerite, I have the honor to ask for your hand in marriage on
- behalf of Lieutenant Gustave de Fondege, my son."
-
- There was a dangerous gleam of anger in Mademoiselle Marguerite's
- eyes, as she coldly replied: "I am honored by your request,
- monsieur; but my future is already decided."
-
- Some seconds elapsed before M. de Fondege could recover his powers
- of speech. "This is a piece of foolishness," he faltered, at last
- with singular agitation." Let me hope that you will reconsider the
- matter. And if Gustave doesn't please you, we will find some one
- better. But under no circumstances will Chalusse's old comrade
- ever desert you. I shall send Madame de Fondege to see you this
- evening. She's a good woman and you will understand each other.
- Come, answer me, what do you say to it?"
-
- His persistence irritated the poor girl beyond endurance, and to
- put an end to the painful scene, she at last asked: "Would you not
- like to look--for the last time--at M. de Chalusse?"
-
- "Ah! yes, certainly--an old friend of thirty years' standing." So
- saying he advanced toward the door leading into the death-room,
- but on reaching the threshold, he cried in sudden terror: "Oh! no,
- no, I could not." And with these words he withdrew or rather he
- fled from the room down the stairs.
-
- As long as the General had been there, the magistrate had given no
- sign of life. But seated beyond the circle of light cast by the
- lamps, he had remained an attentive spectator of the scene, and
- now that he found himself once more alone with Mademoiselle
- Marguerite he came forward, and leaning against the mantelpiece
- and looking her full in the face he exclaimed: "Well, my child?"
-
- The girl trembled like a culprit awaiting sentence of death, and
- it was in a hollow voice that she replied: "I understood--"
-
- "What?" insisted the pitiless magistrate.
-
- She raised her beautiful eyes, in which angry tears were still
- glittering, and then answered in a voice which quivered with
- suppressed passion, "I have fathomed the infamy of those two men
- who have just left the house. I understood the insult their
- apparent generosity conceals. They had questioned the servants,
- and had ascertained that two millions were missing. Ah, the
- scoundrels! They believe that I have stolen those millions; and
- they came to ask me to share the ill-gotten wealth with them.
- What an insult! and to think that I am powerless to avenge it! Ah!
- the servants' suspicions were nothing in comparison with this. At
- least, they did not ask for a share of the booty as the price of
- their silence!"
-
- The magistrate shook his head as if this explanation scarcely
- satisfied him. "There is something else, there is certainly
- something else," he repeated. But the doors were still open, so
- he closed them carefully, and then returned to the girl he was so
- desirous of advising. "I wish to tell you," he said, "that you
- have mistaken the motives which induced these gentlemen to ask for
- your hand in marriage."
-
- "Do you believe, then, that you have fathomed them?"
-
- "I could almost swear that I had. Didn't you remark a great
- difference in their manner? Didn't one of them, the marquis,
- behave with all the calmness and composure which are the result of
- reflection and calculation? The other, on the contrary, acted most
- precipitately, as if he had suddenly come to a determination, and
- formed a plan on the impulse of the moment."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite reflected.
-
- "That's true," she said, "that's indeed true. Now I recollect the
- difference."
-
- "And this is my explanation of it," resumed the magistrate. "'The
- Marquis de Valorsay,' I said to myself, 'must have proofs in his
- possession that Mademoiselle Marguerite is the count's daughter--
- written and conclusive proofs, that is certain--probably a
- voluntary admission of the fact from the father. Who can prove
- that M. de Valorsay does not possess this acknowledgment? In fact,
- he must possess it. He hinted it himself.' Accordingly on hearing
- of the count's sudden death, he said to himself, 'If Marguerite
- was my wife, and if I could prove her to be M. de Chalusse's
- daughter, I should obtain several millions.' Whereupon he
- consulted his legal adviser who assured him that it would be the
- best course he could pursue; and so he came here. You repulsed
- him, but he will soon make another assault, you may rest assured
- of that. And some day or other he will come to you and say,
- 'Whether we marry or not, let us divide.'"
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was amazed. The magistrate's words seemed
- to dispel the mist which had hitherto hidden the truth from view.
- "Yes," she exclaimed, "yes, you are right, monsieur."
-
- He was silent for a moment, and then he resumed: "I understand M.
- de Fondege's motive less clearly; but still I have some clue. He
- had not questioned the servants. That is evident from the fact
- that on his arrival here he believed you to be the sole legatee.
- He was also aware that M. de Chalusse had taken certain
- precautions we are ignorant of, but which he is no doubt fully
- acquainted with. What you told him about your poverty amazed him,
- and he immediately evinced a desire to atone for the count's
- neglect with as much eagerness as if he were the cause of this
- negligence himself. And, indeed, judging by the agitation he
- displayed when he was imploring you to become his son's wife, one
- might almost imagine that the sight of your misery awakened a
- remorse which he was endeavoring to quiet. Now, draw your own
- conclusions."
-
- The wretched girl looked questioningly at the magistrate as if she
- hesitated to trust the thoughts which his words had awakened in
- her mind. "Then you think, monsieur," she said, with evident
- reluctance, "you think, you suppose, that the General is
- acquainted with the whereabouts of the missing millions?"
-
- "Quite correct," answered the magistrate, and then as if he feared
- that he had gone too far, he added: "but draw your own conclusions
- respecting the matter. You have the whole night before you. We
- will talk it over again to-morrow, and if I can be of service to
- you in any way, I shall be only too glad."
-
- "But, monsieur--"
-
- "Oh--to-morrow, to-morrow--I must go to dinner now; besides, my
- clerk must be getting terribly impatient."
-
- The clerk was, indeed, out of temper. Not that he had finished
- taking an inventory of the appurtenances of this immense house,
- but because he considered that he had done quite enough work for
- one day. And yet his discontent was sensibly diminished when he
- calculated the amount he would receive for his pains. During the
- nine years he had held this office he had never made such an
- extensive inventory before. He seemed somewhat dazzled, and as he
- followed his superior out of the house, he remarked: "Do you know,
- monsieur, that as nearly as I can discover the deceased's fortune
- must amount to more than twenty millions--an income of a million a
- year! And to think that the poor young lady shouldn't have a penny
- of it. I suspect she's crying her eyes out."
-
- But the clerk was mistaken. Mademoiselle Marguerite was then
- questioning M. Casimir respecting the arrangements which he had
- made for the funeral, and when this sad duty was concluded, she
- consented to take a little food standing in front of the sideboard
- in the dining-room. Then she went to kneel in the count's room,
- where four members of the parochial clergy were reciting the
- prayers for the dead.
-
- She was so exhausted with fatigue that she could scarcely speak,
- and her eyelids were heavy with sleep. But she had another task
- to fulfil, a task which she deemed a sacred duty. She sent a
- servant for a cab, threw a shawl over her shoulders, and left the
- house accompanied by Madame Leon. The cabman drove as fast as
- possible to the house where Pascal and his mother resided in the
- Rue d'Ulm; but on arriving there, the front door was found to be
- closed, and the light in the vestibule was extinguished.
- Marguerite was obliged to ring five or six times before the
- concierge made his appearance.
-
- "I wish to see Monsieur Ferailleur," she quietly said.
-
- The man glanced at her scornfully, and then replied: "He no longer
- lives here. The landlord doesn't want any thieves in his house.
- He's sold his rubbish and started for America, with his old witch
- of a mother."
-
- So saying he closed the door again, and Marguerite was so
- overwhelmed by this last and unexpected misfortune, that she could
- hardly stagger back to the vehicle. "Gone!" she murmured; "gone!
- without a thought of me! Or does he believe me to be like all the
- rest? But I will find him again. That man Fortunat, who
- ascertained addresses for M. de Chalusse, will find Pascal for
- me."
-
-
-
- XIII.
-
-
- Few people have any idea of the great number of estates which, in
- default of heirs to claim them, annually revert to the government.
- The treasury derives large sums from this source every year. And
- this is easily explained, for nowadays family ties are becoming
- less and less binding. Brothers cease to meet; their children no
- longer know each other; and the members of the second generation
- are as perfect strangers as though they were not united by a bond
- of consanguinity. The young man whom love of adventure lures to a
- far-off country, and the young girl who marries against her
- parents' wishes, soon cease to exist for their relatives. No one
- even inquires what has become of them. Those who remain at home
- are afraid to ask whether they are prosperous or unfortunate, lest
- they should be called upon to assist the wanderers. Forgotten
- themselves, the adventurers in their turn soon forget. If fortune
- smiles upon them, they are careful not to inform their relatives.
- Poor--they have been cast off; wealthy--they themselves deny their
- kindred. Having become rich unaided, they find an egotistical
- satisfaction in spending their money alone in accordance with
- their own fancies. Now when a man of this class dies what
- happens? The servants and people around him profit of his
- loneliness and isolation, and the justice of the peace is only
- summoned to affix the seals, after they have removed all the
- portable property. An inventory is taken, and after a few
- formalities, as no heirs present themselves, the court declares
- the inheritance to be in abeyance, and appoints a trustee.
-
- This trustee's duties are very simple. He manages the property
- and remits the income to the Treasury until a legal judgment
- declares the estate the property of the country, regardless of any
- heirs who may present themselves in future.
-
- "If I only had a twentieth part of the money that is lost in this
- way, my fortune would be made," exclaimed a shrewd man, some
- thirty years ago.
-
- The person who spoke was Antoine Vaudore. For six months he
- secretly nursed the idea, studying it, examining it in all
- respects, weighing its advantages and disadvantages, and at last
- he decided that it was a good one. That same year, indeed,
- assisted by a little capital which he had obtained no one knew
- how, he created a new, strange, and untried profession to supply a
- new demand.
-
- Thus Vaudore was the first man who made heir-hunting a profession.
- As will be generally admitted, it is not a profession that can be
- successfully followed by a craven. It requires the exercise of
- unusual shrewdness, untiring activity, extraordinary energy and
- courage, as well as great tact and varied knowledge. The man who
- would follow it successfully must possess the boldness of a
- gambler, the sang-froid of a duelist, the keen perceptive powers
- and patience of a detective, and the resources and quick wit of
- the shrewdest attorney.
-
- It is easier to decry the profession than to exercise it. To
- begin with, the heir-hunter must be posted up with information
- respecting unclaimed inheritances, and he must have sufficient
- acquaintance with the legal world to be able to obtain information
- from the clerks of the different courts, notaries, and so on.
- When he learns that a man has died without any known heirs, his
- first care is to ascertain the amount of unclaimed property, to
- see if it will pay him to take up the case. If he finds that the
- inheritance is a valuable one, he begins operations without delay.
- He must first ascertain the deceased's full name and age. It is
- easy to procure this information; but it is more difficult to
- discover the name of the place where the deceased was born, his
- profession, what countries he lived in, his tastes and mode of
- life--in a word, everything that constitutes a complete biography.
-
- However, when he has armed himself with the more indispensable
- facts, our agent opens the campaign with extreme prudence, for it
- would be ruinous to awake suspicion. It is curious to observe the
- incomparable address which the agent displays in his efforts to
- learn the particulars of the deceased's life, by consulting his
- friends, his enemies, his debtors, and all who ever knew him,
- until at last some one is found who says: "Such and such a man--
- why, he came from our part of the country. I never knew HIM, but
- I am acquainted with one of his brothers--with one of his uncles--
- or with one of his nephews."
-
- Very often years of constant research, a large outlay of money,
- and costly and skilful advertising in all the European journals,
- are necessary before this result is reached. And it is only when
- it has been attained that the agent can take time to breathe. But
- now the chances are greatly in his favor. The worst is over. The
- portion of his task which depended on chance alone is concluded.
- The rest is a matter of skill, tact, and shrewdness. The
- detective must give place to the crafty lawyer. The agent must
- confer with this heir, who has been discovered at the cost of so
- much time and trouble and induce him to bestow a portion of this
- prospective wealth on the person who is able to establish his
- claim. There must be an agreement in writing clearly stating what
- proportion--a tenth, a third, or a half--the agent will be
- entitled to. The negotiation is a very delicate and difficult
- one, requiring prodigious presence of mind, and an amount of
- duplicity which would make the most astute diplomatist turn pale
- with envy. Occasionally, the heir suspects the truth, sneers at
- the proposition, and hurries off to claim the whole of the
- inheritance that belongs to him. The agent may then bid his hopes
- farewell. He has worked and spent money for nothing.
-
- However, such a misfortune is of rare occurrence. On hearing of
- the unexpected good fortune that has befallen him, the heir is
- generally unsuspicious, and willingly promises to pay the amount
- demanded of him. A contract is drawn up and signed; and then, but
- only then, does the agent take his client into his confidence.
- "You are the relative of such a person, are you not?" "Yes." "Very
- well. He is dead, and you are his heir. Thank Providence, and
- make haste to claim your money."
-
- As a rule, the heir loyally fulfils his obligation. But sometimes
- it happens that, when he has obtained undisputed possession of the
- property, he declares that he has been swindled, and refuses to
- fulfil his part of the contract. Then the case must go to the
- courts. It is true, however, that the judgment of the tribunals
- generally recalls the refractory client to a sense of gratitude
- and humility.
-
- Now our friend M. Isidore Fortunat was a hunter of missing heirs.
- Undoubtedly he often engaged in other business which was a trifle
- less respectable; but heir-hunting was one of the best and most
- substantial sources of his income. So we can readily understand
- why he so quickly left off lamenting that forty thousand francs
- lent to the Marquis de Valorsay.
-
- Changing his tactics, he said to himself that, even if he had lost
- this amount through M. de Chalusse's sudden death, it was much
- less than he might obtain if he succeeded in discovering the
- unknown heirs to so many millions. And he had some reason to hope
- that he would be able to do so. Having been employed by M. de
- Chalusse when the latter was seeking Mademoiselle Marguerite, M.
- Fortunat had gained some valuable information respecting his
- client, and the additional particulars which he had obtained from
- Madame Vantrasson elated him to such an extent that more than once
- he exclaimed: "Ah, well! it is, perhaps, a blessing in disguise,
- after all."
-
- Still, M. Isidore Fortunat slept but little after his stormy
- interview with the Marquis de Valorsay. A loss of forty thousand
- francs is not likely to impart a roseate hue to one's dreams--and
- M. Fortunat prized his money as if it had been the very marrow of
- his bones. By way of consolation, he assured himself that he
- would not merely regain the sum, but triple it; and yet this
- encouragement did not entirely restore his peace of mind. The
- gain was only a possibility, and the loss was a certainty. So he
- twisted, and turned, and tossed on his bed as if it had been a hot
- gridiron, exhausting himself in surmises, and preparing his mind
- for the difficulties which he would be obliged to overcome.
-
- His plan was a simple one, but its execution was fraught with
- difficulties. "I must discover M. de Chalusse's sister, if she is
- still living--I must discover her children, if she is dead," he
- said to himself. It was easy to SAY this; but how was he to do
- it? How could he hope to find this unfortunate girl, who had
- abandoned her home thirty years previously, to fly, no one knew
- where, or with whom? How was he to gain any idea of the life she
- had lived, or the fate that had befallen her? At what point on the
- social scale, and in what country, should he begin his
- investigations? These daughters of noble houses, who desert the
- paternal roof in a moment of madness, generally die most miserably
- after a wretched life. The girl of the lower classes is armed
- against misfortune, and has been trained for the conflict. She
- can measure and calculate the force of her fall, and regulate and
- control it to a certain extent. But the others cannot. They have
- never known privation and hardship, and are, therefore,
- defenceless. And for the very reason that they have been hurled
- from a great height, they often fall down into the lowest depths
- of infamy.
-
- "If morning would only come," sighed M. Isidore Fortunat, as he
- tossed restlessly to and fro. "As soon as morning comes I will
- set to work!"
-
- But just before daybreak he fell asleep; and at nine o'clock he
- was still slumbering so soundly that Madame Dodelin, his
- housekeeper, had considerable difficulty in waking him. "Your
- clerks have come," she exclaimed, shaking him vigorously; "and two
- clients are waiting for you in the reception-room."
-
- He sprang up, hastily dressed himself, and went into his office.
- It cost him no little effort to receive his visitors that morning;
- but it would have been folly to neglect all his other business for
- the uncertain Chalusse affair. The first client who entered was a
- man still young, of common, even vulgar appearance. Not being
- acquainted with M. Fortunat, he deemed it proper to introduce
- himself without delay. "My name is Leplaintre, and I am a coal
- merchant," said he. "I was recommended to call on you by my
- friend Bouscat, who was formerly in the wine trade."
-
- M. Fortunat bowed. "Pray be seated," was his reply. "I remember
- your friend very well. If I am not mistaken I gave him some
- advice with reference to his third failure."
-
- "Precisely; and it is because I find myself in the same fix as
- Bouscat that I have called on you. Business is very bad, and I
- have notes to a large amount overdue, so that--"
-
- "You will be obliged to go into bankruptcy."
-
- "Alas! I fear so."
-
- M. Fortunat already knew what his client desired, but it was
- against his principles to meet these propositions more than half
- way. "Will you state your case?" said he.
-
- The coal merchant blushed. It was hard to confess the truth; but
- the effort had to be made. "This is my case," he replied, at
- last. "Among my creditors I have several enemies, who will refuse
- me a release. They would like to deprive me of everything I
- possess. And in that case, what would become of me? Is it right
- that I should be compelled to starve?"
-
- "It is a bad outlook."
-
- "It is, indeed, monsieur; and for this reason, I desire--if
- possible, if I can do so without danger--for I am an honest man,
- monsieur--I wish to retain a little property--secretly, of course,
- not for myself, by any means, but I have a young wife and----"
-
- M. Fortunat took compassion on the man's embarrassment. "In
- short," he interrupted, "you wish to conceal a part of your
- capital from your creditors?"
-
- On hearing this precise and formal statement of his honorable
- intentions, the coal-merchant trembled. His feelings of integrity
- would not have been alarmed by a periphrasis, but this plain
- speaking shocked him. "Oh, monsieur!" he protested, "I would
- rather blow my brains out than defraud my creditors of a single
- penny that was rightfully theirs. What I am doing is for their
- interest, you understand. I shall begin business again under my
- wife's name; and if I succeed, they shall be paid--yes, monsieur,
- every sou, with interest. Ah! if I had only myself to think of,
- it would be quite different; but I have two children, two little
- girls, so that----"
-
- "Very well," replied M. Fortunat. "I should suggest to you the
- same expedient as I suggested to your friend Bouscat. But you
- must gather a little ready money together before going into
- bankruptcy."
-
- "I can do that by secretly disposing of a part of my stock, so----"
-
- "In that case, you are saved. Sell it and put the money beyond
- your creditors' reach."
-
- The worthy merchant scratched his ear in evident perplexity.
- "Excuse me," said he. "I had thought of this plan; but it seemed
- to me--dishonorable--and--also very dangerous. How could I
- explain this decrease in my stock? My creditors hate me. If they
- suspected anything, they would accuse me of fraud, and perhaps
- throw me into prison; and then----"
-
- M. Fortunat shrugged his shoulders. "When I give advice," he
- roughly replied, "I furnish the means of following it without
- danger. Listen to me attentively. Let us suppose, for a moment,
- that some time ago you purchased, at a very high figure, a
- quantity of stocks and shares, which are to-day almost worthless,
- could not this unfortunate investment account for the absence of
- the sum which you wish to set aside? Your creditors would be
- obliged to value these securities, not at their present, but at
- their former value."
-
- "Evidently; but, unfortunately, I do not possess any such
- securities."
-
- "You can purchase them."
-
- The coal-merchant opened his eyes in astonishment. "Excuse me,"
- he muttered, "I don't exactly understand you."
-
- He did not understand in the least; but M. Fortunat enlightened
- him by opening his safe, and displaying an enormous bundle of
- stocks and shares which had flooded the country a few years
- previously, and ruined a great many poor, ignorant fools which
- were hungering for wealth; among them were shares in the Tifila
- Mining Company, the Berchem Coal Mines, the Greenland Fisheries,
- the Mutual Trust and Loan Association, and so on. There had been
- a time when each of these securities would have fetched five
- hundred or a thousand francs at the Bourse, but now they were not
- worth the paper on which they were printed.
-
- "Let us suppose, my dear sir," resumed M. Fortunat, "that you had
- a drawer full of these securities----"
-
- But the other did not allow him to finish. "I see," he exclaimed;
- "I see--I can sell my stock, and put the proceeds in my pocket
- with perfect safety. There is enough to represent my capital a
- thousand times over."
-
- And, in a paroxysm of delight, he added:
-
- "Give me enough of these shares to represent a capital of one
- hundred and twenty thousand francs; and give me some of each kind.
- I should like my creditors to have a variety."
-
- Thereupon M. Fortunat counted out a pile of these worthless
- securities as carefully as if he had been handling bank-notes; and
- his client at the same time drew out his pocketbook.
-
- "How much do I owe you?" he inquired.
-
- "Three thousand francs."
-
- The honest merchant bounded from his chair. "Three thousand
- francs!" he repeated. "You must be jesting. That trash is not
- worth a louis."
-
- "I would not even give five francs for it," rejoined M. Fortunat,
- coldly; "but it is true that I don't desire to purchase these
- shares in my creditors' interest. With you it is quite a
- different matter--this trash, as you very justly call it, will
- save you at least a hundred thousand francs. I ask only three per
- cent., which is certainly not dear. Still, you know, I don't
- force any one to purchase them." And, in a terribly significant
- tone, he added: "You can undoubtedly buy similar securities on
- better terms; but take care you don't arouse your creditors'
- suspicions by applying elsewhere."
-
- "He would betray me, the scoundrel!" thought the merchant. And,
- realizing that he had fallen into a trap, "Here are three thousand
- francs," he sighed; "but at least, my dear sir, give me good
- measure, and throw in a few thousand francs more."
-
- The coal-merchant smiled the ghastly smile of a man who sees no
- way of escape from imposition, and has, therefore, resolved to
- submit with the best grace possible. But M. Fortunat's gravity
- did not relax. He gave what he had promised--neither more nor
- less--in exchange for the bank-notes, and even gravely exclaimed:
- "See if the amount is correct."
-
- His client pocketed the shares without counting them: but before
- leaving the room he made his estimable adviser promise to assist
- him at the decisive moment, and help him to prepare one of those
- clear financial statements which make creditors say: "This is an
- honest man who has been extremely unfortunate."
-
- M. Fortunat was admirably fitted to render this little service;
- for he devoted such part of his time as was not spent in hunting
- for missing heirs to difficult liquidations, and he had indeed
- made bankruptcy a specialty in which he was without a rival. The
- business was a remunerative one, thanks to the expedient he had
- revealed to the coal-merchant--an expedient which is common enough
- nowadays, but of which he might almost be called the inventor. It
- consisted in compelling the persons who asked for his advice to
- purchase worthless shares at whatever price he chose to set upon
- them, and they were forced to submit, under penalty of
- denunciation and exposure.
-
- The client who followed the coal-merchant proved to be a simple
- creature, who had called to ask for some advice respecting a
- slight difficulty between himself and his landlord. M. Fortunat
- speedily disposed of him, and then, opening the door leading into
- the outer office, he called: "Cashier!"
-
- A shabbily-dressed man, some thirty-five years of age, at once
- entered the private sanctum, carrying a money-bag in one hand and
- a ledger in the other.
-
- "How many debtors were visited yesterday?" inquired M. Fortunat.
-
- "Two hundred and thirty-seven."
-
- "What was the amount collected?"
-
- "Eighty-nine francs."
-
- M. Isidore Fortunat's grimace was expressive of satisfaction.
- "Not bad," said he, "not at all bad."
-
- Then a singular performance began. M. Fortunat called over the
- names of his debtors, one by one, and the cashier answered each
- name by reading a memorandum written against it on the margin of a
- list he held. "Such a one," said the agent, "and such a one--and
- such----" Whereupon the cashier replied: "Has paid two francs--was
- not at home--paid twenty sous--would not pay anything."
-
- How did it happen that M. Fortunat had so many debtors? This
- question can be easily answered. In settling bankrupts' estates
- it was easy for him to purchase a large number of debts which were
- considered worthless, at a trifling cost, and he reaped a
- bountiful harvest on a field which would have yielded nothing to
- another person. It was not because he was rigorous in his
- demands; he conquered by patience, gentleness, and politeness, but
- also by unwearying perseverance and tenacity. When he decided
- that a debtor was to pay him a certain sum, it was paid. He never
- relaxed in his efforts. Every other day some one was sent to
- visit the debtor, to follow him, and harass him; he was surrounded
- by M. Fortunat's agents; they pursued him to his office, shop, or
- cafe--everywhere, continually, incessantly--and always with the
- most perfect urbanity. At last even the most determined
- succumbed; to escape this frightful persecution, they, somehow or
- other, found the money to satisfy M. Fortunat's claim. Besides
- Victor Chupin, he had five other agents whose business it was to
- visit these poor wretches. A list was assigned to each man every
- morning; and when evening came, he made his report to the cashier,
- who in turn reported to his employer. This branch of industry
- added considerably to the profits of M. Fortunat's other business,
- and was the third and last string to his bow.
-
- The report proceeded as usual, but it was quite evident that M.
- Fortunat's thoughts were elsewhere. He paused each moment to
- listen eagerly for the slightest sound outside, for before
- receiving the coal-merchant he had told Victor Chupin to run to
- the Rue de Courcelles and ask M. Casimir for news of the Count de
- Chalusse. He had done this more than an hour before; and Victor
- Chupin, who was usually so prompt, had not yet made his
- appearance.
-
- At last, however, he returned, whereupon M. Fortunat dismissed the
- cashier, and addressed his messenger: "Well?" he asked.
-
- "He is no longer living. They think he died without a will, and
- that the pretty young lady will be turned out of the house."
-
- This information agreed so perfectly with M. Fortunat's
- presentiments that he did not even wince, but calmly asked: "Will
- Casimir keep his appointment?"
-
- "He told me that he would endeavor to come, and I'd wager a
- hundred to one that he will be there; he would travel ten leagues
- to put something good into his stomach."
-
- M. Fortunat's opinion coincided with Chupin's. "Very well," said
- he. "Only you were a long time on the road, Victor."
-
- "That's true, m'sieur; but I had a little matter of my own to
- attend to--a matter of a hundred francs, if you please."
-
- M. Fortunat knit his brows angrily. "It's only right to attend to
- business," said he; "but you think too much of money, Victor--
- altogether too much. You are insatiable."
-
- The young man proudly lifted his head, and with an air of
- importance, replied: "I have so many responsibilities----"
-
- "Responsibilities!--you?"
-
- "Yes, indeed, m'sieur. And why not? My poor, good mother hasn't
- been able to work for a year, and who would care for her if I
- didn't? Certainly not my father, the good-for-nothing scamp, who
- squandered all the Duke de Sairmeuse's money without giving us a
- sou of it. Besides, I'm like other men, I'm anxious to be rich,
- and enjoy myself. I should like to ride in my carriage like other
- people do. And whenever a gamin, such as I was once, opened the
- door for ME, I should put a five-franc piece in his hand----"
-
- He was interrupted by Madame Dodelin, the worthy housekeeper, who
- rushed into the room without knocking, in a terrible state of
- excitement. "Monsieur!" she exclaimed, in the same tone as if she
- would have called "Fire!" "here is Monsieur de Valorsay."
-
- M. Fortunat sprang up and turned extremely pale. "What to the
- devil brings him here?" he anxiously stammered. "Tell him that
- I've gone out--tell him--"
-
- But it was useless, for the marquis at that very moment entered
- the room, and the agent could only dismiss his housekeeper and
- Chupin.
-
- M. de Valorsay seemed to be very angry, and it looked as if he
- meant to give vent to his passion. Indeed, as soon as he was
- alone with M. Fortunat, he began: "So this is the way you betray
- your friends, Master Twenty-per-Cent! Why did you deceive me last
- night about the ten thousand francs you had promised me? Why
- didn't you tell me the truth? You knew of the misfortune that had
- befallen M. de Chalusse. I heard of it first scarcely an hour ago
- through a letter from Madame Leon."
-
- M. Fortunat hesitated somewhat. He was a quiet man, opposed to
- violence of any kind; and it seemed to him that M. de Valorsay was
- twisting and turning his cane in a most ominous manner. "I must
- confess, Monsieur le Marquis," he at last replied, "that I had not
- the courage to tell you of the dreadful misfortune which had
- befallen us."
-
- "How--US?"
-
- "Certainly. If you lose the hope of several millions, I also lose
- the amount I advanced to you, forty thousand francs--my entire
- fortune. And yet, you see that I don't complain. Do as I do--
- confess that the game is lost."
-
- The marquis was listening with an air of suppressed wrath; his
- face was crimson, there was a dark frown on his brow, and his
- hands were clinched. He was apparently furious with passion, but
- in reality he was perfectly self-possessed. The best proof that
- can be given of his coolness is that he was carefully studying M.
- Fortunat's face, and trying to discover the agent's real
- intentions under his meaningless words. He had expected to find
- "his dear extortioner" exasperated by his loss, cursing and
- swearing, and demanding his money--but not at all. He found him
- more gentle and calm, colder and more reserved than ever; brimful
- of resignation indeed, and preaching submission to the inevitable.
- "What can this mean?" he thought, with an anxious heart. "What
- mischief is the scoundrel plotting now? I'd wager a thousand to
- one that he's forging some thunderbolt to crush me." And, in a
- haughty tone, he said aloud:
-
- "In a word, you desert me."
-
- With a deprecatory gesture, M. Fortunat exclaimed: "I desert you,
- Monsieur le Marquis! What have I done that you should think so ill
- of me? Alas! circumstances are the only traitors. I shouldn't
- like to deprive you of the courage you so much need, but,
- honestly, it would be folly to struggle against destiny. How can
- you hope to succeed in your plans? Have you not resorted to every
- possible expedient to prolong your apparently brilliant existence
- until the present time? Are you not at such a point that you must
- marry Mademoiselle Marguerite in a month's time, or perish? And
- now the count's millions are lost! If I might be allowed to give
- you some advice, I should say, 'The shipwreck is inevitable; think
- only of saving yourself.' By tact and shrewdness, you might yet
- save something from your creditors. Compromise with them. And if
- you need my services, here I am. Go to Nice, and give me a power
- of attorney to act for you. From the debris of your fortune, I
- will undertake to guarantee you a competence which would satisfy
- many an ambitious man."
-
- The marquis laughed sneeringly. "Excellent!" he exclaimed. "You
- would rid yourself of me and recover your forty thousand francs at
- the same time. A very clever arrangement."
-
- M. Fortunat realized that his client understood him; but what did
- it matter?" I assure you----" he began.
-
- But the marquis silenced him with a contemptuous gesture. "Let us
- stop this nonsense," said he. "We understand each other better
- than that. I have never made any attempt to deceive you, nor have
- I ever supposed that I had succeeded in doing so, and pray do me
- the honor to consider me as shrewd as yourself." And still
- refusing to listen to the agent, he continued: "If I have come to
- you, it is only because the case is not so desperate as you
- suppose. I still hold some valuable cards which you are ignorant
- of. In your opinion, and every one else's, Mademoiselle
- Marguerite is ruined. But I know that she is still worth three
- millions, at the very least."
-
- "Mademoiselle Marguerite?"
-
- "Yes, Monsieur Twenty-per-Cent. Let her become my wife, and the
- very next day I will place her in possession of an income of a
- hundred and fifty thousand francs. But she must marry me first;
- and this scornful maiden will not grant me her hand unless I can
- convince her of my love and disinterestedness."
-
- "But your rival?"
-
- M. de Valorsay gave a nervous start, but quickly controlled
- himself. "He no longer exists. Read this day's Figaro, and you
- will be edified. I have no rival now. If I can only conceal my
- financial embarrassment a little longer, she is mine. A
- friendless and homeless girl cannot defend herself long in Paris--
- especially when she has an adviser like Madame Leon. Oh! I shall
- win her! I shall have her!--she is a necessity to me. Now you can
- judge if it would be wise on your part to deprive me of your
- assistance. Would you like to know what I want? Simply this--the
- means to sustain me two or three months longer--some thirty
- thousand francs. You can procure the money--will you? It would
- make, in all, seventy thousand francs that I should owe you, and I
- will promise to pay you two hundred and fifty thousand if I
- succeed--and I shall succeed! Such profit is worth some risk.
- Reflect, and decide. But no more subterfuges, if you please. Let
- your answer be plain yes or no."
-
- Without a second's hesitation, M. Fortunat replied, "No."
-
- The flush on the marquis's face deepened, and his voice became a
- trifle harsher; but that was all. "Confess, then, that you have
- resolved to ruin me," he said. "You refuse before you have heard
- me to the end. Wait, at least, until I have told you my plans,
- and shown you the solid foundation which my hopes rest upon."
-
- But M. Fortunat had resolved to listen to nothing. He wished for
- no explanations, so distrustful was he of himself--so much did he
- fear that his adventurous nature would urge him to incur further
- risk. He was positively afraid of the Marquis de Valorsay's
- eloquence; besides, he knew well enough that the person who
- consents to listen is at least half convinced. "Tell me nothing,
- monsieur," he hastily answered; "it would be useless. I haven't
- the money. If I had given you ten thousand francs last night, I
- should have been compelled to borrow them of M. Prosper Bertomy.
- And even if I had the money, I should still say ' Impossible.'
- Every man has his system--his theory, you know. Mine is, never to
- run after my money. With me, whatever I may lose, I regard it as
- finally lost; I think no more about it, and turn to something
- else. So your forty thousand francs have already been entered on
- my profit and loss account. And yet it would be easy enough for
- you to repay me, if you would follow my advice and go quietly into
- bankruptcy."
-
- "Never!" interrupted M. de Valorsay; "never! I do not wish to
- temporize," he continued. "I will save all, or save nothing. If
- you refuse me your help, I shall apply elsewhere. I will never
- give my good friends, who detest me, and whom I cordially hate in
- return, the delicious joy of seeing the Marquis de Valorsay fall
- step by step from the high position he has occupied. I will never
- truckle to the men whom I have eclipsed for fifteen years. No,
- never! I would rather die, or even commit the greatest crime!"
-
- He suddenly checked himself, a trifle astonished, perhaps, by his
- own plain-speaking; and, for a moment, he and M. Fortunat looked
- into each other's eyes, striving to divine their respective secret
- thoughts.
-
- The marquis was the first to speak. "And so," said he, in a tone
- which he strove to make persuasive, but which was threatening
- instead, "it is settled--your decision is final?"
-
- "Final."
-
- "You will not even condescend to listen to my explanation?"
-
- "It would be a loss of time."
-
- On receiving this cruel reply, M. de Valorsay struck the desk such
- a formidable blow with his clenched fist that several bundles of
- papers fell to the floor. His anger was not feigned now. "What
- are you plotting, then?" he exclaimed; "and what do you intend to
- do? What is your object in betraying me? Take care! It is my life
- that I am going to defend, and as truly as there is a God in
- heaven, I shall defend it well. A man who is determined to blow
- his brains out if he is defeated, is a terribly dangerous
- adversary. Woe to you, if I ever find you standing between me and
- the Count de Chalusse's millions!"
-
- Every drop of blood had fled from M. Fortunat's face, still his
- mien was composed and dignified. "You do wrong to threaten me,"
- said he. "I don't fear you in the least. If I were your enemy, I
- should bring suit against you for the forty thousand francs you
- owe me. I should not obtain my money, of course, but I could
- shatter the tottering edifice of your fortune by a single blow.
- Besides, you forget that I possess a copy of our agreement, signed
- by your own hand, and that I have only to show it to Mademoiselle
- Marguerite to give her a just opinion of your disinterestedness.
- Let us sever our connection now, monsieur, and each go his own way
- without reference to the other. If you should succeed you will
- repay me."
-
- Victory perched upon the agent's banner, and it was with a feeling
- of pride that he saw his noble client depart, white and speechless
- with rage. "What a rascal that marquis is," he muttered. "I
- would certainly warn Mademoiselle Marguerite, poor girl, if I were
- not so much afraid of him."
-
-
-
- XIV.
-
-
- M. Casimir, the deceased Count de Chalusse's valet, was neither
- better nor worse than most of his fellows. Old men tell us that
- there formerly existed a race of faithful servants, who considered
- themselves a part of the family that employed them, and who
- unhesitatingly embraced its interests and its ideas. At the same
- time their masters requited their devotion by efficacious
- protection and provision for the future. But such masters and
- such servants are nowadays only found in the old melodramas
- performed at the Ambigu, in "The Emigre," for instance, or in "The
- Last of the Chateauvieux." At present servants wander from one
- house to another, looking on their abode as a mere inn where they
- may find shelter till they are disposed for another journey. And
- families receive them as transient, and not unfrequently as
- dangerous, guests, whom it is always wise to treat with distrust.
- The key of the wine-cellar is not confided to these unreliable
- inmates; they are intrusted with the charge of little else than
- the children--a practice which is often productive of terrible
- results.
-
- M. Casimir was no doubt honest, in the strict sense of the word.
- He would have scorned to rob his master of a ten-sous piece; and
- yet he would not have hesitated in the least to defraud him of a
- hundred francs, if an opportunity had presented itself. Vain and
- rapacious in disposition, he consoled himself by refusing to obey
- any one save his employer, by envying him with his whole heart,
- and by cursing fate for not having made him the Count de Chalusse
- instead of the Count de Chalusse's servant. As he received high
- wages, he served passably well; but he employed the best part of
- his energy in watching the count. He scented some great family
- secret in the household, and he felt angry and humiliated that
- this secret had not been intrusted to his discretion. And if he
- had discovered nothing, it was because M. de Chalusse had been
- caution personified, as Madame Leon had declared.
-
- Thus it happened that when M. Casimir saw Mademoiselle Marguerite
- and the count searching in the garden for the fragments of a
- letter destroyed in a paroxysm of rage which he had personally
- witnessed, his natural curiosity was heightened to such a degree
- as to become unendurable. He would have given a month's wages,
- and something over, to have known the contents of that letter, the
- fragments of which were being so carefully collected by the count.
- And when he heard M. de Chalusse tell Mademoiselle Marguerite that
- the most important part of the letter was still lacking, and saw
- his master relinquish his fruitless search, the worthy valet vowed
- that he would be more skilful or more fortunate than his master;
- and after diligent effort, he actually succeeded in recovering
- five tiny scraps of paper, which had been blown into the
- shrubbery.
-
- They were covered with delicate handwriting, a lady's
- unquestionably; but he was utterly unable to extract the slightest
- meaning from them. Nevertheless, he preserved them with jealous
- care, and was careful not to say that he had found them. The
- incoherent words which he had deciphered on these scraps of paper
- mixed strangely in his brain, and he grew more and more anxious to
- learn what connection there was between this letter and the
- count's attack. This explains his extreme readiness to search the
- count's clothes when Mademoiselle Marguerite told him to look for
- the key of the escritoire. And fortune favored him, for he not
- only found the key, but he also discovered the torn fragments of
- the letter, and having crumpled them up in the palm of his hand,
- he contrived to slip them into his pocket. Fruitless dexterity!
- M. Casimir had joined these scraps to the fragments he had found
- himself, he had read and re-read the epistle, but it told him
- nothing; or, at least, the information it conveyed was so vague
- and incomplete that it heightened his curiosity all the more.
- Once he almost decided to give the letter to Mademoiselle
- Marguerite, but he resisted this impulse, saying to himself: "Ah,
- no; I'm not such a fool! It might be of use to her."
-
- And M. Casimir had no desire to be of service to this unhappy
- girl, who had always treated him with kindness. He hated her,
- under the pretence that she was not in her proper place, that no
- one knew who or what she was, and that it was absurd that he--he,
- Casimir--should be compelled to receive orders from her. The
- infamous slander which Mademoiselle Marguerite had overheard on
- her way home from church, "There goes the rich Count de Chalusse's
- mistress," was M. Casimir's work. He had sworn to be avenged on
- this haughty creature; and no one can say what he might have
- attempted, if it had not been for the intervention of the
- magistrate. Imperatively called to order, M. Casimir consoled
- himself by the thought that the magistrate had intrusted him with
- eight thousand francs and the charge of the establishment.
- Nothing could have pleased him better. First and foremost, it
- afforded him a magnificent opportunity to display his authority
- and act the master, and it also enabled him to carry out his
- compact with Victor Chupin, and repair to the rendezvous which M.
- Isidore Fortunat had appointed.
-
- Leaving his comrades to watch the magistrate's operations, he sent
- M. Bourigeau to report the count's death at the district mayor's
- office, and then lighting a cigar he walked out of the house, and
- strolled leisurely up the Rue de Courcelles. The place appointed
- for his meeting with M. Fortunat was on the Boulevard Haussmann,
- almost opposite Binder's, the famous carriage builder. Although
- it was rather a wine-shop than a restaurant, a capital breakfast
- could be obtained there as M. Casimir had ascertained to his
- satisfaction several times before. "Has no one called for me?" he
- asked, as he went in.
-
- "No one."
-
- He consulted his watch, and evinced considerable surprise. "Not
- yet noon!" he exclaimed. "I'm in advance; and as that is the
- case, give me a glass of absinthe and a newspaper."
-
- He was obeyed with far more alacrity than his deceased master had
- ever required him to show, and he forthwith plunged into the
- report of the doings at the Bourse, with the eagerness of a man
- who has an all-sufficient reason for his anxiety in a drawer at
- home. Having emptied one glass of absinthe, he was about to order
- a second, when he felt a tap on the shoulder, and on turning round
- he beheld M. Isidore Fortunat.
-
- In accordance with his wont, the agent was attired in a style of
- severe elegance--with gloves and boots fitting him to perfection--
- but an unusually winning smile played upon his lips. "You see I
- have been waiting for you," exclaimed M. Casimir.
-
- "I am late, it's true," replied M. Fortunat, "but we will do our
- best to make up for lost time; for, I trust, you will do me the
- honor of breakfasting with me?"
-
- "Really, I don't know that I ought."
-
- "Yes, yes, you must. They will give us a private room; we must
- have a talk."
-
- It was certainly not for the pleasure of the thing that M.
- Fortunat cultivated M. Casimir's acquaintance, and entertained him
- at breakfast. M. Fortunat, who was a very proud man, considered
- this connection somewhat beneath his dignity; but at first,
- circumstances, and afterward interest, had required him to
- overcome his repugnance. It was through the Count de Chalusse
- that he had made M. Casimir's acquaintance. While the count was
- employing the agent he had frequently sent his valet to him with
- messages and letters. Naturally, M. Casimir had talked on these
- occasions, and the agent had listened to him; hence this
- superficial friendship. Subsequently when the marriage
- contemplated by the Marquis de Valorsay was in course of
- preparation, M. Fortunat had profited of the opportunity to make
- the count's servant his spy; and it had been easy to find a
- pretext for continuing the acquaintance, as M. Casimir was a
- speculator, or rather a dabbler in stocks and shares. So,
- whenever he needed information, M. Fortunat invited M. Casimir to
- breakfast, knowing the potent influence of a good bottle of wine
- offered at the right moment. It is needless to say that he
- exercised uncommon care in the composition of the menu on a day
- like this when his future course depended, perhaps, on a word more
- or less.
-
- M. Casimir's eye sparkled as he took his seat at the table
- opposite his entertainer. The crafty agent had chosen a little
- room looking out on to the boulevard. Not that it was more
- spacious or elegant than the others, but it was isolated, and this
- was a very great advantage; for every one knows how unsafe and
- perfidious are those so-called private rooms which are merely
- separated from each other by a thin partition, scarcely thicker
- than a sheet of paper. It was not long before M. Fortunat had
- reason to congratulate himself on his foresight, for the breakfast
- began with a dish of shrimps, and M. Casimir had not finished his
- twelfth, washed down by a glass of chablis, before he declared
- that he could see no impropriety in confiding certain things to a
- friend.
-
- The events of the morning had completely turned his head; and
- gratified vanity and good cheer excited him to such a degree that
- he discoursed with unwonted volubility. With total disregard of
- prudence, he talked with inexcusable freedom of the Count de
- Chalusse, and M. de Valorsay, and especially of his enemy,
- Mademoiselle Marguerite. "For it is she," he exclaimed, rapping
- on the table with his knife--"it is she who has taken the missing
- millions! How she did it, no one will ever know, for she has not
- an equal in craftiness; but it's she who has stolen them, I'm sure
- of it! I would have taken my oath to that effect before the
- magistrate, and I would have proved it, too, if he hadn't taken
- her part because she's pretty--for she is devilishly pretty."
-
- Even if M. Fortunat had wished to put in a word or two, he could
- have found no opportunity. But his guest's loquacity did not
- displease him; it gave him an opportunity for reflection. Strange
- thoughts arose in his mind, and connecting M. Casimir's
- affirmations with the assurances of the Marquis de Valorsay, he
- was amazed at the coincidence. "It's very singular!" he thought.
- "Has this girl really stolen the money? and has the marquis
- discovered the fact through Madame Leon, and determined to profit
- by the theft? In that case, I may get my money back, after all! I
- must look into the matter."
-
- A partridge and a bottle of Pomard followed the shrimps and
- chablis; and M. Casimir's loquacity increased, and his voice rose
- higher and higher. He wandered from one absurd story to another,
- and from slander to slander, until suddenly, and without the
- slightest warning, he began to speak of the mysterious letter
- which he considered the undoubted cause of the count's illness.
-
- At the first word respecting this missive, M. Fortunat started
- violently. "Nonsense!" said he, with an incredulous air. "Why
- the devil should this letter have had such an influence?"
-
- "I don't know. But it is certain--it had." And, in support of
- his assertion, he told M. Fortunat how the count had destroyed the
- letter almost without reading it, and how he had afterward
- searched for the fragments, in order to find an address it had
- contained. "And I'm quite sure," said the valet, "that the count
- intended to apply to you for the address of the person who wrote
- the letter."
-
- "Are you sure of that?"
-
- "As sure as I am of drinking Pomard!" exclaimed M. Casimir,
- draining his glass.
-
- Rarely had the agent experienced such emotion. He did not doubt
- but what this missive contained the solution of the mystery.
- "Were the scraps of this letter found?" he asked.
-
- "I have them," cried the valet, triumphantly. "I have them in my
- pocket, and, what's more, I have the whole of them!"
-
- This declaration made M. Fortunat turn pale with delight.
- "Indeed--indeed!" said he; "it must be a strange production."
-
- His companion pursed up his lips disdainfully. "May be so, may be
- not," he retorted. "It's impossible to understand a word of it.
- The only thing certain about it is that it was written by a
- woman."
-
- "Ah!"
-
- "Yes, by a former mistress, undoubtedly. And, naturally, she asks
- for money for a child. Women of that class always do so. They've
- tried the game with me more than a dozen times, but I'm not so
- easily caught." And bursting with vanity, he related three or four
- love affairs in which, according to his own account, he must have
- played a most ignoble part.
-
- If M. Fortunat's chair had been a gridiron, heated by an excellent
- fire, he could not have felt more uncomfortable. After pouring
- out bumper after bumper for his guest, he perceived that he had
- gone too far, and that it would not be easy to check him. "And
- this letter?" he interrupted, at last.
-
- "Well?"
-
- "You promised to let me read it."
-
- "That's true--that's quite true; but it would be as well to have
- some mocha first, would it not? What if we ordered some mocha,
- eh?"
-
- Coffee was served, and when the waiter had closed the door, M.
- Casimir drew the letter, the scraps of which were fixed together,
- from his pocket, and unfolded it, saying: "Attention; I'm going to
- read."
-
- This did not suit M. Fortunat's fancy. He would infinitely have
- preferred perusing it himself; but it is impossible to argue with
- an intoxicated man, and so M. Casimir with a more and more
- indistinct enunciation read as follows: "'Paris, October 14, 186--
- .' So the lady lives in Paris, as usual. After this she puts
- neither 'monsieur,' nor 'my friend,' nor 'dear count,' nothing at
- all. She begins abruptly: 'Once before, many years ago, I came to
- you as a suppliant. You were pitiless, and did not even deign to
- answer me. And yet, as I told you, I was on the verge of a
- terrible precipice; my brain was reeling, vertigo had seized hold
- of me. Deserted, I was wandering about Paris, homeless and
- penniless, and my child was starving!'"
-
- M. Casimir paused to laugh. "That's like all the rest of them,"
- he exclaimed; "that is exactly like all the rest! I've ten such
- letters in my drawer, even more imperative in their demands. If
- you'll come home with me after breakfast, I'll show them to you.
- We'll have a hearty laugh over them!"
-
- "Let us finish this first."
-
- "Of course." And he resumed: "'If I had been alone. I should not
- have hesitated. I was so wretched that death seemed a refuge to
- me. But what was to become of my child? Should I kill him, and
- destroy myself afterward? I thought of doing so, but I lacked the
- courage. And what I implored you in pity to give me, was
- rightfully mine. I had only to present myself at your house and
- demand it. Alas! I did not know that then. I believed myself
- bound by a solemn oath, and you inspired me with inexpressible
- terror. And still I could not see my child die of starvation
- before my very eyes. So I abandoned myself to my fate, and I have
- sunk so low that I have been obliged to separate from my son. He
- must not know the shame to which he owes his livelihood. And he
- is ignorant even of my existence.'"
-
- M. Fortunat was as motionless as if he had been turned to stone.
- After the information he had obtained respecting the count's past,
- and after the story told him by Madame Vantrasson, he could
- scarcely doubt. "This letter," he thought, "can only be from
- Mademoiselle Hermine de Chalusse."
-
- However, M. Casimir resumed his reading: "'If I apply to you
- again, if from the depth of infamy into which I have fallen, I
- again call upon you for help, it is because I am at the end of my
- resources--because, before I die, I must see my son's future
- assured. It is not a fortune that I ask for him, but sufficient
- to live upon, and I expect to receive it from you.'"
-
- Once more the valet paused in his perusal of the letter to remark:
- "There it is again sufficient to live upon, and I expect to
- receive it from you!--Excellent! Women are remarkable creatures,
- upon my word! But listen to the rest! 'It is absolutely
- necessary that I should see you as soon as possible. Oblige me,
- therefore, by calling to-morrow, October 15th, at the Hotel de
- Homburg, in the Rue du Helder. You will ask for Madame Lucy
- Huntley, and they will conduct you to me. I shall expect you from
- three o'clock to six. Come. I implore you, come. It is painful
- to me to add that if I do not hear from you, I am resolved to
- demand and OBTAIN--no matter what may be the consequences--the
- means which I have, so far, asked of you on my bended knees and
- with clasped hands.'"
-
- Having finished the letter, M. Casimir laid it on the table, and
- poured out a glassful of brandy, which he drained at a single
- draught. "And that's all," he remarked. "No signature--not even
- an initial. It was a so-called respectable woman who wrote that.
- They never sign their notes, the hussies! for fear of compromising
- themselves, as I've reason to know." And so saying, he laughed the
- idiotic laugh of a man who has been drinking immoderately. "If I
- had time," he resumed, "I should make some inquiries about this
- Madame Lucy Huntley--a feigned name, evidently. I should like to
- know---- But what's the matter with you, Monsieur Fortunat? You
- are as pale as death. Are you ill?"
-
- To tell the truth, the agent did look as if he were indisposed.
- "Thanks," he stammered. "I'm very well, only I just remembered
- that some one is waiting for me."
-
- "Who?"
-
- "A client."
-
- "Nonsense!" rejoined the valet; "make some excuse; let him go
- about his business. Aren't you rich enough? Pour us out another
- glass of wine; it will make you all right again."
-
- M. Fortunat complied, but he performed the task so awkwardly, or,
- rather, so skilfully, that he drew toward him, with his sleeve,
- the letter which was lying beside M. Casimir's plate. "To your
- health," said the valet. "To yours," replied M. Fortunat. And in
- drawing back the arm he had extended to chink glasses with his
- guest, he caused the letter to fall on his knees.
-
- M. Casimir, who had not observed this successful manoeuvre, was
- trying to light his cigar; and while vainly consuming a large
- quantity of matches in the attempt, he exclaimed: "What you just
- said, my friend, means that you would like to desert me. That
- won't do, my dear fellow! You are going home with me; and I will
- read you some love-letters from a woman of the world. Then we
- will go to Mourloup's, and play a game of billiards. That's the
- place to enjoy one's self. You'll see Joseph, of the Commarin
- household, a splendid comedian."
-
- "Very well; but first I must settle the score here."
-
- "Yes, pay."
-
- M. Fortunat rang for his bill. He had obtained more information
- than he expected; he had the letter in his pocket, and he had now
- only one desire, to rid himself of M. Casimir. But this was no
- easy task. Drunken men cling tenaciously to their friends; and M.
- Fortunat was asking himself what strategy he could employ, when
- the waiter entered, and said: "There's a very light-complexioned
- man here, who looks as if he were a huissier's clerk. He wishes
- to speak with you, gentlemen."
-
- "Ah! it's Chupin!" exclaimed the valet. "He is a friend. Let him
- come in, and bring us another glass. 'The more the merrier,' as
- the saying goes."
-
- What could Chupin want? M. Fortunat had no idea, but he was none
- the less grateful for his coming, being determined to hand this
- troublesome Casimir over to his keeping. On entering the room
- Chupin realized the valet's condition at the first glance, and his
- face clouded. He bowed politely to M. Fortunat, but addressed
- Casimir in an extremely discontented tone. "It's three o'clock,"
- said he, "and I've come, as we agreed, to arrange with you about
- the count's funeral."
-
- These words had the effect of a cold shower-bath on M. Casimir.
- "Upon my word, I had forgotten--forgotten entirely, upon my word!'
- And the thought of his condition, and the responsibility he had
- accepted, coming upon him at the same time, he continued: "Good
- Heavens! I'm in a nice state! It is all I can do to stand. What
- will they think at the house? What will they say?"
-
- M. Fortunat had drawn his clerk a little on one side. "Victor,"
- said he, quickly and earnestly, "I must go at once. Everything
- has been paid for; but in case you need some money for a cab or
- anything of the sort, here are ten francs. If there's any you
- don't use, keep it for yourself. I leave this fool in your
- charge, take care of him."
-
- The sight of the ten-franc piece made Chupin's face brighten a
- little. "Very well," he replied. "I understand the business. I
- served my apprenticeship as a 'guardian angel' when my grandmother
- kept the Poivriere."*
-
- * See "Lecoq the Detective" by Emile Gaboriau
-
- "Above all, don't let him return home in his present state."
-
- "Have no fears, monsieur, I must talk business with him, and so I
- shall have him all right in a jiffy." And as M. Fortunat made his
- escape, Chupin beckoned to the waiter, and said:
-
- "Fetch me some very strong coffee, a handful of salt, and a lemon.
- There's nothing better for bringing a drunken man to his senses."
-
-
-
- XV.
-
-
- M. Fortunat left the restaurant, almost on the run, for he feared
- that he might be pursued and overtaken by M. Casimir. But after
- he had gone a couple of hundred paces, he paused, not so much to
- take breath, as to collect his scattered wits; and though the
- weather was cold, he seated himself on a bench to reflect.
-
- Never in all his changeful life had he known such intense anxiety
- and torturing suspense as he had just experienced in that little
- room in the restaurant. He had longed for positive information
- and he had obtained it; but it had upset all his plans and
- annihilated all his hopes. Imagining that the count's heirs had
- been lost sight of, he had determined to find them and make a
- bargain with them, before they learned that they were worth their
- millions. But on the contrary, these heirs were close at hand,
- watching M. de Chalusse, and knowing their rights so well that
- they were ready to fight for them. "For it was certainly the
- count's sister who wrote the letter which I have in my pocket," he
- murmured. "Not wishing to receive him at her own home, she
- prudently appointed a meeting at a hotel. But what about this
- name of Huntley? Is it really hers, or is it only assumed for the
- occasion? Is it the name of the man who enticed her from home, or
- is it the name given to the son from whom she has separated
- herself?"
-
- But after all what was the use of all these conjectures? There was
- but one certain and positive thing, and this was that the money he
- had counted upon had escaped him; and he experienced as acute a
- pang as if he had lost forty thousand francs a second time.
- Perhaps, at that moment, he was sorry that he had severed his
- connection with the marquis. Still, he was not the man to
- despond, however desperate his plight might appear, without an
- attempt to better his situation. He knew how many surprising and
- sudden changes in fortune have been brought about by some
- apparently trivial action. "I must discover this sister," he said
- to himself--" I must ascertain her position and her plans. If she
- has no one to advise her, I will offer my services; and who knows----"
-
- A cab was passing; M. Fortunat hailed it, and ordered the Jehu to
- drive him to the Rue du Helder, No. 43, Hotel de Homburg.
-
- Was it by chance or premeditation that this establishment had
- received the name of one of the gambling dens of Europe? Perhaps
- the following information may serve to answer the question. The
- Hotel de Homburg was one of those flash hostelries frequented by
- adventurers of distinction, who are attracted to Paris by the
- millions that are annually squandered there. Spurious counts and
- questionable Russian princesses were sure to find a cordial
- welcome there with princely luxury, moderate prices, and--but very
- little confidence. Each person was called by the title which it
- pleased him to give on his arrival--Excellency or Prince,
- according to his fancy. He could also find numerous servants
- carefully drilled to play the part of old family retainers, and
- carriages upon which the most elaborate coat-of-arms could be
- painted at an hour's notice. Nor was there any difficulty
- whatever in immediately procuring all the accessories of a life of
- grandeur--all that is needful to dazzle the unsuspecting, to throw
- dust in people's eyes, and to dupe one's chance acquaintances.
- All these things were provided without delay, by the month, by the
- day or by the hour, just as the applicant pleased. But there was
- no such thing as credit there. Bills were presented every
- evening, to those lodgers who did not pay in advance: and he who
- could not, or would not, settle the score, even if he were
- Excellency or Prince, was requested to depart at once, and his
- trunks were held as security.
-
- When M. Fortunat entered the office of the hotel, a woman, with a
- crafty looking face, was holding a conference with an elderly
- gentleman, who had a black velvet skullcap on his head, and a
- magnifying glass in his hand. They applied their eyes to the
- glass in turn, and were engaged in examining some very handsome
- diamonds, which had no doubt been offered in lieu of money by some
- noble but impecunious foreigner. On hearing M. Fortunat enter,
- the woman looked up.
-
- "What do you desire, monsieur?" she inquired, politely.
-
- "I wish to see Madame Lucy Huntley."
-
- The woman did not reply at first, but raised her eyes to the
- ceiling, as if she were reading there the list of all the
- foreigners of distinction who honored the Hotel de Homburg by
- their presence at that moment. "Lucy Huntley!" she repeated. "I
- don't recollect that name! I don't think there's such a person in
- the house--Lucy Huntley! What kind of a person is she?"
-
- For many reasons M. Fortunat could not answer. First of all, he
- did not know. But he was not in the least disconcerted, and he
- avoided the question without the slightest embarrassment, at the
- same time trying to quicken the woman's faulty memory. "The
- person I wished to see was here on Friday, between three and six
- in the afternoon; and she was waiting for a visitor with an
- anxiety which could not possibly have escaped your notice."
-
- This detail quickened the memory of the man with the magnifying
- glass--none other than the woman's husband and landlord of the
- hotel. "Ah! the gentleman is speaking of the lady of No. 2--you
- remember--the same who insisted upon having the large private
- room."
-
- "To be sure," replied the wife; "where could my wits have been!"
- And turning to M. Fortunat: "Excuse my forgetfulness," she added.
- "The lady is no longer in the house; she only remained here for a
- few hours."
-
- This reply did not surprise M. Fortunat--he had expected it; and
- yet he assumed an air of the utmost consternation. "Only a few
- hours!" he repeated, like a despairing echo.
-
- "Yes, monsieur. She arrived here about eleven o'clock in the
- morning, with only a large valise by way of luggage, and she left
- that same evening at eight o'clock."
-
- "Alas! and where was she going?"
-
- "She didn't tell me."
-
- You might have sworn that M. Fortunat was about to burst into
- tears. "Poor Lucy!" said he, in a tragical tone; "it was for me,
- madame, that she was waiting. But it was only this morning that I
- received her letter appointing a meeting here. She must have been
- in despair. The post can't be depended on!"
-
- The husband and wife simultaneously shrugged their shoulders, and
- the expression of their faces unmistakably implied: "What can we
- do about it? It is no business of ours. Don't trouble us."
-
- But M. Fortunat was not the man to be dismayed by such a trifle.
-
- "She was taken to the railway station, no doubt," he insisted.
-
- "Really, I know nothing about it."
-
- "You told me just now that she had a large valise, so she could
- not have left your hotel on foot. She must have asked for a
- vehicle. Who was sent to fetch it? One of your boys? If I could
- find the driver I should, perhaps, be able to obtain some valuable
- information from him."
-
- The husband and wife exchanged a whole volume of suspicions in a
- single glance. M. Isidore Fortunat's appearance was incontestably
- respectable, but they were well aware that those strange men
- styled detectives are perfectly conversant with the art of
- dressing to perfection. So the hotelkeeper quickly decided on his
- course. "Your idea is an excellent one," he said to M. Fortunat.
- "This lady must certainly have taken a vehicle on leaving; and
- what is more, it must have been a vehicle belonging to the hotel.
- If you will follow me, we will make some inquiries on the
- subject."
-
- And rising with a willingness that augured well for their success,
- he led the agent into the courtyard, where five or six vehicles
- were stationed, while the drivers lounged on a bench, chatting and
- smoking their pipes "Which of you was employed by a lady yesterday
- evening at about eight o'clock?"
-
- "What sort of a person was she?"
-
- "She was a handsome woman, between thirty and forty years' old,
- very fair, rather stout, and dressed in black. She had a large
- Russia-leather travelling-bag."
-
- "I took her," answered one of the drivers promptly. M. Fortunat
- advanced toward the man with open arms, and with such eagerness
- that it might have been supposed he meant to embrace him. "Ah, my
- worthy fellow!" he exclaimed, "you can save my life!"
-
- The driver looked exceedingly pleased. He was thinking that this
- gentleman would certainly requite his salvation by a magnificent
- gratuity. "What do you want of me?" he asked.
-
- "Tell me where you drove this lady?"
-
- "I took her to the Rue de Berry."
-
- "To what number?"
-
- "Ah, I can't tell. I've forgotten it."
-
- But M. Fortunat no longer felt any anxiety. "Very good," said he.
- "You've forgotten it--that's not at all strange. But you would
- know the house again, wouldn't you?"
-
- "Undoubtedly I should."
-
- "Will you take me there?"
-
- "Certainly, sir. This is my vehicle."
-
- The hunter of missing heirs at once climbed inside; but it was not
- until the carriage had left the courtyard that the landlord
- returned to his office. "That man must be a detective," he
- remarked to his wife.
-
- "So I fancy."
-
- "It's strange we're not acquainted with him. He must be a new
- member of the force."
-
- But M. Fortunat was quite indifferent as to what impression he had
- left behind him at the Hotel de Homburg, for he never expected to
- set foot there again. The one essential thing was that he had
- obtained the information he wished for, and even a description of
- the lady, and he felt that he was now really on the track. The
- vehicle soon reached the Rue de Berry, and drew up in front of a
- charming little private house. "Here we are, monsieur," said the
- driver, bowing at the door.
-
- M. Fortunat sprang nimbly on to the pavement, and handed five
- francs to the coachman, who went off growling and swearing, for he
- thought the reward a contemptibly small one, coming as it did from
- a man whose life had been saved, according to his own confession.
- However, the person the Jehu anathematized certainly did not hear
- him. Standing motionless where he had alighted, M. Fortunat
- scrutinized the house in front of him with close attention. "So
- she lives here," he muttered. "This is the place; but I can't
- present myself without knowing her name. I must make some
- inquiries."
-
- There was a wine-shop some fifty paces distant, and thither M.
- Fortunat hastened, and ordered a glass of currant syrup. As he
- slowly sipped the beverage, he pointed to the house in question,
- with an air of well-assumed indifference, and asked: "Whom does
- that pretty dwelling belong to?"
-
- "To Madame Lia d'Argeles," answered the landlady.
-
- M. Fortunat started. He well remembered that this was the name
- the Marquis de Valorsay had mentioned when speaking of the vile
- conspiracy he had planned. It was at this woman's house that the
- man whom Mademoiselle Marguerite loved had been disgraced! Still
- he managed to master his surprise, and in a light, frank tone he
- resumed: "What a pretty name! And what does this lady do?"
-
- "What does she do? Why, she amuses herself."
-
- M. Fortunat seemed astonished. "Dash it!" said he. "She must
- amuse herself to good purpose to have a house like that. Is she
- pretty?"
-
- "That depends on taste. She's no longer young, at any rate; but
- she has superb golden hair. And, oh! how white she is--as white
- as snow, monsieur--as white as snow! She has a fine figure as
- well, and a most distinguished bearing--pays cash, too, to the
- very last farthing."
-
- There could no longer be any doubt. The portrait sketched by the
- wine-vendor fully corresponded with the description given by the
- hotelkeeper in the Rue de Helder. Accordingly, M. Fortunat
- drained his glass, and threw fifty centimes on the counter. Then,
- crossing the street, he boldly rang at the door of Madame
- d'Argeles's house. If any one had asked him what he proposed
- doing and saying if he succeeded in effecting an entrance, he
- might have replied with perfect sincerity, "I don't know." The
- fact is, he had but one aim, one settled purpose in his mind. He
- was obstinately, FURIOUSLY resolved to derive some benefit, small
- or great, from this mysterious affair. As for the means of
- execution, he relied entirely on his audacity and sang-froid,
- convinced that they would not fail him when the decisive moment
- came. "First of all, I must see this lady," he said to himself.
- "The first words will depend solely upon my first impressions.
- After that, I shall be guided by circumstances."
-
- An old serving-man, in a quiet, tasteful livery, opened the door,
- whereupon M. Fortunat, in a tone of authority, asked: "Madame Lia
- d'Argeles?"
-
- "Madame does not receive on Friday," was the reply.
-
- With a petulant gesture, M. Fortunat rejoined: "All the same I
- must speak with her to-day. It is on a matter of the greatest
- importance. Give her my card." So saying, he held out a bit of
- pasteboard, on which, below his name, were inscribed the words:
- "Liquidations. Settlements effected for insolvent parties."
-
- "Ah! that's a different thing," said the servant. "Will monsieur
- take the trouble to follow me?"
-
- M. Fortunat did take the trouble; and he was conducted into a
- large drawing-room where he was requested to sit down and await
- madame's coming. Left to himself, he began an inventory of the
- apartment, as a general studies the ground on which he is about to
- give battle. No trace remained of the unfortunate scene of the
- previous night, save a broken candelabrum on the chimney-piece.
- It was the one which Pascal Ferailleur had armed himself with,
- when they talked of searching him, and which he had thrown down in
- the courtyard, as he left the house. But this detail did not
- attract M. Fortunat's attention. The only thing that puzzled him
- was the large reflector placed above the chandelier, and it took
- him some time to fathom with what object it was placed there.
- Without precisely intimidating him, the luxurious appointments of
- the house aroused his astonishment. "Everything here is in
- princely style," he muttered, "and this shows that all the
- lunatics are not at Charenton yet. If Madame d'Argeles lacked
- bread in days gone by, she does so no longer--that's evident."
-
- Naturally enough this reflection led him to wonder why such a rich
- woman should become the Marquis de Valorsay's accomplice, and lend
- a hand in so vile and cowardly a plot, which horrified even him--
- Fortunat. "For she must be an accomplice," he thought.
-
- And he marvelled at the freak of fate which had connected the
- unfortunate man who had been sacrificed with the unacknowledged
- daughter, and the cast-off sister, of the Count de Chalusse. A
- vague presentiment, the mysterious voice of instinct, warned him,
- moreover, that his profit in the affair would depend upon the
- antagonism, or alliance, of Mademoiselle Marguerite and Madame
- d'Argeles. But his meditations were suddenly interrupted by the
- sound of a discussion in an adjoining room. He stepped eagerly
- forward, hoping to hear something, and he did hear a man saying in
- a coarse voice: "What! I leave an interesting game, and lose
- precious time in coming to offer you my services, and you receive
- me like this! Zounds! madame, this will teach me not to meddle
- with what doesn't concern me, in future. So, good-bye, my dear
- lady. You'll learn some day, to your cost, the real nature of
- this villain of a Coralth whom you now defend so warmly."
-
- This name of Coralth was also one of those which were engraven
- upon M. Fortunat's memory; and yet he did not notice it at the
- moment. His attention was so absorbed by what he had just heard
- that he could not fix his mind upon the object of his mission; and
- he only abandoned his conjectures on hearing a rustling of skirts
- against the panels of the door leading into the hall.
-
- The next moment Madame Lia d'Argeles entered the room. She was
- arrayed in a very elegant dressing-gown of gray cashmere, with
- blue satin trimmings, her hair was beautifully arranged, and she
- had neglected none of the usual artifices of the toilette-table;
- still any one would have considered her to be over forty years of
- age. Her sad face wore an expression of melancholy resignation;
- and there were signs of recent tears in her swollen eyes,
- surrounded by bluish circles. She glanced at her visitor, and, in
- anything but an encouraging tone exclaimed: "You desired to speak
- with me, I believe?"
-
- M. Fortunat bowed, almost disconcerted. He had expected to meet
- one of those stupid, ignorant young women, who make themselves
- conspicuous at the afternoon promenade in the Bois de Boulogne;
- and he found himself in the presence of an evidently cultivated
- and imperious woman, who, even in her degradation, retained all
- her pride of race, and awed him, despite all his coolness and
- assurance. "I do, indeed, madame, wish to confer with you
- respecting some important interests," he answered.
-
- She sank on to a chair; and, without asking her visitor to take a
- seat: "Explain yourself," she said, briefly.
-
- M. Fortunat's knowledge of the importance of the game in which he
- had already risked so much had already restored his presence of
- mind. He had only needed a glance to form a true estimate of
- Madame d'Argeles's character; and he realized that it would
- require a sudden, powerful, and well-directed blow to shatter her
- composure. "I have the unpleasant duty of informing you of a
- great misfortune, madame," he began. "A person who is very dear
- to you, and who is nearly related to you, was a victim of a
- frightful accident yesterday evening and died this morning."
-
- This gloomy preamble did not seem to produce the slightest effect
- on Madame d'Argeles. "Whom are you speaking of?" she coldly
- asked.
-
- M. Fortunat assumed his most solemn manner as he replied: "Of your
- brother, madame--of the Count de Chalusse."
-
- She sprang up, and a convulsive shudder shook her from head to
- foot. "Raymond is dead!" she faltered.
-
- "Alas! yes, madame. Struck with death at the very moment he was
- repairing to the appointment you had given him at the Hotel de
- Homburg."
-
- This clever falsehood, which was not entirely one, would, so the
- agent thought, be of advantage to him, since it would prove he was
- acquainted with previous events. But Madame d'Argeles did not
- seem to notice, or even to hear the remark. She had fallen back
- in her arm-chair, paler than death. "How did he die?" she asked.
-
- "From an attack of apoplexy."
-
- "My God!" exclaimed the wretched woman, who now suspected the
- truth; "my God, forgive me. It was my letter that killed him!"
- and she wept as if her heart were breaking--this woman who had
- suffered and wept so much.
-
- It is needless to say that M. Fortunat was moved with sympathy; he
- always evinced a respectful sympathy for the woes of others; but
- in the present instance, his emotion was greatly mitigated by the
- satisfaction he felt at having succeeded so quickly and so
- completely. Madame d'Argeles had confessed everything! This was
- indeed a victory, for it must be admitted that he had trembled
- lest she should deny all, and bid him leave the house. He still
- saw many difficulties between his pocket and the Count de
- Chalusse's money; but he did not despair of conquering them after
- such a successful beginning. And he was muttering some words of
- consolation, when Madame d'Argeles suddenly looked up and said: "I
- must see him--I will see him once more! Come, monsieur!" But a
- terrible memory rooted her to the spot and with a despairing
- gesture, and in a voice quivering with anguish she exclaimed:
-
- "No, no--I cannot even do that."
-
- M. Fortunat was not a little disturbed; and it was with a look of
- something very like consternation that he glanced at Madame
- d'Argeles, who had reseated herself and was now sobbing violently,
- with her face hidden on the arm of her chair. "What prevents
- her?" he thought. "Why this sudden terror now that her brother is
- dead? Is she unwilling to confess that she is a Chalusse? She must
- make up her mind to it, however, if she wishes to receive the
- count's property--and she must make up her mind to it, for my
- sake, if not for her own."
-
- He remained silent, until it seemed to him that Madame d'Argeles
- was calmer, then: "Excuse me, madame," he began, "for breaking in
- upon your very natural grief, but duty requires me to remind you
- of your interests."
-
- With the passive docility of those who are wretched, she wiped
- away her tears, and replied, gently: "I am listening, monsieur."
-
- He had had time to prepare his discourse. "First of all, madame,"
- he remarked, "I must tell you that I was the count's confidential
- agent. In him I lose a protector. Respect alone prevents me from
- saying a friend. He had no secrets from me." M. Fortunat saw so
- plainly that Madame d'Argeles did not understand a word of this
- sentimental exordium that he thought it necessary to add: "I tell
- you this, not so much to gain your consideration and good-will, as
- to explain to you how I became acquainted with these matters
- relating to your family--how I became aware of your existence, for
- instance, which no one else suspected." He paused, hoping for some
- reply, a word, a sign, but not receiving this encouragement, he
- continued: "I must, first of all, call your attention to the
- peculiar situation of M. de Chalusse, and to the circumstances
- which immediately preceded and attended his departure from life.
- His death was so unexpected that he was unable to make any
- disposition of his property by will, or even to indicate his last
- wishes. This, madame, is fortunate for you. M. de Chalusse had
- certain prejudices against you, as you are aware. Poor count. He
- certainly had the best heart in the world, and yet hatred with him
- was almost barbaric in its intensity. There can be no doubt
- whatever, that he had determined to deprive you of your
- inheritance. With this intention he had already begun to convert
- his estates into ready money, and had he lived six months longer
- you would not have received a penny."
-
- With a gesture of indifference, which was difficult to explain
- after the vehemence and the threatening tone of her letter, Madame
- d'Argeles murmured:
-
- "Ah, well! what does it matter?"
-
- "What does it matter?" repeated M. Fortunat. "I see, madame, that
- your grief prevents you from realizing the extent of the peril you
- have escaped. M. de Chalusse had other, and more powerful reasons
- even than his hatred for wishing to deprive you of your share of
- his property. He had sworn that he would give a princely fortune
- to his beloved daughter."
-
- For the first time, Madame d'Argeles's features assumed an
- expression of surprise. "What, my brother had a child?"
-
- "Yes, madame, an illegitimate daughter, Mademoiselle Marguerite, a
- lovely and charming girl whom I had the pleasure of restoring to
- his care some years ago. She has been living with him for six
- months or so; and he was about to marry her, with an enormous
- dowry, to a nobleman bearing one of the proudest names in France,
- the Marquis de Valorsay."
-
- The name shook Madame d'Argeles as if she had experienced the
- shock of an electric battery, and springing to her feet, with
- flashing eyes: "You say that my brother's daughter was to marry M.
- de Valorsay?" she asked.
-
- "It was decided--the marquis adored her."
-
- "But she--she did not love him--confess that she did not love
- him."
-
- M. Fortunat did not know what to reply. The question took him
- completely by surprise; and feeling that his answer would have a
- very considerable influence upon what might follow, he hesitated.
-
- "Will you answer me?" insisted Madame d'Argeles, imperiously.
- "She loved another, did she not?"
-
- "To tell the truth, I believe she did," the agent stammered. "But
- I have no proof of it, madame."
-
- "Ah! the wretch!" she exclaimed with a threatening gesture; "the
- traitor! the infamous scoundrel! Now I understand it all. And to
- think that it occurred in my house. But no; it was best so, I can
- still repair everything." And darting to the bell-rope, she pulled
- it violently.
-
- A servant at once appeared. "Job," she said, "hasten after Baron
- Trigault--he left the house a moment ago and bring him back. I
- must speak with him. If you do not overtake him, go to his club,
- to his house, to the houses of his friends, go to every place
- where there is any chance of finding him. Make haste, and do not
- return without him."
-
- And as the man turned to obey, she added: "My carriage must be in
- the courtyard. Take it."
-
- Meanwhile M. Fortunat's expression of countenance had undergone a
- marked change. "Well!" thought he, "I have just made a mess of
- it! M. Valorsay is unmasked; and now, may I be hung, if he ever
- marries Mademoiselle Marguerite. Certainly, I do not owe much to
- the scoundrel, for he has defrauded me of forty thousand francs,
- but what will he say when he discovers what I've done? He will
- never believe me if I tell him that it was an involuntary blunder,
- and Heaven only knows what revenge he will plan! A man of his
- disposition, knowing that he is ruined, is capable of anything! So
- much the worse for me. Before night I shall warn the commissary
- of police in my district, and I shall not go out unarmed!"
-
- The servant went off, and Madame d'Argeles then turned to her
- visitor again. But she seemed literally transfigured by the storm
- of passion which was raging in her heart and mind; her cheeks were
- crimson, and an unwonted energy sparkled in her eyes. "Let us
- finish this business," she said, curtly; "I am expecting some
- one."
-
- M. Fortunat bowed with a rather pompous, but at the same time
- obsequious air. "I have only a few more words to say," he
- declared. "M. de Chalusse having no other heir, I have come to
- acquaint you with your rights."
-
- "Very good; continue, if you please."
-
- "You have only to present yourself, and establish your identity,
- to be put in possession of your brother's property."
-
- Madame d'Argeles gave the agent a look of mingled irony and
- distrust; and after a moment's reflection, she replied: "I am very
- grateful for your interest, monsieur; but if I have any rights, it
- is not my intention to urge them."
-
- It seemed to M. Fortunat as if he were suddenly falling from some
- immense height. "You are not in earnest," he exclaimed, "or you
- are ignorant of the fact that M. de Chalusse leaves perhaps twenty
- millions behind him."
-
- "My course is decided on, monsieur; irrevocably decided on."
-
- "Very well, madame; but it often happens that the court institutes
- inquiries for the heirs of large fortunes, and this may happen in
- your case."
-
- "I should reply that I was not a member of the Chalusse family,
- and that would end it. Startled by the news of my brother's
- death, I allowed my secret to escape me. I shall know how to keep
- it in future."
-
- Anger succeeded astonishment in M. Fortunat's mind. "Madame,
- madame, what can you be thinking of?" he cried, impetuously.
- "Accept--in Heaven's name--accept this inheritance; if not for
- yourself, for the sake of----"
-
- In his excitement, he was about to commit a terrible blunder. He
- saw it in time, and checked himself.
-
- "For the sake of whom?" asked Madame d'Argeles, in an altered
- voice.
-
- "For the sake of Mademoiselle Marguerite, madame; for the sake of
- this poor child, who is your niece. The count never having
- acknowledged her as his daughter, she will be left actually
- without bread, while her father's millions go to enrich the
- state."
-
- "That will suffice, monsieur; I will think of it. And now,
- enough!"
-
- The dismissal was so imperious that M. Fortunat bowed and went
- off, completely bewildered by this denouement. "She's crazy!" he
- said to himself. "Crazy in the fullest sense of the word. She
- refuses the count's millions from a silly fear of telling people
- that she belongs to the Chalusse family. She threatened her
- brother, but she would never have carried her threats into
- execution. And she prefers her present position to such a
- fortune. What lunacy!" But, although he was disappointed and
- angry, he did not by any means despair. "Fortunately for me," he
- thought, "this proud and haughty lady has a son somewhere in the
- world. And she'll do for him what she would not consent to do for
- herself. Through her, with a little patience and Victor Chupin's
- aid, I shall succeed in discovering this boy. He must be an
- intelligent youth--and we'll see if he surrenders his millions as
- easily as his mamma does."
-
-
-
- XVI.
-
-
- It is a terrible task to break suddenly with one's past, without
- even having had time for preparation; to renounce the life one has
- so far lived, to return to the starting point, and begin existence
- anew; to abandon everything--the position one has gained, the work
- one has become familiar with, every fondly cherished hope, and
- friend, and habit; to forsake the known to plunge into the
- unknown, to leave the certain for the uncertain, and desert light
- for darkness; to cast one's identity aside, assume a strange
- individuality, become a living lie, change name, position, face,
- and clothes--in one phrase, to cease to be one's self, in order to
- become some one else.
-
- This is indeed, a terrible ordeal, and requires an amount of
- resolution and energy which few human beings possess. The boldest
- hesitate before such a sacrifice, and many a man has surrendered
- himself to justice rather than resort to this last extremity. And
- yet this was what Pascal Ferailleur had the courage to do, on the
- morrow of the shameful conspiracy that had deprived him of his
- good name. When his mother's exhortations and Baron Trigault's
- encouraging words had restored his wonted clearness of perception,
- the only course he felt disposed to pursue was to disappear and
- fly from the storm of slander and contempt; and then, in a secure
- hiding-place, to watch for the time and opportunity of
- rehabilitation and revenge.
-
- Madame Ferailleur and her son made all needful arrangements. "I
- shall start out at once," said Pascal, "and before two hours have
- elapsed I shall have found a modest lodging, where we must conceal
- ourselves for the present. I know a locality that will suit us,
- and where no one will certainly ever think of looking for us."
-
- "And I," asked Madame Ferailleur, "what shall I do in the
- meantime?"
-
- "You, mother; you must, at once, sell all that we possess here--
- everything--even my books. You will only keep such of our linen
- and clothes as you can pack in three or four trunks. We are
- undoubtedly watched; and so it is of the utmost importance that
- every one should imagine I have left Paris, and that you are going
- to join me."
-
- "And when everything is sold, and my trunks are ready?"
-
- "Then, mother, you must send some one for a cab, and order the
- driver to take you to the Western Railway Station, where you will
- have the trunks removed from the cab and placed in the baggage-
- room, as if you did not intend to leave Paris till the next day."
-
- "Very good, I will do so; even if any one is watching us, he won't
- be likely to suspect this ruse. But afterward?"
-
- "Afterward, mother, you must go to the waiting-room upstairs, and
- you will find me there. I will then take you to the rooms I shall
- have rented, and to-morrow we'll send a messenger with the receipt
- the railway people will give you, to fetch our luggage for us."
-
- Madame Ferailleur approved of this plan, deeming herself fortunate
- in this great calamity that despair had not destroyed her son's
- energy and resources of mind. "Shall we retain our name, Pascal?"
-
- "Oh, no. That would be an unpardonable imprudence."
-
- "What name shall we take, then? I must know, for they may ask me
- at the station."
-
- He reflected for a moment and then said: "We'll take your maiden
- name, mother. It will bring us good luck. Our new lodgings shall
- be hired in the name of the Widow Maumejan."
-
- They talked for some time longer, anxious to take every precaution
- that prudence could suggest. And when they were convinced that
- they had forgotten nothing, Madame Ferailleur suggested that
- Pascal should start off. But before doing so he had a sacred duty
- to perform. "I must warn Marguerite," he muttered. And seating
- himself at his desk, he wrote his beloved a concise and exact
- account of the events which had taken place. He told her of the
- course he intended to pursue; and promised her that she should
- know his new abode as soon as he knew it himself. In conclusion,
- he entreated her to grant him an interview, in which he could give
- her the full particulars of the affair and acquaint her with his
- hopes. As for exculpating himself, even by so much as a single
- word--as for explaining the snare he had been the victim of, the
- idea never once occurred to him. He was worthy of Mademoiselle
- Marguerite; he knew that not a doubt would disturb the perfect
- faith she had in his honor.
-
- Leaning over her son's shoulder, Madame Ferailleur read what he
- had written. "Do you intend to trust this letter to the post?"
- she inquired. "Are you sure, perfectly sure, that it will reach
- Mademoiselle Marguerite, and not some one else who might use it
- against you?"
-
- Pascal shook his head. "I know how to insure its safe receipt,"
- he replied. "Some time ago, Marguerite told me that if ever any
- great peril threatened us, I might call for the housekeeper at the
- Chalusse mansion and intrust my message to her. The danger is
- sufficiently great to justify such a course in the present
- instance. So I shall pass down the Rue de Courcelles, ask to see
- Madame Leon, and give her this letter. Have no fear, my dear
- mother."
-
- As he spoke, he began to pack all the legal documents which had
- been confided to him into a large box, which was to be carried to
- one of his former friends, who would distribute the papers among
- the people they belonged to. He next made a small bundle of the
- few important private papers and valuables he possessed; and then,
- ready for the sacrifice, he took a last survey of the pleasant
- home where success had smiled so favorably upon his efforts, where
- he had been so happy, and where he had cherished such bright
- dreams of the future. Overcome by a flood of recollections, the
- tears sprang to his eyes. He embraced his mother, and fled
- precipitately from the house.
-
- "Poor child!" murmured Madame Ferailleur; "poor Pascal!"
-
- Was she not also to be pitied? This was the second time within
- twenty years that a thunderbolt had fallen on her in the full
- sunlight of happiness. And yet now, as on the day following her
- husband's death, she found in her heart the robust energy and
- heroic maternal constancy which enable one to rise above every
- misfortune. It was in a firm voice that she ordered her servant
- to go in search of the nearest furniture dealer, no matter which,
- provided he would pay cash. And when the man arrived she showed
- him through the rooms with stoical calmness. God alone knew how
- intensely she was suffering. And yet while she was waiting for
- the dealer, each piece of furniture had acquired an extraordinary
- value in her eyes. It seemed to her as if each object were a part
- of herself, and when the man turned and twisted a chair or a table
- she almost considered it a personal affront.
-
- The rich, who are accustomed from birth to the luxury that
- surrounds them, are ignorant of the terrible sufferings which
- attend such cases as these. The persons who do suffer are those
- of the middle classes, not the parvenus, but those who bid fair to
- become parvenus when misfortune overtook them. Their hearts bleed
- when inexorable necessity deprives them of all the little comforts
- with which they had gradually surrounded themselves, for there is
- not an object that does not recall a long ungratified desire, and
- the almost infantile joy of possession. What happiness they felt
- on the day when they purchased that large arm-chair! How many
- times they had gone to admire those velvet curtains in the shop
- windows before buying them! Those carpets represented months of
- self-denial. And that pretty clock--ah! they had fancied it would
- only herald the flight of prosperous and pleasant hours. And all
- these things the dealer handles, and shakes, and jeers at, and
- depreciates. He will scarcely condescend to purchase. Who would
- care to buy such trash? He knows that the owner is in need of
- money, and he profits by this knowledge. It is his business.
- "How much did this cost you?" he asks, as he inspects one piece of
- furniture after another.
-
- "So much."
-
- "Well, you must have been terribly cheated."
-
- You know very well that if there is a cheat in the world, it is
- this same man; but what can you say? Any other dealer you might
- send for would act in the same way. Now, Madame Ferailleur's
- furniture had cost some ten thousand francs; and, although it was
- no longer new, it was worth at least a third of that sum. But she
- obtained only seven hundred and sixty francs for it. It is true,
- however, that she was in haste, and that she was paid cash.
-
- Nine o'clock was striking when her trunks were at last piled on a
- cab, and she called out to the driver: "Take me to the Place du
- Havre--to the railway station." Once before, when defrauded by a
- scoundrel, she had been obliged to part with all her household
- treasures. Once before she had left her home, taking merely the
- wreck of her fortune with her. But what a difference between then
- and now!
-
- Then, the esteem and sympathy of all who knew her was hers, and
- the admiring praise she received divested the sacrifice of much of
- its bitterness, and increased her courage two-fold. Now, she was
- flying secretly, and alone, under an assumed name, trembling at
- the thought of pursuit or recognition--flying as a criminal flies
- at thought of his crime, and fear of punishment. She had far less
- suffered on the day, when, with her son upon her knees, she
- journeyed to the cemetery, following all that was mortal of the
- man who had been her only thought, her love, her pride, her
- happiness, and hope. Though crushed by the sense of her
- irreparable loss, she had not rebelled against the hand that
- struck her; but now it was human wickedness that assailed her
- through her son, and her suffering was like that of the innocent
- man who perishes for want of power to prove his innocence. Her
- husband's death had not caused her such bitter tears as her son's
- dishonor. She who was so proud, and who had such good reason to
- be proud, she could note the glances of scorn she was favored with
- as she left her home. She heard the insulting remarks made by
- some of her neighbors, who, like so many folks, found their chief
- delight in other people's misfortunes.
-
- "Crocodile tears," some had exclaimed. "She is going to meet her
- son; and with what he has stolen they will live like princes in
- America." Rumor, which enlarges and misrepresents everything, had,
- indeed, absurdly exaggerated the affair at Madame d'Argeles's
- house. It was reported in the Rue d'Ulm that Pascal had spent
- every night at the gaming table for more than five years; and
- that, being an incomparable trickster, he had stolen millions.
-
- Meanwhile, Madame Ferailleur was approaching the station. The cab
- horse soon slackened its pace to climb the acclivity of the Rue
- d'Amsterdam; and shortly afterward the vehicle drew up in the
- courtyard of the railway station. Faithfully observing the
- directions which had been given her, the worthy woman had her
- trunks taken to the baggage-room, declaring that she should not
- leave Paris until the next day, whereupon she received a receipt
- from the man in charge of the room. She was oppressed by vague
- apprehensions, and looked closely at every one who passed her;
- fearing the presence of spies, and knowing full well that the most
- profound secrecy could alone insure the success of Pascal's plans.
- However, she did not see a single suspicious looking person. Some
- Englishmen--those strange travellers, who are at the same time so
- foolishly prodigal and so ridiculously miserly--were making a
- great hue and cry over the four sous gratuity claimed by a poor
- commissionaire; but these were the only persons in sight.
-
- Partially reassured, Madame Ferailleur hastily ascended the
- staircase, and entered the large waiting-room. It was here that
- Pascal had promised to meet her; but, though she looked round on
- all sides, she did not perceive him. Still, this delay did not
- alarm her much; nor was it at all strange, since Pascal had
- scarcely known what he would have to do when he left the house.
- She seated herself on a bench, as far back in the shade as
- possible and gazed sadly at the ever-changing throng, when all of
- a sudden she was startled by a man, who abruptly paused in front
- of her. This man proved to be Pascal. But his hair had been
- closely cut, and he had shaved off his beard. And thus shorn,
- with his smooth face, and with a brown silk neckerchief in lieu of
- the white muslin tie he usually wore, he was so greatly changed
- that for an instant his own mother did not recognize him. "Well?"
- asked Madame Ferailleur, as she realized his identity.
-
- "I have succeeded. We have secured such rooms as I wished for."
-
- "Where?"
-
- "Ah!--a long way off, my poor mother--many a league from those we
- have known and loved--in a thinly populated part of the suburbs,
- on the Route de la Revolte, just outside the fortifications, and
- almost at the point where it intersects the Asnieres road. You
- will not be very comfortable there, but you will have the pleasure
- of a little garden."
-
- She rose, summoning all her energy. "What does it matter where or
- what our abode is?" she interrupted, with forced gayety. "I am
- confident that we shall not remain there long."
-
- But it seemed as if her son did not share her hopes, for he
- remained silent and dejected; and as his mother observed him
- closely, she fancied by the expression of his eyes, that some new
- anxiety had been added to all his other troubles.
-
- "What is the matter?" she inquired, unable to master her alarm--
- "what has happened?"
-
- "Ah! a great misfortune!"
-
- "My God! still another?"
-
- "I have been to the Rue de Courcelles; and I have spoken to Madame
- Leon."
-
- "What did she say?"
-
- "The Count de Chalusse died this morning."
-
- Madame Ferailleur drew a long breath, as if greatly relieved. She
- was certainly expecting to hear something very different, and she
- did not understand why this death should be a great misfortune to
- them personally. One point, however, she did realize, that it was
- imprudent, and even dangerous, to carry on this conversation in a
- hall where a hundred persons were passing and repassing every
- minute. So she took her son's arm, and led him away, saying:
- "Come, let us go."
-
- Pascal had kept the cab which he had been using during the
- afternoon; and having installed his mother inside, he got in
- himself, and gave his new address to the driver. "Now tell me
- all," said Madame Ferailleur.
-
- Poor Pascal was in that state of mind in which it costs one actual
- suffering to talk; but he wished to mitigate his mother's anxiety
- as much as possible; and moreover, he did not like her to suppose
- him wanting in endurance. So, with a powerful effort, he shook
- off the lethargy that was creeping over him, and in a voice loud
- enough to be heard above the noise of the carriage wheels, he
- began: "This is what I have done, mother, since I left you. I
- remembered that some time ago, while I was appraising some
- property, I had seen three or four houses on the Route de la
- Revolte, admirably suited to our present wants. Naturally I went
- there first. A suite of rooms was vacant in one of these houses.
- I have taken it; and in order that nothing may interfere with the
- liberty of my movements, I have paid six months' rent in advance.
- Here is the receipt, drawn up in the name we shall henceforth
- bear." So saying, he showed his mother a document in which the
- landlord declared that he had received from M. Maumejan the sum of
- three hundred and fifty francs for two quarters' rent, etc. "My
- bargain concluded," he resumed, "I returned into Paris, and
- entered the first furniture shop I saw. I meant to hire the
- necessary things to furnish our little home, but the dealer made
- all sorts of objections. He trembled for his furniture, he wanted
- a sum of money to be deposited as security, or the guarantee of
- three responsible business men. Seeing this, and knowing that I
- had no time to lose, I preferred to purchase such articles as were
- absolutely necessary. One of the conditions of the purchase was
- that everything should be in the house and in its place by eleven
- o'clock to-night. As I stipulated in writing that the dealer
- should forfeit three hundred francs in case he failed to fulfil
- his agreement, I can rely upon his punctuality; I confided the key
- of our lodgings to him, and he must now be there waiting for us."
-
- So, before thinking of his love, and Mademoiselle Marguerite,
- Pascal had taken the necessary measures for the execution of his
- plan to regain his lost honor. Madame Ferailleur had scarcely
- supposed him capable of so much courage and firmness, and she
- rewarded him with a warm pressure of the hand. Then, as he was
- silent: "When did you see Madame Leon, then?" she asked.
-
- "When all the household arrangements were completed, mother. On
- leaving the furniture-shop, I found that I had still an hour and a
- quarter before me. I could defer no longer, and at the risk of
- obliging you to wait for me, I hastened to the Rue de Courcelles."
-
- It was evident that Pascal felt extreme embarrassment in speaking
- of Mademoiselle Marguerite. There is an instinctive delicacy and
- dislike of publicity in all deep passion, and true and chaste love
- is ever averse to laying aside the veil with which it conceals
- itself from the inquisitive. Madame Ferailleur understood this
- feeling; but she was a mother, and as such, jealous of her son's
- tenderness, and anxious for particulars concerning this rival who
- had suddenly usurped her place in the heart where she had long
- reigned supreme. She was also a woman--that is to say, distrustful
- and suspicious in reference to all other women. So, without
- taking pity on Pascal's embarrassment, she urged him to continue.
-
- "I gave the driver five francs on condition that he would hurry
- his horses," he resumed, "and we were rattling along at a rapid
- rate, when, suddenly, near the Hotel de Chalusse, I noticed a
- change in the motion of the vehicle. I looked out and saw that we
- were driving over a thick layer of straw which had been spread
- across the street. I can scarcely describe my feelings on seeing
- this. A cold perspiration came over me--I fancied I saw
- Marguerite in agony, dying--far from me, and calling me in vain.
- Without waiting for the vehicle to stop, I sprang to the ground,
- and was obliged to exercise all my self-control to prevent myself
- from rushing into the concierge's lodge, and wildly asking: 'Who
- is dying here?' But an unforeseen difficulty presented itself. It
- was evident that I ought not to go in person to inquire for Madame
- Leon. Whom could I send? There were no commissionaires at the
- street corners, and nothing would have induced me to confide the
- message to any of the lads in the neighboring wine-shops.
- Fortunately, my driver--the same who is driving us now--is an
- obliging fellow, and I intrusted him with the commission, while I
- stood guard over his horses. Ten minutes later, Madame Leon left
- the house and came to meet me. I knew her at once, for I had seen
- her a hundred times with Marguerite when they lived near the
- Luxembourg; and having seen me pass and repass so often, she
- recognized me in spite of my changed appearance. Her first words,
- 'M. de Chalusse is dead,' relieved my heart of a terrible weight.
- I could breathe again. But she was in such haste that she could
- not stop to tell me any particulars. Still I gave her my letter,
- and she promised me a prompt reply from Marguerite. Everybody
- will be up and moving about the house to-night, and she said she
- could easily make her escape for a few moments. So, at half-past
- twelve to-night she will be at the little garden gate, and if I am
- promptly at hand, I shall have a reply from Marguerite."
-
- Madame Ferailleur seemed to be expecting something more, and as
- Pascal remained silent, she remarked: "You spoke of a great
- misfortune. In what does it consist? I do not perceive it."
-
- With an almost threatening gesture, and in a gloomy voice, he
- answered: "The misfortune is this: if it had not been for this
- abominable conspiracy, which has dishonored me, Marguerite would
- have been my wife before a month had elapsed, for now she is free,
- absolutely free to obey the dictates of her own will and heart."
-
- "Then why do you complain?"
-
- "Oh, mother! don't you understand? How can I marry her? Would it
- be right for me to think of offering her a dishonored name? It
- seems to me that I should be guilty of a most contemptible act--of
- something even worse than a crime--if I dared speak to her of my
- love and our future before I have crushed the villains who have
- ruined me."
-
- Regret, anger, and the consciousness of his present powerlessness
- drew from him tears which fell upon Madame Ferailleur's heart like
- molten lead; but she succeeded in concealing her agony. "All the
- more reason," she answered, almost coldly, "why you should not
- lose a second, but devote all your energy and intelligence to the
- work of justification."
-
- "Oh, I shall have my revenge, never fear. But in the meantime,
- what is to become of HER? Think, mother, she is alone in the
- world, without a single friend. It is enough to drive one mad!"
-
- "She loves you, you tell me. What have you to fear? Now she will
- be freed from the persecutions of the suitor they intended to
- force upon her, whom she has spoken to you about--the Marquis de
- Valorsay, is it not?"
-
- This name sent Pascal's blood to his brain. "Ah, the scoundrel!"
- he exclaimed. "If there was a God in heaven----"
-
- "Wretched boy!" interrupted Madame Ferailleur; "you blaspheme when
- Providence has already interposed on your behalf. And who suffers
- most at this moment, do you think?--you, strong in your innocence,
- or the marquis, who realizes that he has committed an infamous
- crime in vain?"
-
- The sudden stopping of the cab put an end to their conversation.
- Leaving the Route d'Asnieres, the driver had turned into the Route
- de la Revolte, and had drawn up in front of an unpretentious two-
- storied house which stood entirely alone. "We have arrived,
- mother," said Pascal.
-
- A man, who was standing on the threshold, stepped forward to open
- the cab door. It was the furniture-dealer. "Here you are at
- last, M. Maumejan," said he. "Come in, and you'll see that I've
- strictly fulfilled the conditions of our contract." His words
- proved true. He was paid the sum stipulated, and went away
- satisfied.
-
- "Now, my dear mother," said Pascal, "allow me to do the honors of
- the poor abode I have selected."
-
- He had taken only the ground floor of this humble dwelling. The
- story above, which had an independent entrance and staircase, was
- occupied by the quiet family of the owner. Although the space was
- small, the architect had made the most of it. He had divided it
- into four small rooms, separated by a corridor; and the kitchen
- looked out upon a little garden about four times as large as an
- ordinary sheet. The furniture which Pascal had purchased was more
- than plain; but it was well suited to this humble abode. It had
- just been brought in, but any one would have supposed it had been
- in its place for a couple of years.
-
- "We shall be very comfortable here," declared Madame Ferailleur.
- "Yes, very comfortable. By to-morrow evening you won't recognize
- the place. I have saved a few trifles from the wreck--some
- curtains, a couple of lamps, a clock--you'll see. It's wonderful
- how much four trunks can be made to hold."
-
- When his mother set him such a noble example Pascal would have
- blushed to allow himself to be outdone. He very quietly explained
- the reasons which had influenced him in choosing these rooms, the
- principal one being that there was no concierge, and he was
- therefore assured absolute liberty in his movements, as well as
- entire immunity from indiscreet gossip. "Certainly, my dear
- mother," he added, "it is a lonely and unattractive neighborhood;
- but you will find all the necessaries of life near at hand. The
- owner of the house lives on the floor above. I have talked with
- the wife--they seem to be honest, quiet people--and she will pilot
- you about. I inquired for some one to do the heavy work, and she
- mentioned a poor woman named Vantrasson, who lives in the
- neighborhood, and who is anxious to obtain employment. They were
- to inform her this evening, and you will see her to-morrow. And
- above all, don't forget that you are henceforth Madame Maumejan."
-
- Occupied with these arrangements for the future, he was still
- talking, when Madame Ferailleur, drawing out her watch, gently
- remarked: "And your appointment? You forget that the cab is
- waiting at the door."
-
- It was true; he had forgotten it. He caught up his hat, hastily
- embraced his mother, and sprang into the vehicle. The horses were
- almost exhausted, but the driver was so willing that he found a
- means of making them trot as far as the Rue de Courcelles.
- However, on arriving there, he declared that his animals and
- himself could endure no more, and after receiving the amount due
- to him, he departed.
-
- The air was chilly, the night dark, and the street deserted. The
- gloomy silence was only disturbed at long intervals by the opening
- or shutting of a door, or by the distant tread of some belated
- pedestrian. Having at least twenty minutes to wait, Pascal sat
- down on the curbstone opposite the Hotel de Chalusse, and fixed
- his eyes upon the building as if he were striving to penetrate the
- massive walls, and see what was passing within. Only one window--
- that of the room where the dead man was lying--was lighted up, and
- he could vaguely distinguish the motionless form of a woman
- standing with her forehead pressed against the pane of glass. A
- prey to the indescribable agony which seizes a man when he feels
- that his life is at stake--that his future is about to be
- irrevocably decided--Pascal counted the seconds as they passed by.
- He found it impossible to reflect, to deliberate, to decide on any
- plan of action. He forgot the tortures he had endured during the
- last twenty-four hours; Coralth, Valorsay, Madame d'Argeles, the
- baron, no longer existed for him. He forgot his loss of honor and
- position, and the disgrace attached to his name. The past was
- annihilated, as it were, and he could think of no future beyond
- the next few moments. His physical condition undoubtedly
- contributed to his mental weakness. He had taken no food that
- day, and he was faint from want of nourishment. He had come
- without an overcoat, moreover, and the cold night air chilled him
- to the bone. There was a strange ringing in his ears, and a mist
- swam before his eyes. At last the bell at the Beaujon Hospital
- tolled the appointed hour, and roused him from his lethargy. He
- seemed to hear a voice crying to him in the darkness, "Up! the
- hour has come!"
-
- Trembling, and with tottering limbs, he dragged himself to the
- little gate opening into the gardens of the Chalusse mansion.
- Soon it softly opened, and Madame Leon appeared. Ah! it was not
- she that Pascal had hoped to see. Unfortunate man! He had been
- listening to that mysterious echo of our own desires which we so
- often mistake for a presentiment; and it had whispered in his
- heart: "Marguerite herself will come!"
-
- With the candor of wretchedness, he could not refrain from telling
- Madame Leon the hope he had entertained. But, on hearing him, the
- housekeeper recoiled with a gesture of outraged propriety, and
- reproachfully exclaimed: "What are you thinking of, monsieur?
- What! could you suppose that Mademoiselle Marguerite would abandon
- her place by her dead father's bedside to come to a rendezvous?
- Ah! you should think better of her than that, the dear child!"
-
- He sighed deeply, and in a scarcely audible voice, he asked:
- Hasn't she even sent me a reply?"
-
- "Yes, monsieur, she has; and although it is a great indiscretion
- on my part, I bring you the letter. Here it is. Now, good-
- evening. I must go at once. What would become of me if the
- servants discovered my absence, and found that I had gone out
- alone----"
-
- She was hurrying away, but Pascal detained her. "Pray wait until
- I see what she has written," he said, imploringly. "I shall
- perhaps be obliged to send her some message in reply."
-
- Madame Leon obeyed, though with rather bad grace, and not without
- several times repeating: "Make haste!"--while Pascal ran to a
- street lamp near by. It was not a letter that Marguerite had sent
- him, but a short note, written on a scrap of crumpled paper,
- folded, and not sealed. It was written in pencil; and the
- handwriting was irregular and indistinct. Still, by the
- flickering light of the gas, Pascal deciphered the word
- "Monsieur." It made him shudder. "Monsieur!" What did this mean?
- In writing to him of recent times, Marguerite had always said, "My
- dear Pascal," or, "My friend."
-
- Nevertheless, he continued: "I have not had the courage to resist
- the entreaties made to me by the Count de Chalusse, my father, in
- his last agony. I have solemnly pledged myself to become the wife
- of the Marquis de Valorsay.
-
- "One cannot break a promise made to the dying. I shall keep mine,
- even though my heart break. I shall do my duty. God will give me
- strength and courage. Forget her whom you loved. She is now the
- betrothed of another, and honor commands her to forget your very
- name. Once more, and for the last time, farewell! If you love me,
- you will not try to see me again. It would only add to my misery.
-
- "Think as though she were dead--she who signs herself--MARGUERITE.
-
- The commonplace wording of this letter, and the mistakes in
- spelling that marred it, entirely escaped Pascal's notice. He
- only understood one thing, that Marguerite was lost to him, and
- that she was on the point of becoming the wife of the vile
- scoundrel who had planned the snare which had ruined him at the
- Hotel d'Argeles. Breathless, despairing, and half crazed with
- rage, he sprang toward Madame Leon. "Marguerite, where is she?"
- he demanded, in a hoarse, unnatural voice; "I must see her!"
-
- "Oh! monsieur, what do you ask? Is it possible? Allow me to
- explain to you----" But the housekeeper was unable to finish her
- sentence, for Pascal had caught her by the hands, and holding them
- in a vicelike grip, he repeated: "I must see Marguerite, and speak
- to her. I must tell her that she has been deceived; I will unmask
- the scoundrel who----"
-
- The frightened housekeeper struggled with all her might, trying
- her best to reach the little gate which was standing open. "You
- hurt me!" she cried. "Are you mad? Let me go or I shall call for
- help?" And twice indeed she shouted in a loud voice, "Help!
- murder!"
-
- But her cries were lost in the stillness of the night. If any one
- heard them, no one came; still they recalled Pascal to a sense of
- the situation, and he was ashamed of his violence. He released
- Madame Leon, and his manner suddenly became as humble as it had
- been threatening. "Excuse me," he said, entreatingly. "I am
- suffering so much that I don't know what I'm doing. I beseech you
- to take me to Mademoiselle Marguerite, or else run and beg her to
- come here. I ask but a moment."
-
- Madame Leon pretended to be listening attentively; but, in
- reality, she was quietly manoeuvring to gain the garden gate.
- Soon she succeeded in doing so, whereupon, with marvellous
- strength and agility, she pushed Pascal away, and sprang inside
- the garden, closing the gate after her, and saying as she did so,
- "Begone, you scoundrel!"
-
- This was the final blow; and for more than a minute Pascal stood
- motionless in front of the gate, stupefied with mingled rage and
- sorrow. His condition was not unlike that of a man who, after
- falling to the bottom of a precipice, is dragging himself up, all
- mangled and bleeding, swearing that he will yet save himself, when
- suddenly a heavy stone which he had loosened in his descent, falls
- forward and crushes him. All that he had so far endured was
- nothing in comparison with the thought that Valorsay would wed
- Marguerite. Was such a thing possible? Would God permit such a
- monstrous iniquity?" No, that shall never be," he muttered. "I
- will murder the scoundrel rather; and afterward justice may do
- whatever it likes with me."
-
- He experienced that implacable, merciless thirsting for vengeance
- which does not even recoil before the commission of a crime to
- secure satisfaction, and this longing inflamed him with such
- energy that, although he had been so utterly exhausted a few
- moments before--he was not half an hour in making his way back to
- his new home. His mother, who was waiting for him with an anxious
- heart, was surprised by the flush on his cheeks, and the light
- glittering in his eyes. "Ah, you bring good news," she exclaimed.
-
- His only answer was to hand her the letter which Madame Leon had
- given him, saying as he did so, "Read."
-
- Madame Ferailleur's eyes fell upon the words: "Once more, and for
- the last time, farewell!" She understood everything, turned very
- pale, and in a trembling voice exclaimed: "Don't grieve, my son;
- the girl did not love you."
-
- "Oh, mother! if you knew----"
-
- But she checked him with a gesture, and lifting her head proudly,
- she said: "I know what it is to love, Pascal--it is to have
- perfect faith. If the whole world had accused your father of a
- crime, would a single doubt of his innocence have ever entered my
- mind? This girl has doubted you. They have told her that you
- cheated at cards--and she has believed it. You have failed to see
- that this oath at the bedside of the dying count is only an
- excuse."
-
- It was true; the thought had not occurred to Pascal. "My God!" he
- cried in agony; "are you the only one who believes in my
- innocence?"
-
- "Without proofs--yes. It must be your task to obtain these
- proofs."
-
- "And I shall obtain them," he rejoined, in a tone of
- determination. "I am strong now that I have Marguerite's life to
- defend--for they have deceived her, mother, or she would never
- have given me up. Oh! don't shake your head. I love her, and so
- I trust her."
-
-
-
- XVII.
-
-
- M. Isidore Fortunat was not the man to go to sleep over a plan
- when it was once formed. Whenever he said to himself, "I'll do
- this, or that," he did it as soon as possible--that very evening,
- rather than the next day. Having sworn that he would find out
- Madame d'Argeles's son, the heir to the Count de Chalusse's
- millions, it did not take him long to decide which of his agents
- he would select to assist him in this difficult task. Thus his
- first care, on returning home, was to ask his bookkeeper for
- Victor Chupin's address.
-
- "He lives in the Faubourg Saint-Denis," replied the bookkeeper,
- "at No.--."
-
- "Very well," muttered M. Fortunat; "I'll go there as soon as I
- have eaten my dinner." And, indeed, as soon as he had swallowed
- his coffee, he requested Madame Dodelin to bring him his overcoat,
- and half an hour later he reached the door of the house where his
- clerk resided.
-
- The house was one of those huge, ungainly structures, large enough
- to shelter the population of a small village, with three or four
- courtyards, as many staircases as there are letters in the
- alphabet, and a concierge who seldom remembers the names of the
- tenants except on quarter-days when he goes to collect the rent,
- and at New Year, when he expects a gratuity. But, by one of those
- lucky chances made expressly for M. Fortunat, the porter did
- recollect Chupin, knew him and was kindly disposed toward him, and
- so he told the visitor exactly how and where to find him. It was
- very simple. He had only to cross the first courtyard, take
- staircase D, on the left-hand side, ascend to the sixth floor, go
- straight ahead, etc., etc.
-
- Thanks to this unusual civility, M. Fortunat did not lose his way
- more than five times before reaching the door upon which was
- fastened a bit of pasteboard bearing Victor Chupin's name.
- Noticing that a bell-rope hung beside the door, M. Fortunat pulled
- it, whereupon there was a tinkling, and a voice called out, "Come
- in!" He complied, and found himself in a small and cheaply
- furnished room, which was, however, radiant with the cleanliness
- which is in itself a luxury. The waxed floor shone like a mirror;
- the furniture was brilliantly polished, and the counterpane and
- curtains of the bed were as white as snow. What first attracted
- the agent's attention was the number of superfluous articles
- scattered about the apartment--some plaster statuettes on either
- side of a gilt clock, an etagere crowded with knickknacks, and
- five or six passable engravings. When he entered, Victor Chupin
- was sitting, in his shirt-sleeves, at a little table, where, by
- the light of a small lamp, and with a zeal that brought a flush to
- his cheeks, he was copying, in a very fair hand a page from a
- French dictionary. Near the bed, in the shade, sat a poorly but
- neatly clad woman about forty years of age, who was knitting
- industriously with some long wooden needles.
-
- "M. Victor Chupin?" inquired M. Fortunat.
-
- The sound of his voice made the young man spring to his feet. He
- quickly lifted the shade from his lamp, and, without attempting to
- conceal his astonishment, exclaimed: "M'sieur Fortunat!--at this
- hour! Where's the fire?" Then, in a grave manner that contrasted
- strangely with his accustomed levity: "Mother," said he, "this is
- one of my patrons, M'sieur Fortunat--you know--the gentleman whom
- I collect for."
-
- The knitter rose, bowed respectfully, and said: "I hope, sir, that
- you are pleased with my son, and that he's honest."
-
- "Certainly, madame," replied the agent; "certainly. Victor is one
- of my best and most reliable clerks."
-
- "Then I'm content," said the woman, reseating herself.
-
- Chupin also seemed delighted "This is my good mother, sir," said
- he. "She's almost blind now; but, in less than six months she
- will be able to stand at her window and see a pin in the middle of
- the street, so the physician who is treating her eyes promised me;
- then we shall be all right again. But take a seat, sir. May we
- venture to offer you anything?"
-
- Although his clerk had more than once alluded to his
- responsibilities, M. Fortunat was amazed. He marvelled at the
- perfume of honesty which exhaled from these poor people, at the
- dignity of this humble woman, and at the protecting and respectful
- affection evinced by her son--a young man, whose usual tone of
- voice and general behavior had seemed to indicate that he was
- decidedly a scapegrace. "Thanks, Victor," he replied, "I won't
- take any refreshment. I've just left the dinner-table. I've come
- to give you my instructions respecting a very important and very
- urgent matter."
-
- Chupin at once understood that his employer wished for a private
- interview. Accordingly, he took up the lamp, opened a door, and,
- in the pompous tone of a rich banker who is inviting some
- important personage to enter his private room, he said: "Will you
- be kind enough to step into my chamber, m'sieur?"
-
- The room which Chupin so emphatically denominated his "chamber"
- was a tiny nook, extraordinarily clean, it is true, but scantily
- furnished with a small iron bedstead, a trunk, and a chair. He
- offered the chair to his visitor, placed the lamp on the trunk,
- and seated himself on the bed, saying as he did so: "This is
- scarcely on so grand a scale as your establishment, m'sieur; but I
- am going to ask the landlord to gild the window of my snuff-box."
-
- M. Fortunat was positively touched. He held out his hand to his
- clerk and exclaimed: "You're a worthy fellow, Chupin."
-
- "Nonsense, m'sieur, one does what one can; but, zounds! how hard
- it is to make money honestly! If my good mother could only see,
- she would help me famously, for there is no one like her for work!
- But you see one can't become a millionaire by knitting!"
-
- "Doesn't your father live with you?"
-
- Chupin's eyes gleamed angrily. "Ah! don't speak of that man to
- me, m'sieur!" he exclaimed, "or I shall hurt somebody." And then,
- as if he felt it necessary to explain and excuse his vindictive
- exclamation, he added: "My father, Polyte Chupin, is a good-for-
- nothing scamp. And yet he's had his opportunities. First, he was
- fortunate enough to find a wife like my mother, who is honesty
- itself--so much so that she was called Toinon the Virtuous when
- she was young. She idolized him, and nearly killed herself by
- working to earn money for him. And yet he abused her so much, and
- made her weep so much, that she has become blind. But that's not
- all. One morning there came to him--I don't know whence or how--
- enough money for him to have lived like a gentleman. I believe it
- was a munificent reward for some service he had rendered a great
- nobleman at the time when my grandmother, who is now dead, kept a
- dramshop called the Poivriere. Any other man would have treasured
- that money, but not he. What he did was to carouse day and night,
- and all the while my poor mother was working her fingers to the
- bone to earn food for me. She never saw a penny of all his money;
- and, indeed, once when she asked him to pay the rent, he beat her
- so cruelly that she was laid up in bed for a week. However,
- monsieur, you can very readily understand that when a man leads
- that kind of life, he speedily comes to the end of his banking
- account. So my father was soon without a penny in his purse, and
- then he was obliged to work in order to get something to eat, and
- this didn't suit him at all. But when he didn't know where to
- find a crust he remembered us; he sought us out, and found us.
- Once I lent him a hundred sous; the next day he came for forty
- more, and the next for three francs; then for five francs again.
- And so it was every day: 'Give me this, or give me that!' At last
- I said, 'Enough of this, the bank's closed!' Then, what do you
- think he did? He watched the house until he saw me go out; then he
- came in with a second-hand furniture-dealer, and tried to sell
- everything, pretending that he was the master. And my poor, dear
- mother would have allowed him to do it. Fortunately, I happened
- to come in again. Let him sell my furniture? Not I. I would
- sooner have been chopped in pieces! I went and complained to the
- commissary of police, who made my father leave the house, and
- since then we've lived in peace."
-
- Certainly this was more than sufficient to explain and excuse
- Victor Chupin's indignation. And yet he had prudently withheld
- the most serious and important cause of his dislike. What he
- refrained from telling was that years before, when he was still a
- mere child, without will or discernment, his father had taken him
- from his mother, and had started him down that terrible descent,
- which inevitably leads one to prison or the gallows, unless there
- be an almost miraculous interposition on one's behalf. This
- miracle had occurred in Chupin's case; but he did not boast of it.
-
- "Come, come!" said M. Fortunat, "don't worry too much about it. A
- father's a father after all, and yours will undoubtedly reform by
- and by."
-
- He said this as he would have said anything else, out of
- politeness and for the sake of testifying a friendly interest; but
- he really cared no more for this information concerning the Chupin
- family than the grand Turk. His first emotion had quickly
- vanished; and he was beginning to find these confidential
- disclosures rather wearisome. "Let us get back to business," he
- remarked; "that is to say, to Casimir. What did you do with the
- fool after my departure?"
-
- "First, monsieur, I sobered him; which was no easy task. The
- greedy idiot had converted himself into a wine-cask! At last,
- however, when he could talk as well as you and I, and walk
- straight, I took him back to the Hotel de Chalusse."
-
- "That was right. But didn't you have some business to transact
- with him?"
-
- "That's been arranged, monsieur; the agreement has been signed.
- The count will have the best of funerals--the finest hearse out,
- with six horses, twenty-four mourning coaches--a grand display, in
- fact. It will be worth seeing."
-
- M. Fortunat smiled graciously. "That ought to bring you a
- handsome commission," he said, benignly.
-
- Employed by the job, Chupin was the master of his own time, free
- to utilize his intelligence and industry as he chose, but M.
- Fortunat did not like his subordinates to make any money except
- through him. Hence his approval, in the present instance, was so
- remarkable that it awakened Chupin's suspicions. "I shall make a
- few sous, probably," he modestly replied, "a trifle to aid my good
- mother in keeping the pot boiling."
-
- "So much the better, my boy," said M. Fortunat. "I like to see
- money gained by those who make a good use of it. And to prove
- this, I'm about to employ you in an affair which will pay you
- handsomely if you prosecute it successfully."
-
- Chupin's eyes brightened at first but grew dark a moment
- afterward, for delight had been quickly followed by a feeling of
- distrust. He thought it exceedingly strange that an employer
- should take the trouble to climb to a sixth floor merely for the
- purpose of conferring a favor on his clerk. There must be
- something behind all this; and so it behove him to keep his eyes
- open. However, he knew how to conceal his real feelings; and it
- was with a joyous air that he exclaimed: "Eh! What? Money? Now?
- What must I do to earn it?"
-
- "Oh! a mere trifle," replied the agent; "almost nothing, indeed."
- And drawing his chair nearer to the bed on which his employee was
- seated, he added: "But first, one question, Victor. By the way in
- which a woman looks at a young man in the street, at the theatre
- or anywhere--would you know if she were watching her son?"
-
- Chupin shrugged his shoulders. "What a question!" he retorted.
- "Nonsense! monsieur, it would be impossible to deceive me. I
- should only have to remember my mother's eyes when I return home
- in the evening. Poor woman! although she's half blind, she sees
- me--and if you wish to make her happy, you've only to tell her I'm
- the handsomest and most amiable youth in Paris."
-
- M. Fortunat could not refrain from rubbing his hands, so delighted
- was he to see his idea so perfectly understood and so admirably
- expressed. "Good!" he declared; "very good! That's intelligence,
- if I am any judge. I have not been deceived in you, Victor."
-
- Victor was on fire with curiosity. "What am I to do, monsieur?"
- he asked eagerly.
-
- "This: you must follow a woman whom I shall point out to you,
- follow her everywhere without once losing sight of her, and so
- skilfully as not to let her suspect it. You must watch her every
- glance, and when her eyes tell you that she is looking at her son,
- your task will be nearly over. You will then only have to follow
- this son, and find out his name and address, what he does, and how
- he lives. I don't know if I explain what I mean very clearly."
-
- This doubt was awakened in M. Fortunat's mind by Chupin's
- features, which were expressive of lively astonishment and
- discontent. "Excuse me, monsieur," he said, at last, "I do not
- understand at all."
-
- "It's very simple, however. The lady in question has a son about
- twenty. I know it--I'm sure of it. But she denies it; she
- conceals the fact, and he doesn't even know her. She secretly
- watches over him, however--she provides him with money, and every
- day she finds some way of seeing him. Now, it is to my interest
- to find this son."
-
- Chupin's mobile face became actually threatening in its
- expression; he frowned darkly, and his lips quivered. Still this
- did not prevent M. Fortunat from adding, with the assurance of a
- man who does not even suspect the possibility of a refusal: "Now,
- when shall we set about our task?"
-
- "Never!" cried Chupin, violently; and, rising, he continued: "No!
- I wouldn't let my good mother eat bread earned in that way--it
- would strangle her! Turn spy! I? Thanks--some one else may have
- the job!" He had become as red as a turkey-cock, and such was his
- indignation that he forgot his accustomed reserve and the caution
- with which he had so far concealed his antecedents. "I know this
- game--I've tried it!" he went on, vehemently. "One might as well
- take one's ticket to prison by a direct road. I should be there
- now if it hadn't been for Monsieur Andre. I was thirsting for
- gold, and, like the brigand that I was, I should have killed the
- man; but in revenge he drew me from the mire and placed my feet on
- solid ground once more. And now, shall I go back to my vile
- tricks again? Why, I'd rather cut my leg off! I'm to hunt down
- this poor woman--I'm to discover her secret so that you may extort
- money from her, am I? No, not I! I should like to be rich, and I
- shall be rich; but I'll make my money honestly. I hope to touch
- my hundred-franc pieces without being obliged to wash my hands
- afterward. So, a very good evening to your establishment."
-
- M. Fortunat was amazed, and at the same time much annoyed, to find
- himself forsaken on account of such a trifle. He feared, too,
- that Chupin might let his tongue wag if he left his employment.
- So, since he had confided this project to Chupin, he was
- determined that Chupin alone should carry it into execution.
- Assuming his most severe and injured manner, he sternly exclaimed:
- "I think you have lost your senses." His demeanor and intonation
- were so perfectly cool that Chupin seemed slightly abashed. "It
- seems that you think me capable of urging you to commit some
- dangerous and dishonorable act," continued M. Fortunat.
-
- "Why--no--m'sieur--I assure you "
-
- There was such evident hesitation in the utterance of this "no"
- that the agent at once resumed: "Come, you are not ignorant of the
- fact that in addition to my business as a collector, I give my
- attention to the discovery of the heirs of unclaimed estates? You
- are aware of this? Very well then: pray tell me how I am to find
- them without searching for them? If I wish this lady to be
- watched, it is only in view of reaching a poor lad who is likely
- to be defrauded of the wealth that rightfully belongs to him. And
- when I give you a chance to make forty or fifty francs in a couple
- of days, you receive my proposition in this style! You are an
- ingrate and a fool, Victor!"
-
- Chupin's nature combined, in a remarkable degree, the vices and
- peculiarities of the dweller in the Paris faubourgs, who is born
- old, but who, when aged in years, still remains a gamin. In his
- youth he had seen many strange things, and acquired a knowledge of
- life that would have put the experience of a philosopher to shame.
- But he was not fit to cope with M. Fortunat, who had an immense
- advantage over him, by reason of his position of employer, as well
- as by his fortune and education. So Chupin was both bewildered
- and disconcerted by the cool arguments his patron brought forward;
- and what most effectually allayed his suspicions was the small
- compensation offered for the work--merely forty or fifty francs.
- "Small potatoes, upon my word!" he thought. "Just the price of an
- honest service; he would have offered more for a piece of
- rascality." So, after considering a moment, he said, aloud: "Very
- well; I'm your man, m'sieur."
-
- M. Fortunat was secretly laughing at the success of his ruse.
- Having come with the intention of offering his agent a handsome
- sum, he was agreeably surprised to find that Chupin's scruples
- would enable him to save his money. "If I hadn't found you
- engaged in study, Victor," he said, "I should have thought you had
- been drinking. What venomous insect stung you so suddenly?
- Haven't I confided similar undertakings to you twenty times since
- you have been in my employment? Who ransacked Paris to find
- certain debtors who were concealing themselves? Who discovered the
- Vantrassons for me? Victor Chupin. Very well. Then allow me to
- say that I see nothing in this case in any way differing from the
- others, nor can I understand why this should be wrong, if the
- others were not."
-
- Chupin could only have answered this remark by saying that there
- had been no mystery about the previous affairs, that they had not
- been proposed to him late at night at his own home, and that he
- had acted openly, as a person who represents a creditor has a
- recognized right to act. But, though he felt that there WAS a
- difference in the present case, it would have been very difficult
- for him to explain in what this difference consisted. Hence, in
- his most resolute tone: "I'm only a fool, m'sieur," he declared;
- "but I shall know how to make amends for my folly."
-
- "That means you have recovered your senses," said M. Fortunat,
- ironically. "Really, that's fortunate. But let me give you one
- bit of advice: watch yourself, and learn to bridle your tongue.
- You won't always find me in such a good humor as I am this
- evening."
-
- So saying, he rose, passed out into the adjoining room, bowed
- civilly to his clerk's mother, and went off. His last words, as
- he crossed the threshold, were, "So I shall rely upon you. Be at
- the office to-morrow a little before noon."
-
- "It's agreed m'sieur."
-
- The blind woman had risen, and had bowed respectfully; but, as
- soon as she was alone with her son, she asked: "What is this
- business he bids you undertake in such a high and mighty tone?"
-
- "Oh! an every-day matter, mother."
-
- The old woman shook her head. "Why were you talking so loud
- then?" she inquired. "Weren't you quarrelling? It must be
- something very grave when it's necessary to conceal it from me. I
- couldn't see your employer's face, my son; but I heard his voice,
- and it didn't please me. It isn't the voice of an honest,
- straightforward man. Take care, Toto, and don't allow yourself to
- be cajoled--be prudent."
-
- However, it was quite unnecessary to recommend prudence to Victor
- Chupin. He had promised his assistance, but not without a mental
- reservation. "No need to see danger till it comes," he had said
- to himself. "If the thing proves to be of questionable propriety
- after all, then good-evening; I desert."
-
- It remains to know what he meant by questionable propriety; the
- meaning of the expression is rather vague. He had returned in all
- honesty and sincerity of purpose to an honest life, and nothing in
- the world would have induced him, avaricious though he was, to
- commit an act that was positively wrong. Only the line that
- separates good from evil was not very clearly defined in his mind.
- This was due in a great measure to his education, and to the fact
- that it had been long before he realized that police regulations
- do not constitute the highest moral law. It was due also to
- chance, and, since he had no decided calling, to the necessity of
- depending for a livelihood upon the many strange professions which
- impecunious and untrained individuals, both of the higher and
- lower classes, adopt in Paris.
-
- However, on the following morning he arrayed himself in his best
- apparel, and at exactly half-past eleven o'clock he rang at his
- employer's door. M. Fortunat had made quick work with his clients
- that morning, and was ready, dressed to go out. He took up his
- hat and said only the one word, "Come." The place where the agent
- conducted his clerk was the wine-shop in the Rue de Berry, where
- he had made inquiries respecting Madame d'Argeles the evening
- before; and on arriving there, he generously offered him a
- breakfast. Before entering, however, he pointed out Madame
- d'Argeles's pretty house on the opposite side of the street, and
- said to him: "The woman whom you are to follow, and whose son you
- are to discover, will emerge from that house "
-
- At that moment, after a night passed in meditating upon his
- mother's prophetic warnings, Chupin was again beset by the same
- scruples which had so greatly disturbed him on the previous
- evening. However, they soon vanished when he heard the wine-
- vendor, in reply to M. Fortunat's skilful questions, begin to
- relate all he knew concerning Madame Lia d'Argeles, and the
- scandalous doings at her house. The seeker after lost heirs and
- his clerk were served at a little table near the door; and while
- they partook of the classical beef-steak and; potatoes--M.
- Fortunat eating daintily, and Chupin bolting his food with the
- appetite of a ship-wrecked mariner--they watched the house
- opposite.
-
- Madame d'Argeles received on Saturdays, and, as Chupin remarked,
- "there was a regular procession of visitors."
-
- Standing beside M. Fortunat, and flattered by the attention which
- such a well-dressed gentleman paid to his chatter, the landlord of
- the house mentioned the names of all the visitors he knew. And he
- knew a good number of them, for the coachmen came to his shop for
- refreshments when their masters were spending the night in play at
- Madame d'Argeles's house. So he was able to name the Viscount de
- Coralth, who dashed up to the door in a two-horse phaeton, as well
- as Baron Trigault, who came on foot, for exercise, puffing and
- blowing like a seal. The wine-vendor, moreover, told his
- customers that Madame d'Argeles never went out before half-past
- two or three o'clock, and then always in a carriage--a piece of
- information which must have troubled Chupin; for, as soon as the
- landlord had left them to serve some other customers, he leant
- forward and said to M. Fortunat: "Did you hear that? How is it
- possible to track a person who's in a carriage?"
-
- "By following in another vehicle, of course."
-
- "Certainly, m'sieur; that's as clear as daylight. But that isn't
- the question. The point is this: How can one watch the face of a
- person who turns her back to you? I must see this woman's face to
- know whom she looks at, and how."
-
- This objection, grave as it appeared, did not seem to disturb M.
- Fortunat. "Don't worry about that, Victor," he replied. "Under
- such circumstances, a mother wouldn't try to see her son from a
- rapidly moving carriage. She will undoubtedly alight, and
- contrive some means of passing and repassing him--of touching him,
- if possible. Your task will only consist in following her closely
- enough to be on the ground as soon as she is. Confine your
- efforts to that; and if you fail to-day, you'll succeed to-morrow
- or the day after--the essential thing is to be patient."
-
- He did better than to preach patience--he practised it. The hours
- wore away, and yet he did not stir from his post, though nothing
- could have been more disagreeable to him than to remain on
- exhibition, as it were, at the door of a wine-shop. At last, at a
- little before three o'clock, the gates over the way turned upon
- their hinges, and a dark-blue victoria, in which a woman was
- seated, rolled forth into the street. "Look!" said M. Fortunat,
- eagerly. "There she is!"
-
-
-
- XVIII.
-
-
- The woman in the carriage was none other than Madame Lia
- d'Argeles. She was attired in one of those startling costumes
- which are the rage nowadays, and which impart the same bold and
- brazen appearance to all who wear them: so much so, that the most
- experienced observers are no longer able to distinguish the honest
- mother of a family from a notorious character. A Dutchman, named
- Van Klopen, who was originally a tailor at Rotterdam, rightfully
- ascribes the honor of this progress to himself. One can scarcely
- explain how it happens that this individual, who calls himself
- "the dressmaker of the queens of Europe," has become the arbiter
- of Parisian elegance; but it is an undeniable fact that he does
- reign over fashion. He decrees the colors that shall be worn,
- decides whether dresses shall be short or long, whether paniers
- shall be adopted or discarded, whether ruches and puffs and
- flowers shall be allowed, and in what form; and his subjects, the
- so-called elegant women of Paris, obey him implicitly.
-
- Madame d'Argeles would personally have preferred less finery,
- perhaps, but it would not have done for her to be out of the
- fashion. She wore an imperceptible hat, balanced on an immense
- pyramidal chignon, from which escaped a torrent of wavy hair.
- "What a beautiful woman!" exclaimed the dazzled Chupin, and
- indeed, seen from this distance, she did not look a day more than
- thirty-five--an age when beauty possesses all the alluring charm
- of the luscious fruit of autumn. She was giving orders for the
- drive, and her coachman, with a rose in his buttonhole, listened
- while he reined in the spirited horse. "The weather's superb,"
- added Chupin. "She'll no doubt drive round the lakes in the Bois
- de Boulogne----"
-
- "Ah, she's off!" interrupted M. Fortunat. "Run, Victor, run! and
- don't be miserly as regards carriage hire; all your expenses shall
- be liberally refunded you."
-
- Chupin was already far away. Madame d'Argeles's horse went
- swiftly enough, but the agent's emissary had the limbs and the
- endurance of a stag, and he kept pace with the victoria without
- much difficulty. And as he ran along, his brain was busy. "If I
- don't take a cab," he said to himself, "if I follow the woman on
- foot, I shall have a perfect right to pocket the forty-five sous
- an hour--fifty, counting the gratuity--that a cab would cost."
-
- But on reaching the Champ Elysees, he discovered, to his regret,
- that this plan was impracticable, for on running down the Avenue
- de l'Imperatrice after the rapidly driven carriage, he could not
- fail to attract attention. Stifling a sigh of regret, and seeing
- a cab at a stand near by, he hastily hailed it. "Where do you
- want to go, sir?" inquired the driver.
-
- "Just follow that blue victoria, in which a handsome lady is
- seated, my good fellow."
-
- The order did not surprise the cabman, but rather the person who
- gave it; for in spite of his fine apparel, Chupin did not seem
- quite the man for such an adventure. "Excuse me," said the Jehu,
- in a slightly ironical tone, "I----"
-
- "I said exactly what I mean," retorted Chupin, whose pride was
- severely wounded. "And no more talk--hurry on, or we shall miss
- the track."
-
- This last remark was correct, for if Madame d'Argeles's coachman
- had not slackened his horse's speed on passing round the Arc de
- Triomphe, the woman would have escaped Chupin, for that day at
- least. However, this circumstance gave the cabman an opportunity
- to overtake the victoria; and after that the two vehicles kept
- close together as they proceeded down the Avenue de l'Imperatrice.
- But at the entrance of the Bois de Boulogne Chupin ordered his
- driver to stop. "Halt!" he exclaimed; "I shall get out. Pay the
- extra cab charges for passing beyond the limits of Paris!--never!
- I'll crawl on my hands and knees first. Here are forty sous for
- your fare--and good-evening to you."
-
- And, as the blue victoria was already some distance in advance, he
- started off at the top of his speed to overtake it. This
- manoeuvre was the result of his meditations while riding along.
- "What will this fine lady do when she gets to the Bois?" he asked
- himself. "Why, her coachman will take his place in the
- procession, and drive her slowly round and round the lakes.
- Meantime I can trot along beside her without attracting attention--
- and it will be good for my health."
-
- His expectations were realized in every respect. The victoria
- soon turned to the left, and took its place in the long line of
- equipages which were slowly winding round the lake. Having gained
- the foot-path which borders the sheet of water, Chupin followed
- the carriage easily enough, with his hands in his pockets, and his
- heart jubilant at the thought that he would gain the sum supposed
- to have been spent in cab hire, in addition to the compensation
- which had been promised him. "This is a strange way of enjoying
- one's self," he muttered, as he trotted along. "There can't be
- much pleasure in going round and round this lake. If ever I'm
- rich, I'll find some other way of amusing myself."
-
- Poor Chupin did not know that people do not go to the Bois to
- enjoy themselves, but rather to torment others. This broad drive
- is in reality only a field for the airing of vanity--a sort of
- open-air bazaar for the display of dresses and equipages. People
- come here to see and to be seen; and, moreover, this is neutral
- ground, where so-called honest women can meet those notorious
- characters from whom they are elsewhere separated by an impassable
- abyss. What exquisite pleasure it must be to the dames of society
- to find themselves beside Jenny Fancy or Ninette Simplon, or any
- other of those young ladies whom they habitually call "creatures,"
- but whom they are continually talking of, and whose toilettes,
- make-up, and jargon, they assiduously copy!
-
- However, Chupin indulged in none of these reflections. He was
- engaged in noting Madame d'Argeles's evident anxiety and
- restlessness. She looked eagerly on all sides, sometimes half
- leaning out of her carriage, and immediately turning her head
- whenever she heard the gallop of a horseman behind her. She was
- evidently looking or waiting for some one, but the person did not
- make his appearance, and so, growing weary of waiting, after
- driving three times round the lake, she made a sign to her
- coachman, who at once drew out of line, and turned his horse into
- a side-path. Chupin hastened after the victoria, keeping it in
- sight until he was fortunate enough to meet an empty cab, which he
- at once hired. Madame d'Argeles's coachman, who had received his
- orders, now drove down the Champs Elysees, again crossed the Place
- de la Concorde, turned into the boulevards, and stopped short at
- the corner of the Chaussee d'Antin, where, having tied a thick
- veil over her face, Madame Lia abruptly alighted and walked away.
-
- This was done so quickly that Chupin barely had time to fling two
- francs to his driver and rush after her. She had already turned
- round the corner of the Rue du Helder, and was walking rapidly up
- the street. It was a little after five o'clock, and dusk was
- setting in. Madame d'Argeles had taken the side of the street
- allotted to the uneven numbers. After she had passed the Hotel de
- Homburg, she slackened her pace, and eagerly scrutinized one of
- the houses opposite--No. 48. Her examination lasted but a moment,
- and seemed to be satisfactory. She then turned, and rapidly
- retraced her steps as far as the boulevard, when, crossing the
- street to the side of the even numbers, she walked up it again
- very slowly, stopping before every shop-window.
-
- Convinced that he had almost reached the goal, Chupin also
- crossed, and followed closely at her heels. He soon saw her start
- and resume her rapid gait. A young man was coming toward her so
- quickly indeed that she had not time to avoid him, and a collision
- ensued, whereupon the young man gave vent to an oath, and hurling
- an opprobrious epithet in her face, passed on.
-
- Chupin shuddered. "What if that should be her son?" he thought.
- And while he pretended to be gazing into a shop window, he
- stealthily watched the poor woman. She had paused, and he was so
- near that he could almost have touched her. He saw her raise her
- veil and follow her insulter with a look which it was impossible
- to misunderstand. "Oh! oh! It was her son that called her that----"
- said Chupin to himself, quite horrified. And without more ado,
- he hastened after the young man.
-
- He was between two and four-and-twenty years of age, rather above
- the medium height, with very light hair and an extremely pale
- complexion. His slight mustache would have been almost
- imperceptible if it had not been dyed several shades darker than
- his hair. He was attired with that studied carelessness which
- many consider to be the height of elegance, but which is just the
- reverse. And his bearing, his mustache, and his low hat, tipped
- rakishly over one ear, gave him an arrogant, pretentious, rowdyish
- appearance. "Zounds! that fellow doesn't suit my fancy," growled
- Chupin, as he trotted along. For he was almost running in his
- efforts to keep pace with Madame d'Argeles's insulter. The
- latter's haste was soon explained. He was carrying a letter which
- he wished to have delivered, and no doubt he feared he would not
- be able to find a commissionaire. Having discovered one at last,
- he called him, gave him the missive, and then pursued his way more
- leisurely.
-
- He had reached the boulevard, when a florid-faced youth,
- remarkably short and stout, rushed toward him with both hands
- amicably extended, at the same time crying, loud enough to attract
- the attention of the passers-by: "Is it possible that this is my
- dear Wilkie?"
-
- "Yes--alive and in the flesh," replied the young man.
-
- "Well, and what the devil have you been doing with yourself? Last
- Sunday, at the races, I looked for you everywhere, and not a
- vestige of Wilkie was to be found. However, you were wise not to
- go. I am three hundred louis out of pocket. I staked everything
- on Domingo, the Marquis de Valorsay's horse. I thought I was sure
- to win--yes, sure. Well, Domingo came in third. Can you
- understand that? If every one didn't know that Valorsay was a
- millionaire, it might be supposed there had been some foul play--
- yes, upon my word--that he had bet against his own horse, and
- forbidden his jockey to win the race." But the speaker did not
- really believe this, so he continued, more gayly: "Fortunately, I
- shall retrieve my losses to-morrow, at Vincennes. Shall we see
- you there?"
-
- "Probably."
-
- "Then good-by, until to-morrow."
-
- "Until to-morrow."
-
- Thereupon they shook hands, and each departed on his way.
-
- Chupin had not lost a word of this conversation. "Valorsay a
- millionaire!" he said to himself. "That's good! Ah, well! now I
- know my little gamecock's name, and I also know that he goes to
- the races. Wilkie that must be an English name; I like the name
- of d'Argeles better. But where the devil is he going now?"
-
- M. Wilkie had simply paused to replenish his cigar-case at the
- tobacco office of the Grand Hotel; and, after lighting a cigar, he
- came out again, and walked up the boulevard in the direction of
- the Faubourg Montmartre. He was no longer in a hurry now; he
- strolled along in view of killing time, displaying his charms, and
- staring impudently at every woman who passed. With his shoulders
- drawn up on a level with his ears, and his chest thrown back, he
- dragged his feet after him as if his limbs were half paralyzed; he
- was indeed doing his best to create the impression that he was
- used up, exhausted, broken down by excesses and dissipation. For
- that is the fashion--the latest fancy--chic!
-
- "Will you never have done?" growled Chupin.
-
- "You shall pay for this, you little wretch!" He was so indignant
- that the gamin element in his nature stirred again under his fine
- broadcloth, and he had a wild longing to throw stones at M.
- Wilkie. He would certainly have trodden on his heels, and have
- picked a quarrel with him, had it not been for a fear of failing
- in his mission, and thereby losing his promised reward.
-
- He followed his man closely, for the crowd was very great. Light
- was coming on, and the gas was lit on all sides. The weather was
- very mild, and there was not an unoccupied table in front of the
- cafes, for it was now the absinthe hour. How does it happen that
- every evening, between five and seven o'clock, every one in Paris
- who is known--who is somebody or something--can be found between
- the Passage de l'Opera and the Passage Jouffroy? Hereabout you may
- hear all the latest news and gossip of the fashionable world, the
- last political canards--all the incidents of Parisian life which
- will be recorded by the papers on the following morning. You may
- learn the price of stocks, and obtain tips for to-morrow's Bourse;
- ascertain how much Mademoiselle A's necklace cost, and who gave it
- to her; with the latest news from Prussia; and the name of the
- bank chairman or cashier who has absconded during the day, and the
- amount he has taken with him.
-
- The crowd became more dense as the Faubourg Montmartre was
- approached, but Wilkie made his way through the throng with the
- ease of an old boulevardier. He must have had a large circle of
- acquaintances, for he distributed bows right and left, and was
- spoken to by five or six promenaders. He did not pass the
- Terrasse Jouffroy, but, pausing there, he purchased an evening
- paper, retraced his steps, and about seven o'clock reached the
- Cafe Riche, which he entered triumphantly. He did not even touch
- the rim of his hat on going in--that would have been excessively
- BAD form; but he called a waiter, in a very loud voice, and
- imperiously ordered him to serve dinner on a table near the
- window, where he could see the boulevard--and be seen.
-
- "And now my little fighting-cock is going to feed," thought
- Chupin. He, too, was hungry; and he was trying to think of some
- modest restaurant in the neighborhood, when two young men passed
- near him and glanced into the cafe.
-
- "Look, there's Wilkie!" observed one of them.
-
- "That's so, upon my word!" responded the other. "And he has
- money, too; fortune has smiled upon him."
-
- "How do you know that?"
-
- "Why, by watching the fellow; one can tell the condition of his
- purse as correctly as he could himself. If his funds are low, he
- has his meals brought to his room from a cook-shop where he has
- credit; his mustache droops despondingly; he is humble even to
- servility with his friends, and he brushes his hair over his
- forehead. When he is in average circumstances, he dines at
- Launay's, waxes his mustache, and brushes his hair back from his
- face. But when he dines at the Cafe Riche, my boy, when he has
- dyed his mustache, and tips his hat over his ear, and deports
- himself in that arrogant fashion, why, he has at least five or six
- thousand francs in his pocket, and all is well with him."
-
- "Where does he get his money from?"
-
- "Who can tell?"
-
- "Is he rich?"
-
- "He must have plenty of money--I lent him ten louis once, and he
- paid me back."
-
- "Zounds! He's a very honorable fellow, then." Thereupon the two
- young men laughed, and passed on.
-
- Chupin had been greatly edified. "Now I know you as well as if I
- were your concierge," he muttered, addressing the unconscious
- Wilkie; "and when I've followed you home, and learned your number,
- I shall have richly earned the fifty francs M. Fortunat promised
- me." As well as he could judge through the windowpane, M. Wilkie
- was eating his dinner with an excellent appetite. "Ah!" he
- exclaimed, not without envy, "these fighting-cocks take good care
- of their stomachs. He's there for an hour at least, and I shall
- have time to run and swallow a mouthful myself."
-
- So saying, Chupin hastened to a small restaurant in a neighboring
- street, and magnificently disbursed the sum of thirty-nine sous.
- Such extravagance was unusual on his part, for he had lived very
- frugally since he had taken a vow to become rich. Formerly, when
- he lived from hand to mouth--to use his own expression--he
- indulged in cigars and in absinthe; but now he contented himself
- with the fare of an anchorite, drank nothing but water, and only
- smoked when some one gave him a cigar. Nor was this any great
- privation to him, since he gained a penny by it--and a penny was
- another grain of sand added to the foundation of his future
- wealth. However, this evening he indulged in the extravagance of
- a glass of wine, deciding in his own mind that he had fairly
- earned it.
-
- When he returned to his post in front of the Cafe Riche, M. Wilkie
- was no longer alone at his table. He was finishing his coffee in
- the company of a man of his own age, who was remarkably good-
- looking--almost too good-looking, in fact--and a glance at whom
- caused Chupin to exclaim: "What! what! I've seen that face
- somewhere before--". But he racked his brain in vain in trying to
- remember who this newcomer was, in trying to set a name on this
- face, which was positively annoying in its classical beauty, and
- which he felt convinced had occupied a place among the phantoms of
- his past. Irritated beyond endurance by what he termed his
- stupidity, he was trying to decide whether he should enter the
- cafe or not, when he saw M. Wilkie take his bill from the hands of
- a waiter, glance at it, and throw a louis on the table. His
- companion had drawn out his pocketbook for the ostensible purpose
- of paying for the coffee he had taken; but Wilkie, with a cordial
- gesture, forbade it, and made that magnificent, imperious sign to
- the waiter, which so clearly implies: "Take nothing! All is paid!
- Keep the change." Thereupon the servant gravely retired, more than
- ever convinced of the fact that vanity increases the fabulous
- total of Parisian gratuities by more than a million francs a year.
-
- "My gallant youths are coming out," thought Chupin. "I must keep
- my ears open." And approaching the door, he dropped on one knee,
- and pretended to be engaged in tying his shoestrings. This is one
- of the thousand expedients adopted by spies and inquisitive
- people. And when a man is foolish enough to tell his secrets in
- the street, he should at least be wise enough to distrust the
- people near him who pretend to be absorbed in something else; for
- in nine cases out of ten these persons are listening to him,
- possibly for pay, or possibly from curiosity.
-
- However, the young men whom Chupin was watching were far from
- suspecting that they were under surveillance. M. Wilkie came out
- first, talking very loud, as often happens when a man has just
- partaken of a good dinner, and is blessed with an excellent
- digestion. "Come, Coralth, my good fellow, you won't desert me in
- this way? I have a box for the Varietes, and you must go with me.
- We'll see if Silly imitates Theresa as perfectly as they say."
-
- "But I have an appointment."
-
- "Oh, well, let it wait. Come, viscount, is it agreed?"
-
- "Ah, you do with me just as you like."
-
- "Good! But, first of all let us take a glass of beer to finish our
- cigars. And do you know whom you will find in my box?"
-
- At this moment they passed, and Chupin rose to his feet.
- "Coralth," he muttered, "Viscount de Coralth. He's not one of our
- clients. Let me see, Coralth. This is certainly the first time I
- have ever heard the name. Can it be that I'm mistaken?
- Impossible!"
-
- The more he reflected, the more thoroughly he became convinced of
- the accuracy of his first impression, consoling himself with the
- thought that a name has but a slight significance after all. His
- preoccupation had at least the advantage of shortening the time
- which he spent in promenading to and fro, while the friends sat
- outside a cafe smoking and drinking. It was still M. Wilkie who
- monopolized the conversation, while his companion listened with
- his elbow resting on the table, occasionally nodding his head in
- token of approbation. One thing that incensed Chupin was that
- they loitered there, when one of them had a ticket for a box at
- the theatre in his pocket.
-
- "Idiots!" he growled; "they'll wait till the play's half over
- before they go in. And then they'll let the doors slam behind
- them for the express purpose of disturbing everybody. Fools, go!"
-
- As if they had heard the command, they rose suddenly, and an
- instant after they entered the Varietes. They entered, but Chupin
- remained on the pavement, scratching his head furiously, in
- accordance with his habit whenever he wished to develop his powers
- of imagination. He was trying to think how he might procure
- admission to the theatre without paying for it. For several years
- he had seen every play put upon the stage in Paris, without
- spending a sou, and he felt that it would be actually degrading to
- purchase a ticket at the office now. "Pay to see a farce!" he
- thought. "Not I. I must know some one here--I'll wait for the
- entr'acte."
-
- The wisdom of this course became apparent when among those who
- left the theatre at the close of the first act he recognized an
- old acquaintance, who was now working on the claque,* and who at
- once procured him a ticket of admission for nothing. "Well, it is
- a good thing to have friends everywhere," he muttered, as he took
- the seat assigned him.
-
- * The body of hired applauders who are employed at most Parisian
- theatres to stimulate the enthusiasm of the audience.--[Trans.]
-
- It was a very good place they had given him--a seat in the second
- gallery commanding an excellent view of the house. The first
- glance around told him that his "customers," as he styled them,
- were in a box exactly opposite. They were now in the company of
- two damsels in startling toilettes, with exceedingly dishevelled
- yellow hair, who moved restlessly about, and giggled and stared,
- and tried in every possible way to attract attention. And their
- stratagem succeeded. However, this did not seem to please the
- Viscount de Coralth, who kept himself as far back in the shade as
- he possibly could. But young Wilkie was evidently delighted, and
- seemed manifestly proud of the attention which the public was
- compelled to bestow upon his box. He offered himself as much as
- possible to the gaze of the audience; moved about, leaned forward,
- and made himself fully as conspicuous as his fair companions.
- Less than ever did Chupin now forgive Wilkie for the insult he had
- cast in the face of Madame Lia d'Argeles, who was probably his
- mother.
-
- As for the play, M. Fortunat's emissary did not hear twenty words
- of it. He was so overcome with fatigue that he soon fell asleep.
- The noise and bustle of each entr'acte aroused him a little, but
- he did not thoroughly wake up until the close of the performance.
- His "customers" were still in their box, and M. Wilkie was
- gallantly wrapping the ladies in their cloaks and shawls. In the
- vestibule, he and M. de Coralth were joined by several other young
- men, and the whole party adjourned to a neighboring cafe. "These
- people are certainly afflicted with an unquenchable thirst,"
- growled Chupin. "I wonder if this is their everyday life?"
-
- He, too, was thirsty after his hastily eaten dinner; and necessity
- prevailing over economy, he seated himself at a table outside the
- cafe, and called for a glass of beer, in which he moistened his
- parched lips with a sigh of intense satisfaction. He sipped the
- beverage slowly, in order to make it last the longer, but this did
- not prevent his glass from becoming dry long before M. Wilkie and
- his friends were ready to leave. "It seems to me we are going to
- stay here all night," he thought, angrily.
-
- His ill-humor was not strange under the circumstances, for it was
- one o'clock in the morning; and after carrying all the tables and
- chairs round about, inside, a waiter came to ask Chupin to go
- away. All the other cafes were closing too, and the fastening of
- bolts or the clanking of shutter chains could be heard on every
- side. On the pavement stood groups of waiters in their shirt-
- sleeves, stretching and yawning, and inhaling the fresh night air
- with delight. The boulevard was fast becoming deserted--the men
- were going off in little groups, and female forms could be seen
- gliding along in the dark shadow cast by the houses. The police
- were watching everywhere, with a word of menace ever ready on
- their lips; and soon the only means of egress from the cafes were
- the narrow, low doorways cut in the shutters through which the
- last customers--the insatiable, who are always ordering one
- thimbleful more to finish--passed out.
-
- It was through a portal of this sort that M. Wilkie and his
- companions at last emerged, and on perceiving them, Chupin gave a
- grunt of satisfaction. "At last," he thought, "I can follow the
- man to his door, take his number, and go home."
-
- But his joy was short-lived, for M. Wilkie proposed that the whole
- party should go and take supper. M. de Coralth demurred to the
- idea, but the others over-ruled his objections, and dragged him
- away with them.
-
-
-
- XIX.
-
-
- "Ah! this is a bad job!" growled Chupin. "Go, go, and never
- stop!"
-
- What exasperated him even more than his want of sleep was the
- thought that his good mother must be waiting for him at home in an
- agony of anxiety; for since his reformation he had become
- remarkably regular in his habits. What should he do? "Go home,"
- said Reason; "it will be easy enough to find this Wilkie again.
- There can be little doubt that he lives at No. 48, in the Rue du
- Helder." "Remain," whispered Avarice; "and, since you have
- accomplished so much, finish your work. M. Fortunat won't pay for
- conjectures, but for a certainty."
-
- Love of money carried the day; so, weaving an interminable chaplet
- of oaths, he followed the party until they entered Brebant's
- restaurant, one of the best known establishments which remain open
- at night-time. It was nearly two o'clock in the morning now; the
- boulevard was silent and deserted, and yet this restaurant was
- brilliantly lighted from top to bottom, and snatches of song and
- shouts of laughter, with the clatter of knives and forks and the
- clink of glasses, could be heard through the half opened windows.
-
- "Eight dozen Marennes for No. 6," shouted a waiter to the man who
- opened oysters near the restaurant door.
-
- On hearing this order, Chupin shook his clenched fist at the
- stars. "The wretches!" he muttered through his set teeth; "bad
- luck to them! Those oysters are for their mouths, plainly enough,
- for there are eight of them in all, counting those yellow-haired
- women. They will, no doubt, remain at table until six o'clock in
- the morning. And they call this enjoying themselves. And
- meanwhile, poor little Chupin must wear out his shoe-leather on
- the pavement. Ah! they shall pay for this!"
-
- It ought to have been some consolation to him to see that he was
- not alone in his misery, for in front of the restaurant stood a
- dozen cabs with sleepy drivers, who were waiting for chance to
- send them one of those half-intoxicated passengers who refuse to
- pay more than fifteen sous for their fare, but give their Jehu a
- gratuity of a louis. All these vehicles belonged to the peculiar
- category known as "night cabs"--dilapidated conveyances with
- soiled, ragged linings, and drawn by half-starved, jaded horses.
-
- However, Chupin neither thought of these vehicles, nor of the poor
- horses, nor, indeed, of the drivers themselves. His wrath had
- been succeeded by philosophical resignation; he accepted with good
- grace what he could not avoid. As the night air had become very
- cool, he turned up the collar of his overcoat, and began to pace
- to and fro on the pavement in front of the restaurant. He had
- made a hundred turns perhaps, passing the events of the day in
- review, when suddenly such a strange and startling idea flashed
- across his mind that he stood motionless, lost in astonishment.
- Reflecting on the manner in which M. Wilkie and the Viscount de
- Coralth had behaved during the evening, a singular suspicion
- assailed him. While M. Wilkie gradually lost his wits, M. de
- Coralth had become remarkably cold and reserved. He had seemed to
- oppose all M. Wilkie's propositions; but he had agreed to them at
- last, so that his objections had produced much the same effect as
- a stimulant. It seemed then as if M. de Coralth had some strange
- interest in wishing to gain ascendency over his friend. At least
- such was Chupin's opinion. "Oh, oh!" he murmured. "What if HE
- should be working up the same little scheme? What if he were
- acquainted with Madame Lia d'Argeles? What if he knew that there's
- a fortune waiting for a claimant? I shouldn't at all be surprised
- if I found that he wanted to cook his bread in our oven. But
- father Fortunat wouldn't be pleased with the news. Ah! no--he
- wouldn't even smile----"
-
- While carrying on this little conversation with himself, he stood
- just in front of the restaurant, looking up into the air, when all
- of a sudden a window was thrown noisily open, and the figures of
- two men became plainly visible. They were engaged in a friendly
- struggle; one of them seemed to be trying to seize hold of
- something which the other had in his hand, and which he refused to
- part with. One of these men was M. Wilkie as Chupin at once
- perceived. "Good!" he said to himself; "this is the beginning of
- the end!"
-
- As he spoke, M. Wilkie's hat fell on the window-sill, slipped off,
- and dropped on to the pavement below. With a natural impulse
- Chupin picked it up, and he was turning it over and over in his
- hands, when M. Wilkie leant out of the window and shouted in a
- voice that was thick with wine: "Halloo! Eh, there! Who picked up
- my hat? Honesty shall be rewarded. A glass of champagne and a
- cigar for the fellow who'll bring it me in room No. 6."
-
- Chupin hesitated. By going up, he might, perhaps, compromise the
- success of his mission. But on the other hand his curiosity was
- aroused, and he very much wished to see, with his own eyes, how
- these young men were amusing themselves. Besides, he would have
- an opportunity of examining this handsome viscount, whom he was
- certain he had met before, though he could not tell when or where.
- In the meantime, M. Wilkie had perceived him.
-
- "Come, you simpleton!" he cried; "make haste. You can't be very
- thirsty."
-
- The thought of the viscount decided Chupin. Entering the
- restaurant and climbing the staircase, he had just reached the
- landing when a pale-looking man, who had a smoothly-shaven face
- and was dressed in black, barred his way and asked: "What do you
- want?"
-
- "M'sieur, here's a hat which fell from one of your windows and----"
-
- "All right, hand it here."
-
- But Chupin did not seem to hear this order. He was beginning a
- long explanation, when a curtain near by was pushed aside, and M.
- Wilkie called out: "Philippe! eh, Philippe!--bring me the man who
- picked up my hat."
-
- "Ah!" said Chupin, "you see, m'sieur, that he asks for me."
-
- "Very well," said Philippe. "Go on, then." And raising the
- portiere he pushed Chupin into room No. 6.
-
- It was a small, square apartment, with a very low ceiling. The
- temperature was like that of a furnace, and the glare of the
- gaslights almost blinded one. The supper was over, but the table
- had not yet been cleared, and plates full of leavings showed that
- the guests had fairly exhausted their appetites. Still, with the
- exception of M. Wilkie, every one present seemed to be terribly
- bored. In one corner, with her head resting on a piano, sat one
- of the yellow-haired damsels, fast asleep, while, beside the
- window, M. de Coralth was smoking with his elbows propped upon the
- table. The four other young men were looking on phlegmatically.
- "Ah! here's my hat," exclaimed M. Wilkie, as soon as Chupin
- appeared. "Wait and receive your promised reward." And thereupon
- he rang the bell, crying at the top of his voice: "Henry, you
- sleepy-head--a clean glass and some more of the widow Cliquot's
- champagne!"
-
- Several bottles were standing upon the table, only half empty, and
- one of M. Wilkie's friends called his attention to this fact, but
- he shrugged his shoulders disdainfully. "You must take me for a
- fool," he said, contemptuously. "A man doesn't drink stale wine
- when he has the prospect of such an inheritance as is coming to me"
-
- "Wilkie!" interrupted M. de Coralth, quickly; "Wilkie!"
-
- But he was too late; Chupin had heard and understood everything.
- His conjectures had proved correct. M. Wilkie knew his right to
- the estate; M. Fortunat had been forestalled by the viscount, and
- would merely have his labor for his pains. "No chance for the
- guv'nor!" thought the agent's emissary. "And what a blow after
- the De Valorsay affair! It's enough to give him the jaundice!"
-
- For a youth of his age, Chupin controlled his feelings admirably;
- but the revelation came so suddenly that he had started despite
- himself, and changed color a trifle. M. de Coralth saw this; and,
- though he was far from suspecting the truth, his long repressed
- anger burst forth. He rose abruptly, took up a bottle, and
- filling the nearest glass, he rudely exclaimed: "Come, drink that--
- make haste--and clear out!"
-
- Victor Chupin must have become very sensitive since his
- conversion. In former times he was not wont to be so susceptible
- as to lose his temper when some one chanced to address him in a
- rather peremptory manner, or to offer him wine out of the first
- available glass. But M. de Coralth inspired him with one of those
- inexplicable aversions which cannot be restrained "Eh! tell me if
- it's because we've drank champagne together before that you talk
- to me like that?" the young fellow retorted, savagely.
-
- It was only a random shot, but it reached home. The viscount
- seemed touched to the quick. "You hear that, Wilkie," said he.
- "This will teach you that the time of your compatriot, Lord
- Seymour, has passed by. The good-humored race of plebeians who
- respectfully submitted to the blows with which noblemen honored
- them after drinking, has died out. This ought to cure you of your
- unfortunate habit of placing yourself on terms of equality with
- all the vagabonds you meet."
-
- Chupin's hair fairly bristled with anger. "What! what!" he
- exclaimed; "I'll teach you to call me a vagabond, you scoundrel!"
-
- His gesture, his attitude, and his eyes were so expressive of
- defiance and menace that two of the guests sprang up and caught
- him by the arm. "Go, go," they said.
-
- But he freed himself from their grasp. "Go!" he replied. "Never!
- He called me a vagabond. Am I to pocket the insult quietly and
- walk off with it? You can scarcely expect that. First, I demand
- an apology."
-
- This was asking too much of the Viscount de Coralth. "Let the
- fool alone," he remarked, with affected coolness, "and ring for
- the waiters to kick him out."
-
- It did not require this new insult to put Chupin in a furious
- passion. "Come on!" he exclaimed. "Ah, ha! Where's the fellow
- who'll turn me out? Let him come. I'll teach him a lesson!" And
- as he spoke he squared his shoulders, inflated his chest, and
- threw the weight of his entire body on his left leg, after the
- most approved method of sparring-masters.
-
- "Go, go!" insisted Wilkie's friends.
-
- "Yes, I'll go with pleasure, but your friend must go, too. Is he
- a man? Then let him come, and we'll settle this outside." And
- seeing that they were again trying to seize him: "Hands off!" he
- thundered, "or I'll strike. You were not obliged to invite me
- here. It isn't my business to furnish amusement to parties who've
- drunk too much wine. And why should you despise me? It's true I
- haven't any money while you have plenty--that I work and you
- carouse. Still that's no reason why you should scorn me.
- Besides, those who are poor in the morning are sometimes rich in
- the evening. Every dog has his day. I have an idea that I shall
- have some coin when yours is all gone. Then it will be my turn to
- laugh; and as I'm a good-natured fellow, I will give you my half-
- smoked cigars."
-
- M. Wilkie seemed delighted. He had climbed on to the piano and
- seated himself, with his feet on the keyboard; and there, as on a
- judgment seat, he listened and applauded, alternately taking
- Chupin's part, and then the viscount's. "Bravo, gamin!" or, "Give
- it to him, Coralth!" he shouted in turn.
-
- This irritated the viscount exceedingly. "I see that we shall be
- obliged to call in the police to settle the affair," he said,
- sneeringly.
-
- "The police!" roared Chupin. "Ah! that won't do, you scamp--" But
- his voice died away in his throat, and he stood motionless,
- speechless, with his arm raised as if he were about to strike, and
- his eyes dilated with astonishment.
-
- For a change of expression in M. de Coralth's face had enlightened
- him; and he suddenly recollected when and under what circumstances
- he had known this so-called viscount. He remembered, too, the
- name he had borne when he first met him. "Oh!" he stammered; "oh!
- oh!"
-
- However, the effect of this discovery was to dispel his anger, or
- rather to restore his calmness, and, addressing M. de Coralth, he
- exclaimed: "Don't be angry at what I've said, m'sieur; it was only
- a jest--I know that there's a wide difference between a poor devil
- like me and a viscount like you--I haven't a sou, you see, and
- that maddens me. But I'm not so very bad-looking, fortunately,
- and I'm always hoping that the daughter of some rich banker will
- fall in love with me and marry me. Some people have such luck,
- you know. If I meet with any you may be sure I shall pass myself
- off as the lost child of some great personage--of a duke, for
- instance--and if the real son exists, and troubles me, why I'll
- quietly put him out of the way, if possible."
-
- With but one exception the persons present did not understand a
- single word of this apparent nonsense; and indeed the yellow-
- haired damsels stared at the speaker in amazement. Still it was
- evident that each of these words had a meaning, and a terrible
- meaning for M. de Coralth. Accustomed for years to control his
- features, he remained apparently unmoved--he even smiled; but a
- close observer could have detected anguish in his eyes, and he had
- become very pale. At last, unable to endure the scene any longer,
- he drew a hundred-franc bank-note from his pocketbook, crumpled it
- in his hand and threw it at Chupin, saying: "That's a very pretty
- story you are telling, my boy; but we've had enough of it. Take
- your pay and leave us."
-
- Unfortunately, the note struck Chupin full in the face. He
- uttered a hoarse cry of rage, and, by the way in which he seized
- and brandished an empty bottle, it might have been imagined that
- M. de Coralth was about to have his head broken. But no. Thanks
- to a supreme effort of will, Chupin conquered this mad fury; and,
- dropping the bottle, he remarked to the young women who were
- uttering panic-stricken shrieks: "Be quiet; don't you see that I
- was only in fun."
-
- But even M. Wilkie had found the fun a little rough, and even
- dangerous. Several of the young fellows present sprang up, with
- the evident intention of pushing Chupin out of the room, but he
- checked them with a gesture. "Don't disturb yourselves,
- gentlemen," he said. "I'm going, only let me find the bank-note
- which this gentleman threw at me."
-
- "That's quite proper," replied M. Wilkie, approvingly; "look for
- it."
-
- Chupin did so, and at last found it lying almost under the piano.
- "Now," he remarked, "I should like a cigar."
-
- A score or so were lying in a dish. He gravely selected one of
- them and coolly cut off the end of it before placing it in his
- mouth. Those around watched him with an air of profound
- astonishment, not understanding this ironical calmness following
- so closely upon such a storm of passion. Then he, Victor Chupin,
- who had, it seems to me, but one aim in life--to become rich--
- Victor Chupin, who loved money above anything else, and had
- stifled all other passions in his soul--he who often worked two
- whole days to earn five francs--he who did not disdain to claim
- his five sous when he went to hire a cab for his employer--he,
- Chupin, twisted the bank-note in his fingers, lit it at the gas,
- and used it to light his cigar.
-
- "Ah! he's crazy!" murmured the yellow-haired damsels, with despair
- in their voices.
-
- But M. Wilkie was enthusiastic. "There's form!" said he. "Fine
- form and no mistake!"
-
- But Chupin did not even deign to turn his head. He opened the
- door, and standing on the threshold, he bowed to M. de Coralth
- with an ironical smile. "Until we meet again, Monsieur Paul,"
- said he. "And kindly remember me to Madame Paul, if you please."
-
- If the others had been less astonished, they would have no doubt
- have remarked the prodigious effect of this name upon their
- brilliant friend. He became ghastly pale and fell back in his
- chair. Then, suddenly, he bounded up as if he wished to attack
- his enemy. But pursuit seemed likely to yield no result, for
- Chupin was already on the boulevard.
-
- It was daybreak. Paris was waking up; the bakers were standing at
- their doors, and boys in their shirt-sleeves, with their eyes
- swollen with sleep, were taking down the shutters of the wine-
- shops. A cloud of dust, raised by the street-sweepers, hung in
- the distance; the rag-pickers wandered about, peering among the
- rubbish; the noisy milk-carts jolted along at a gallop, and
- workmen were proceeding to their daily toil, with hunches of bread
- in their hands. The morning air was very chilly; nevertheless,
- Chupin seated himself on a bench across the boulevard, at a spot
- where he could watch the entrance of the restaurant without being
- seen. He had just experienced one of those sudden shocks which so
- disturb the mind, that one becomes insensible to outward
- circumstances, whatever they may be. He had recognized in the so-
- called Viscount de Coralth, the man whom he had hated above all
- others in the world, or, rather, the only man whom he hated, for
- his was not a bad heart. Impressionable to excess like a true
- child of the faubourgs, he had the Parisian's strange mobility of
- feeling. If his anger was kindled by a trifle, the merest nothing
- usually sufficed to extinguish it. But matters were different
- respecting this handsome viscount! God! how I hate him!" he
- hissed through his set teeth. "God! how I hate him!"
-
- For once, years before, as he had confessed to M. Fortunat, Chupin
- had been guilty of a cowardly and abominable act, which had nearly
- cost a man his life. And this crime, if it had been successful,
- would have benefited the very fellow who concealed his sinful,
- shameful past under the high-sounding name of Coralth. How was it
- that Chupin had not recognized him at once? Because he had worked
- for this fellow without knowing him, receiving his orders through
- the miserable wretches who pandered to his vices. He had only
- seen him personally once or twice, and had never spoken to him.
- Later--too late--he discovered what vile intrigue it was that he
- had served. And when he became sincerely repentant he loathed
- this Coralth who had caused his crime.
-
- Nor was this all. The recognition of Coralth had inspired him
- with remorse. It had aroused in the recesses of his conscience a
- threatening voice which cried: "What are you doing here? You are
- acting as a spy for a man you distrust, and whose real designs you
- are ignorant of. It was in this way you began before. Have you
- forgotten what it led to? Have you not sin enough already upon
- your conscience? Blood enough upon your hands? It is folly to
- pretend that one may serve as a tool for villains, and still
- remain an honest man!"
-
- It was this voice which had given Chupin the courage to light his
- cigar with the bank-note. And this voice still tortured him, as
- seated on the bench he now tried to review the situation. Where,
- indeed, was he? With rare good luck he had discovered the son whom
- Madame Lia d'Argeles had so long and successfully concealed. But
- contrary to all expectations, this young fellow already knew of
- the inheritance which he was entitled to. M. de Coralth had
- already achieved what M. Fortunat had meant to do; and so the plan
- was a failure, and it was useless to persist in it.
-
- This would have ended the matter if Chupin had not chanced to know
- the Viscount de Coralth's shameful past. And this knowledge
- changed everything, for it gave him the power to interfere in a
- most effectual manner. Armed with this secret, he could bestow
- the victory on M. Fortunat, and force M. de Coralth to capitulate.
- And he could do this all the more easily, as he was sure that
- Coralth had not recognized him, and that he was perhaps ignorant
- of his very existence. Chupin had allowed himself to be carried
- away by a sudden impulse of anger which he regretted; he had made
- an ironical illusion to his enemy's past life, but after all this
- had done no particular harm. So nothing prevented him from
- lending M. Fortunat his assistance, and thus killing two birds
- with one stone. He could have his revenge on Coralth, and at the
- same time insure his patron a large fee, of which he could claim a
- considerable share for himself. But no! The idea of deriving any
- profit whatever from this affair inspired him with a feeling of
- disgust--honor triumphed over his naturally crafty and avaricious
- nature. It seemed to him that any money made in this way would
- soil his fingers; for he realized there must be some deep villainy
- under all this plotting and planning; he was sure of it, since
- Coralth was mixed up in the affair. "I will serve my guv'nor for
- nothing," he decided. "When a man is avenged, he's well paid."
-
- Chupin decided upon this course because he could think of no
- better plan. Still, if he had been master of events he would have
- acted otherwise. He would have quietly presented the government
- with this inheritance which he found M. Wilkie so unworthy of.
- "The devil only knows what he'll do with it," he thought. "He'll
- squander it as my father squandered the fortune that was given
- him. It is only fools who meet with such luck as that."
-
- However, his meditations did not prevent him from keeping a close
- watch over the restaurant, for it was of the utmost importance
- that M. Wilkie should not escape him. It was now broad daylight,
- and customers were leaving the establishment; for, after passing
- what is generally conceded to be a joyous night, they felt the
- need of returning home to rest and sleep. Chupin watched them as
- they emerged. There were some who came out with drooping heads,
- mumbling incoherent phrases; while others who were equally
- intoxicated, but more nervous, evinced considerable animation, and
- sang snatches of songs, or jested loudly with the street-sweepers
- as they passed on. The more sober, surprised by the sunlight, and
- blushing at themselves, slunk hastily and quietly away. There was
- one man, moreover, whom the waiters were obliged to carry to his
- cab, for he could no longer stand on his feet.
-
- At last Chupin saw the individual clad in black whom Wilkie had
- addressed as Philippe, and who had endeavored to prevent him from
- entering the restaurant, come out, and walk rapidly away. He was
- warmly clad in a thick overcoat, but he shivered, and his pale,
- wan face betrayed the man who is a martyr to the pleasures of
- others--the man who is condemned to be up all night and sleep only
- in the daytime--the man who can tell you how much folly and
- beastliness lurk in the depths of the wine-cup, and who knows
- exactly how many yawns are expressed by the verb "to amuse one's
- self." Chupin was beginning to feel uneasy. "Can M. Wilkie and
- his friends have made their escape?" he wondered.
-
- But at that very moment they made their appearance. They lingered
- awhile on the pavement to chat, and Chupin had an opportunity of
- observing the effect of their night's dissipation on their faces.
- The brilliant sunlight made their eyes blink, and the cold sent
- purple blotches to their bloated cheeks. As for the young women
- with yellow hair, they appeared as they really were--hideous.
- They entered the only cab that remained, the most dilapidated one
- of all, and the driver of which had no little difficulty in
- setting his horse in motion; whereupon the gentlemen went off on
- foot.
-
- Many persons would have been vexed and even humiliated by the
- necessity of appearing at this hour on the boulevard in disorderly
- attire, which plainly indicated that they had spent the night in
- debauchery. But with the exception of the Viscount de Coralth,
- who was evidently out of humor, the party seemed delighted with
- themselves, as it was easy to see by the way they met the glances
- of the passers-by. They considered themselves first-class form--
- they were producing an effect--they were astonishing people. And
- what more could they desire?
-
- One thing is certain--they were irritating Chupin terribly. He
- was following them on the opposite side of the boulevard, at some
- little distance in the rear, for he was afraid of being
- recognized. "The wretches!" he growled. "One couldn't draw a
- pint of manly blood from the veins of all six of them. Ah, if
- they knew how I hate them!"
-
- But he had not long to nurse his wrath. On reaching the Rue
- Drouot, two of the gentlemen left the party, and two more went
- down the Rue Lepelletier. M. Wilkie and the viscount were left to
- walk down the boulevard alone. They linked their arms and carried
- on an animated conversation until they reached the Rue du Helder,
- where they shook hands and separated. What had they said at
- parting? What agreement had been made between them? Chupin would
- willingly have given a hundred sous from his private purse to have
- known. He would have given as much more to have been able to
- double himself, in order to pursue the viscount, who had started
- off in the direction of the Madeleine, without having to give up
- watching and following his friend. But the days of miracles are
- over. So Chupin sighed, and, following Wilkie, he soon saw him
- enter No. 48 of the Rue du Helder. The concierge, who was at the
- door busily engaged in polishing the bell-handle, bowed
- respectfully. "So there it is!" grumbled Chupin. "I knew he
- lived there--I knew it by the way that Madame d'Argeles looked at
- the windows yesterday evening. Poor woman! Ah! her son's a fine
- fellow and no mistake!"
-
- His compassion for the unhappy mother seemed to recall him to a
- sense of duty. "Scoundrel that I am!" he exclaimed, striking his
- forehead with his clenched fist. "Why, I'm forgetting my own good
- mother!" And as his task was now ended, he started off on the run,
- taking the shortest cut to the Faubourg Saint-Denis. "Poor
- mother!" he said to himself as he tore along, "what a night she
- must have had! She must have cried her eyes out!"
-
- He spoke the truth. The poor woman had passed a night of agony--
- counting the hours, and trembling each time the door of the house
- opened, announcing some tenant's return. And as morning
- approached, her anxiety increased. "For her son would not have
- allowed her to remain in such suspense," she said to herself,
- "unless he had met with some accident or encountered some of his
- former friends--those detestable scamps who had tried to make him
- as vile as themselves." Perhaps he had met his father, Polyte
- Chupin, the man whom she still loved in spite of everything,
- because he was her husband, but whom she judged, and whom indeed
- she knew, to be capable of any crime. And of all misfortunes, it
- was an accident, even a fatal accident, that she dreaded least.
- In her heroic soul the voice of honor spoke even more loudly than
- the imperious instinct of maternity; and she would rather have
- found her son lying dead on the marble slabs of the Morgue than
- seated in the dock at the Assize Court.
-
- Her poor eyes were weary of weeping when she at last recognized
- Victor's familiar step approaching down the passage. She hastily
- opened the door, and as soon as she FELT that he was near her, for
- she could not see him, she asked: "Where have you spent the night?
- Where have you come from? What has happened?"
-
- His only answer was to fling his arms round her neck, following
- alike the impulse of his heart and the advice of experience, which
- told him that this would be the best explanation he could give.
- Still it did not prevent him from trying to justify himself,
- although he was careful not to confess the truth, for he dreaded
- his mother's censure, knowing well enough that she would be less
- indulgent than his own conscience.
-
- "I believe you, my son," said the good woman, gravely; "you
- wouldn't deceive me, I'm sure." And she added: "What reassured
- me, when you kissed me, was that you hadn't been drinking."
-
- Chupin did not speak a word; this confidence made him strangely
- uneasy. "May I be hung," he thought, "if after this I ever do
- anything that I can't confess to this poor good woman!"
-
- But he hadn't time for sentimental reflections. He had gone too
- far to draw back, and it was necessary for him to report the
- result of his researches as soon as possible. Accordingly, he
- hastily ate a morsel, for he was faint with hunger, and started
- out again, promising to return to dinner. He was in all the
- greater haste as it was Sunday. M. Fortunat was in the habit of
- passing these days in the country, and Chupin feared he might fail
- to see him if he was not expeditious in his movements. And while
- running to the Place de la Bourse, he carefully prepared the story
- he meant to relate, deeply impressed by the wisdom of the popular
- maxim which says: "It is not always well to tell the whole truth."
- Ought he to describe the scene at the restaurant, mention Coralth,
- and say that there was nothing more to be done respecting M.
- Wilkie? After mature deliberation he decided in the negative. If
- he revealed everything, M. Fortunat might become discouraged and
- abandon the affair. It would be better to let him discover the
- truth himself, and profit by his anger to indicate a means of
- vengeance.
-
- It happened that M. Fortunat had decided not to go to the country
- that Sunday. He had slept later than usual, and was still in his
- dressing-gown when Chupin made his appearance. He uttered a
- joyful cry on seeing his emissary, feeling assured that he must be
- the bearer of good news, since he came so early. "You have
- succeeded, then?" he exclaimed.
-
- "Yes, monsieur."
-
- "You have discovered Madame d'Argeles's son?"
-
- "I have him."
-
- "Ah! I knew that you were a clever fellow. Quick, tell me
- everything. But no, wait a moment."
-
- He rang the bell, and Madame Dodelin at once made her appearance.
- "Put another plate on the table," said the agent. "M. Chupin will
- breakfast with me--and serve us at once. You agree, don't you,
- Victor? It's ten o'clock; I'm hungry; and we can talk better over
- a bottle of wine."
-
- This was a great honor; and it gave Chupin a fitting idea of the
- value of the service he had rendered. He was not too much elated,
- however; though he felt very sorry that he had eaten before he
- came. On his side, M. Fortunat by no means regretted having
- conferred this favor on his clerk, for the story which the latter
- related, caused him intense delight. "Very good!--well done," he
- exclaimed every other minute. "I could not have done better
- myself. You shall be abundantly rewarded, Victor, if this affair
- is successful." And at this thought his satisfaction overflowed in
- a complacent monologue: "Why shouldn't it succeed?" he asked
- himself. "Could anything be more simple and certain? I can make
- any demand I please--one, two, three hundred thousand francs. Ah,
- it was a good thing that the Count de Chalusse died! Now, I can
- forgive Valorsay. Let him keep my forty thousand francs; he's
- quite welcome to them! Let him marry Mademoiselle Marguerite; I
- wish them a large and flourishing family! And Madame d'Argeles,
- too, has my benediction!"
-
- He was so confident his fortune was made that at noon he could
- restrain himself no longer. He hired a cab and accompanied by
- Chupin he set out for M. Wilkie's abode, declaring that he would
- wake that young gentleman up if needs be, but at all events he
- must see him without delay. When he reached the Rue du Helder, he
- told Chupin to wait in the cab, and then entering the house, he
- asked: "Monsieur Wilkie?"
-
- "On the second floor, the door to the right," replied the
- concierge.
-
- M. Fortunat ascended the stairs very slowly, for he felt the
- necessity of regaining all his composure, and it was not until he
- had brought himself to a proper frame of mind that he rang the
- bell. A small servant, M. Wilkie's fag, who took his revenge in
- robbing his employer most outrageously, came to the door, and
- began by declaring that his master was out of town. But M.
- Fortunat understood how to force doors open, and his manoeuvres
- succeeded so well that he was finally allowed to enter a small
- sitting-room, while the servant went off, saying: "I will go and
- inform monsieur."
-
- Instead of wasting time in congratulating himself on this first
- achievement the agent began to inspect the room in which he found
- himself, as well as another apartment, the door of which stood
- open. For he was of the opinion that a dwelling-place indicates
- the character of its inmate, as surely as a shell indicates the
- form of the creature that inhabits it. M. Wilkie was comfortably
- lodged; but his rooms were most pretentiously ornamented. They
- were indeed decorated in more than doubtful taste. There were
- very few books lying about, but costly riding-whips, spurs,
- rifles, cartridge-boxes, and all the paraphernalia of a
- fashionable sporting man, were here in abundance.
-
- The only pictures on the wall were a few portraits of celebrated
- horses, which foreshadowed the fact that M. Wilkie must have, at
- least, an eighth share in some well-known racer. After this
- inspection, M. Fortunat smiled complacently. "This young fellow
- has expensive tastes," he thought. "It will be very easy to
- manage him."
-
- However his reflections were interrupted by the return of the
- servant, who exclaimed: "My master is in the dining-room, and if
- monsieur will enter----"
-
- The heir-hunter did enter, and found himself face to face with M.
- Wilkie, who was partaking of a cup of chocolate. He was not only
- up, but he was dressed to go out--dressed in such a style that he
- would have been taken for a respectable groom. A couple of hours'
- sleep had made him himself again; and he had regained the
- arrogance of manner which was the distinguishing trait of his
- character, and a sure sign that he was in prosperous
- circumstances. As his unknown visitor entered he looked up, and
- bruskly asked: "What do you want?"
-
- "I called on business, monsieur."
-
- "Ah, well! this isn't a favorable moment. I must be at Vincennes
- for the races. I'm interested in a horse. So, you understand----"
-
- M. Fortunat was secretly amused by M. Wilkie's nonchalance. "The
- young fellow won't be in so much of a hurry when he learns my
- business," he thought. And he replied aloud: "I can explain what
- brings me in a few words, monsieur."
-
- "Proceed, then."
-
- M. Fortunat began by closing the door which had been intentionally
- left open by the servant; and then, returning to M. Wilkie's side,
- he began with an air of the greatest mystery: "What would you give
- a shrewd man if he suddenly placed you in undisputed possession of
- an immense fortune--of a million--two millions, perhaps?"
-
- He had prepared this little effect most carefully, and he fully
- expected to see Wilkie fall on his knees before him. But not at
- all; the young gentleman's face never moved a muscle; and it was
- in the calmest possible tone, and with his mouth half full that he
- replied: "I know the rest. You come, don't you, to sell me the
- secret of an unclaimed inheritance, which belongs to me? Very
- well, you have come too late."
-
- If the ceiling had fallen and crushed M. Fortunat there and then
- he would, mentally at least, have not been in a more pitiable
- condition. He stood silent, motionless, utterly confounded, with
- his mouth wide open, and such an expression of consternation in
- his eyes that M. Wilkie burst into a hearty laugh. Still the
- agent struggled against fate, and ultimately faltered: "Let me
- explain--permit me----"
-
- "Oh, it would be useless. I know my rights. I have already
- arranged with a party to prosecute my claims; the agreement will
- be signed on the day after to-morrow."
-
- "With whom?"
-
- "Ah, excuse me; that's my affair."
-
- He had finished his chocolate, and he now poured out a glass of
- ice-water, drank it, wiped his mouth, and rose from the table.
- "You will excuse me, my dear sir, if I leave you," he remarked.
- "As I said before, I am going to Vincennes. I have staked a
- thousand louis on 'Pompier de Nanterre,' my horse, and my friends
- have ventured ten times as much. Who knows what may happen if I'm
- not there at the start?" And then, ignoring M. Fortunat as
- completely as if he had not existed, M. Wilkie exclaimed: "Toby,
- you fool! where are you? Is my carriage below? Quick, bring me my
- cane, my gloves, and my glasses. Take down that basket of
- champagne. Run and put on your new livery. Make haste, you
- little beast, I shall be too late."
-
- M. Fortunat left the room. The frightful anger that had followed
- his idiotic stupor sent his blood rushing madly to his brain. A
- purple mist swam before his eyes; there was a loud ringing in his
- ears, and with each pulsation of his heart his head seemed to
- receive a blow from a heavy hammer. His feelings were so terrible
- that he was really frightened. "Am I about to have an attack of
- apoplexy?" he wondered. And, as every surrounding object seemed
- to whirl around him, the very floor itself apparently rising and
- falling under his feet, he remained on the landing waiting for
- this horrible vertigo to subside and doing his best to reason with
- himself. It was fully five minutes before he dared to risk the
- descent; and even when he reached the street, his features were so
- frightfully distorted that Chupin trembled.
-
- He sprang out, assisted his employer into the cab, and bade the
- driver return to the Place de la Bourse. It was really pitiful to
- see the despair which had succeeded M. Fortunat's joyful
- confidence. "This is the end of everything," he groaned. "I'm
- robbed, despoiled, ruined! And such a sure thing as it seemed.
- These misfortunes happen to no one but me! Some one in advance of
- me! Some one else will capture the prize! Oh, if I knew the
- wretch, if I only knew him!"
-
- "One moment," interrupted Chupin; "I think know the man."
-
- M. Fortunat gave a violent start. "Impossible!" he exclaimed.
-
- "Excuse me, monsieur--it must be a vile rascal named Coralth."
-
- It was a bellow rather than a cry of rage that escaped M.
- Fortunat's lips. To a man of his experience, only a glimmer of
- light was required to reveal the whole situation. "Ah! I
- understand!--I see!" he exclaimed. "Yes, you are right, Victor;
- it's he--Coralth--Valorsay's tool! Coralth was the traitor who, in
- obedience to Valorsay's orders, ruined the man who loved
- Mademoiselle Marguerite. The deed was done at Madame d'Argeles's
- house. So Coralth knows her, and knows her secret. It's he who
- has outwitted me." He reflected for a moment, and then, in a very
- different tone, he said: "I shall never see a penny of the count's
- millions, and my forty thousand francs are gone forever; but, as
- Heaven hears me, I will have some satisfaction for my money. Ah!--
- so Coralth and Valorsay combine to ruin me! Very well!--since
- this is the case, I shall espouse the cause of Mademoiselle
- Marguerite and of the unfortunate man they've ruined. Ah, my
- cherubs, you don't know Fortunat yet! Now well see if the
- innocent don't get the best of you, and if they don't unmask you.
- I shall do my best, since you have forced me to do it--and gratis
- too!"
-
- Chupin was radiant; his vengeance was assured. "And I, monsieur,"
- said he, "will give you some information about this Coralth.
- First of all, the scoundrel's married and his wife keeps a
- tobacco-shop somewhere near the Route d'Asnieres. I'll find her
- for you--see if I don't"
-
- The sudden stopping of the vehicle which had reached the Place de
- la Bourse, cut his words short. M. Fortunat ordered him to pay
- the driver, while he himself rushed upstairs, eager to arrange his
- plan of campaign--to use his own expression. In his absence a
- commissionaire had brought a letter for him which Madame Dodelin
- now produced. He broke the seal, and read to his intense
- surprise: "Monsieur--I am the ward of the late Count de Chalusse.
- I must speak to you. Will you grant me an interview on Wednesday
- next, at a quarter-past three o'clock? Yours respectfully,
-
- "MARGUERITE."
-
-
-
- XX.
-
-
- When Mademoiselle Marguerite left the dead count's bedside at ten
- o'clock at night to repair to Pascal Ferailleur's house, she did
- not yet despair of the future. Father, friend, rank, security,
- fortune--she had lost all these in a single moment--but she could
- still see a promise of happiness in the distance.
-
- She suffered undoubtedly, and yet she experienced a sort of bitter
- pleasure at the thought of uniting her life to the man who was as
- unfortunate as herself, who was slandered as she herself had been
- slandered, branded with the most cruel and unjust imputations, and
- had neither fortune nor friends. Others might scorn them; but
- what did they care for the world's disdain so long as they had the
- approval of their consciences? Would not their mutual esteem
- suffice since they loved each other? It seemed to Marguerite that
- their very misfortunes would bind them more closely to each other,
- and cement the bonds of their love more strongly. And if it were
- absolutely necessary for them to leave France--ah, well! they
- would leave it. To them Fatherland would always be the spot where
- they lived together.
-
- As the cab approached the Rue d'Ulm she pictured Pascal's sorrow,
- and the joy and surprise he would feel when she suddenly appeared
- before him, and faltered: "They accuse you--here I am! I know that
- you are innocent, and I love you!"
-
- But the brutal voice of the concierge, informing her of Pascal's
- secret departure, in the most insulting terms, abruptly dispelled
- her dreams. If Pascal had failed her, everything had failed her.
- If she had lost him, she had lost her all. The world seemed
- empty--struggling would be folly--happiness was only an empty
- name. She indeed longed for death!
-
- Madame Leon who had a set of formulas adapted to all
- circumstances, undertook to console her. "Weep, my dear young
- lady, weep; it will do you good. Ah! this is certainly a horrible
- catastrophe. You are young, fortunately, and Time is a great
- consoler. M. Ferailleur isn't the only man on earth. Others will
- love you. There are others who love you already!"
-
- "Silence!" interrupted Marguerite, more revolted than if she had
- heard a libertine whispering shameful proposals in her ear.
- "Silence! I forbid you to add another word." To speak of another--
- what sacrilege! Poor girl. She was one of those whose life is
- bound up in one love alone, and if that fails them--it is death!
-
- The thought that she was utterly alone added to the horror of her
- situation. Whom could she depend upon? Not on Madame Leon. She
- distrusted her; she had no confidence whatever in her. Should she
- ask for the advice of either of her suitors? The Marquis de
- Valorsay inspired her with unconquerable aversion, and she
- despised the so-called General de Fondege. So her only friend,
- her only protector was a stranger, the old justice of the peace
- who had taken her defence, by crushing the slander of the
- servants, and whom she had opened her heart to. But he would soon
- forget her, she thought; and the future, such as it was presented
- to her imagination, seemed a terrible one. However, she was too
- courageous to remain for long in despair--she struggled against
- her sorrow; and the thought that she might, perhaps, reach Pascal
- through M. Fortunat at last occurred to her mind. This hope was
- her sole chance of salvation. She clung to it as a shipwrecked
- mariner clings to the plank which is his only hope of life.
-
- When she returned to the mansion her mind was made up, and she had
- regained her usual composure. For ten minutes or so she had been
- praying by the count's bedside, when M. Bourigeau, the concierge,
- appeared and handed her a letter which had just been brought to
- the house. It was addressed to "Mademoiselle Marguerite de Durtal
- de Chalusse, at the Hotel de Chalusse, Rue de Courcelles."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite blushed. Who was it that addressed her by
- this name which she no longer had the right to bear? She studied
- the handwriting for a moment, but she did not remember ever having
- seen it before. At last, however, she opened the letter and read:
- " My dear, dear child." "Dear child!" indeed. What could this
- mean? Was there any one in the world sufficiently interested in
- her welfare, or loving her enough, to address her in this style?
- She quickly turned the sheet to see the signature; and when her
- eyes fell on it she turned pale. "Ah!" she exclaimed,
- involuntarily, "ah! ah!"
-
- The letter was signed: "Athenais de Fondege." It had been written
- by the General's wife. She resumed her perusal of it, and this is
- what she read: "I this instant hear of the cruel loss you have
- sustained, and also learn that, for want of testamentary
- provisions, the poor Count de Chalusse leaves you, his idolized
- daughter, almost without resources. I will not attempt to offer
- you consolation, God alone can assuage certain sorrows. I should
- come and weep with you if I were not kept in bed by illness. But
- to-morrow, whatever happens, I shall be with you before breakfast.
- It is at such a time as this, my poor dear afflicted child, that
- one can tell one's true friends; and we are yours as I hope to
- prove. The General feels that he should be insulting and
- betraying the memory of a man who was his dearest friend for
- thirty years, if he did not take the count's place, if he did not
- become your second father. He has offered you our modest home;
- you have refused. Why? With the authority conferred upon me by my
- age and my position as the mother of a family, I tell you that you
- ought to accept. What other course can you possibly think of?
- Where would you go, my poor, dear child? But we will discuss this
- matter to-morrow. I shall find a way to persuade you to love us,
- and to allow yourself to be loved. In MY heart you will fill the
- place of the beloved and lamented daughter I have lost--my
- beautiful and gentle Bathilde. Once more I say farewell until to-
- morrow--trusting that you will accept the sympathy and affection
- of your best friend,
-
- "ATHENAIS DE FONDEGE."
-
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was thunderstruck, for the writer of this
- epistle was a lady whom she had only met five or six times, who
- had never visited her, and with whom she had scarcely exchanged
- twenty words. Moreover, she well remembered certain glances with
- which Madame de Fondege had, on one occasion, tried to crush her--
- glances so full of cruel contempt that they had drawn bitter tears
- of sorrow, shame, and anger, from the poor girl. The count
- himself had said to her at the time: "Don't be so childish,
- Marguerite, as to trouble yourself about this foolish and impudent
- woman."
-
- And now this same woman sent her a letter overflowing with
- sympathy, and claimed her affection and confidence in the tone of
- an old and tried friend. Was such a change natural? Not being
- what is called a credulous person, Mademoiselle Marguerite was
- unable to believe it. She divined that Madame de Fondege must
- have had some hidden motive in writing such a letter--but what
- motive was it? Alas! she divined this also only too well. The
- General, suspecting that she had stolen the missing money, had
- imparted his suspicions to his wife; and she, being as avaricious
- and as unscrupulous as himself, was doing her best to secure the
- booty for her son. Such a calculation is a common one nowadays.
- Steal yourself? Fie. never! You would not dare. Besides, you are
- honest. But it is quite a different thing to profit by other
- people's rascality. Besides, there are no risks to be
- encountered.
-
- On perusing the letter a second time, it seemed to Mademoiselle
- Marguerite that she could hear the General and his wife discussing
- the means of obtaining a share of the two millions. She could
- hear Madame de Fondege saying to her husband: "You are a block-
- head! You frightened the girl by your precipitancy and roughness.
- But fortunately, I'm here. Let me manage the affair; and I'll
- prove that women are far more clever than men." And, thereupon,
- she had seized her pen, and commenced this letter. In
- Mademoiselle Marguerite's opinion, the epistle betrayed the joint
- efforts of the pair. She could have sworn that the husband had
- dictated the sentence: "The General feels that he should be
- insulting and betraying the memory of a man who was his dearest
- friend for thirty years, if he did not become your second father."
- On the other hand, the phrase, "I shall find a way to persuade you
- to love us, and to allow yourself to be loved," was unmistakably
- the wife's work. The writer's insincerity was fully revealed by
- one passage of the letter. "You will fill the place of the
- beloved daughter I have lost," wrote Madame de Fondege. It is
- true that she had once had a daughter; but the child had died of
- croup when only six months old, and more than twenty-five years
- previously.
-
- It was strange, moreover, that this letter had not been sent until
- ten o'clock in the evening; but, on reflection, Mademoiselle
- Marguerite was able to explain this circumstance satisfactorily to
- herself. Before taking any decided step, M. and Madame de Fondege
- had wished to consult their son; and they had been unable to see
- him until late in the evening. However, as soon as the brilliant
- hussar had approved the noble scheme concocted by his parents, a
- servant had been dispatched with the letter. All these surmises
- were surely very plausible; but it was difficult to reconcile them
- with the opinion advanced by the magistrate--that M. de Fondege
- must know what had become of the missing millions.
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite did not think of this, however. She was
- losing her presence of mind at thought of the odious suspicions
- which rested on her, suspicions which she had seemed to read in
- the eyes of all who approached her, from Dr. Jodon to the Marquis
- de Valorsay. It is true that the magistrate had taken her
- defence; he had silenced the servants, but would that suffice?
- Would she not remain branded by an abominable accusation? And even
- the consciousness of her innocence did not reassure her, for
- Pascal's case warned her that innocence is not a sufficient
- safeguard against slander.
-
- Could she hope to escape when he had succumbed? She could tell by
- the agony that was torturing her own heart, how much he must have
- suffered. Where was he now? Beyond the frontiers of France? They
- had told her so, but she did not, could not believe it. Knowing
- him as she knew him, it seemed to her impossible that he had
- accepted his fate so quickly and without a struggle. A secret
- presentiment told her that his absence was only feigned, that he
- was only biding his time, and that M. Fortunat would not have far
- to go in search of him. It was in M. de Chalusse's bedroom that
- she thus reflected, but a few steps from the bed on which reposed
- all that was mortal of the man whose weakness had made her life
- one long martyrdom, whose want of foresight had ruined her future,
- but whom she had not the heart to censure. She was standing in
- front of the window with her burning forehead resting against the
- glass. At that very moment Pascal was waiting, seated on the
- curbstone opposite the mansion. At that very moment he was
- watching the shadow on the window-curtain, wondering if it were
- not Marguerite's. If the night had been clear she might have
- discerned the motionless watcher in the street below, and divined
- that it was Pascal. But how could she suspect his presence? How
- could she suspect that he had hastened to the Rue de Courcelles as
- she had hastened to the Rue d'Ulm?
-
- It was almost midnight when a slight noise, a sound of stealthy
- footsteps, made her turn. Madame Leon was leaving the room, and a
- moment later Marguerite heard the house-door leading into the
- garden open and shut again. There was nothing extraordinary about
- such an occurrence, and yet a strange misgiving assailed her.
- Why, she could not explain; but many trivial circumstances,
- suddenly invested with a new and alarming significance, recurred
- to her mind. She remembered that Madame Leon had been restless
- and nervous all the evening. The housekeeper, who was usually so
- inactive, who lounged in her arm-chair for hours together, had
- been moving uneasily about, going up and down stairs at least a
- dozen times, and continually glancing at her watch or the clock.
- Twice, moreover, had the concierge come to tell her that some one
- wished to see her. "Where can she be going now, at midnight?"
- thought Mademoiselle Marguerite; "she who is usually so timid?"
-
- At first, the girl resisted her desire to solve the question; her
- suspicions seemed absurd to her, and, besides, it was distasteful
- to her to play the spy. Still, she listened, waiting to hear
- Madame Leon re-enter the house. But more than a quarter of an
- hour elapsed, and yet the door did not open or close again.
- Either Madame Leon had not left the house at all, or else she was
- still outside. "This is very strange!" thought Mademoiselle
- Marguerite. "Was I mistaken? I must convince myself." And,
- obeying a mysterious influence, stronger than her own will, she
- left the room and went down the stairs. She had reached the hall,
- when the garden door suddenly opened, and Madame Leon came in.
- The lights in the hall were burning brightly, so that it was easy
- to observe the housekeeper's manner and countenance. She was
- panting for breath, like a person who had been running. She was
- very pale, and her dress was disordered. Her cap-strings were
- untied, and her cap had slipped from her head and was hanging over
- her shoulders. "What is the matter with you?" asked Mademoiselle
- Marguerite in astonishment. "Where have you been?"
-
- On seeing the girl Madame Leon recoiled. Should she fly off or
- remain? She hesitated for an instant; and it was easy to read her
- hesitation in her eyes. She decided to remain; but it was with a
- constrained smile and in an unnatural voice that she replied: "Why
- do you speak to me like that, my dear young lady? One might
- suppose you were angry with me. You must know very well that I've
- been in the garden!"
-
- "At this hour of the night?"
-
- "MON DIEU! yes--and not for pleasure, I assure you--not by any
- means--I--I----" She was evidently seeking for some excuse; and,
- for a moment or two, she stammered forth one incoherent sentence
- after another, trying to gain time and imploring Heaven to grant
- her an inspiration.
-
- "Well?" insisted Mademoiselle Marguerite, impatiently. "Why did
- you go out?"
-
- "Ah! I--I--thought I heard Mirza barking in the garden. I thought
- she had been forgotten in all the confusion, and that the poor
- creature had been shut out, so I summoned all my courage, and----"
-
- Mirza was an old spaniel that M. de Chalusse had been very fond
- of, and the animal's caprices were respected by all the inmates of
- the house.
-
- "That's very strange," remarked Mademoiselle Marguerite, "for when
- you rose to leave the room, half an hour ago, Mirza was sleeping
- at your feet."
-
- "What--really--is it possible?"
-
- "It's certain."
-
- But the worthy woman had already recovered her self-possession and
- her accustomed loquacity at the same time. "Ah! my dear young
- lady," she said, bravely, "I'm in such sorrow that I'm losing my
- senses completely. Still, it was only from the kindest of motives
- that I ventured into the garden, and I had scarcely entered it
- before I saw something white run away from me--I felt sure it was
- Mirza--and so I ran after it. But I could find nothing. I called
- 'Mirza! Mirza!' and still nothing. I searched under all the
- trees, and yet I could not find her. It was as dark as pitch, and
- suddenly a terrible fear seized hold of me--such a terrible fright
- that I really believe I called for help, and I ran back to the
- house half crazed."
-
- Any one hearing her would have sworn that she was telling the
- truth. But, unfortunately, her earlier manner had proved her
- guilt.
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was not deceived when she said to herself:
- "I am on the track of some abominable act." However, she had
- sufficient self-control to conceal her suspicions; and she
- pretended to be perfectly satisfied with the explanation which the
- house-keeper had concocted. "Ah, my dear Leon, you are altogether
- too timid; it's absurd," she said, kindly.
-
- The housekeeper hung her head. "I know that I make myself
- ridiculous," she said, humbly. "But how can I help it? When a
- person's frightened, she can't reason. And that white object
- which I saw, as plainly as I see you, what could it have been?"
- And, convinced that her fable was believed, she grew bolder, and
- ventured to add: "Oh, my dear young lady, I shall tremble all
- night if the garden isn't searched. Pray send the servants out to
- look. There are so many thieves and rascals in Paris!"
-
- Under any other circumstances Mademoiselle Marguerite would have
- refused to listen to this ridiculous request; but, determined to
- repay the hypocrite in her own coin, she replied. "Very well; it
- shall be done." And calling M. Casimir and Bourigeau, the
- concierge, she ordered them to take a lantern and explore the
- garden carefully.
-
- They obeyed, though with rather bad grace, not being particularly
- courageous, either of them, and, of course, they found nothing.
-
- "No matter," said Madame Leon, "I feel safe now." And she did
- indeed feel more tranquil in mind. "I had a lucky escape!" she
- said to herself. "What would have become of me, if Mademoiselle
- Marguerite had discovered the truth?"
-
- But the housekeeper congratulated herself on her victory too soon.
- Mademoiselle Marguerite not only suspected her of treason, but she
- was endeavoring to procure proofs of it. She felt certain that
- the plausible housekeeper had deceived her, and cruelly wronged
- her as well. But what she could not understand was, how Madame
- Leon had been able to do so. She had spent a long time in
- fruitless conjectures, when suddenly she remembered the little
- garden gate. "The deceitful creature must have used that gate,"
- she thought.
-
- It was easy for her to verify her suspicion. The little gate had
- not been exactly condemned, but many months had elapsed since it
- had been used; so it would be a very simple matter to ascertain
- whether it had been recently opened or not. "And I will know for
- certain before an hour has passed," said Mademoiselle Marguerite
- to herself.
-
- Having come to this conclusion, she feigned sleep, keeping a sharp
- watch over Madame Leon from between her half-closed eyelids. The
- housekeeper, after twisting uneasily in her arm-chair, at last
- became quiet again; and it was soon evident that she was sleeping
- soundly. Thereupon Mademoiselle Marguerite rose to her feet and
- stole noiselessly from the room downstairs into the garden. She
- had provided herself with a candle and some matches, and as soon
- as she struck a light, she saw that her surmises were correct.
- The little gate had just been opened and closed again. The
- cobwebs round about the bolts were torn and broken; the rust which
- had filled the keyhole had been removed, and on the dust covering
- the lock the impress of a hand could be detected. "And I have
- confided my most precious secrets to this wicked woman!" thought
- Mademoiselle Marguerite. "Fool that I was!"
-
- Already thoroughly convinced, she extinguished her candle. Still,
- having discovered so much, she wished to pursue her investigation
- to the end, and so she opened the little gate. The ground outside
- had been soaked by the recent rains, and had not yet dried, and by
- the light of the neighboring street-lamp, she plainly
- distinguished a number of well-defined footprints on the muddy
- soil. An experienced observer would have realized by the
- disposition of these footprints that something like a struggle had
- taken place here; but Mademoiselle Marguerite was not sufficiently
- expert for that. She only understood what a child would have
- understood--that two people had been standing here for some time.
- Poor girl! She had not seen Pascal when he was sitting in front of
- the mansion some hours before! And now no presentiment warned her
- that these footprints were his. In her opinion, the man who had
- been talking with Madame Leon was either M. de Fondege, or the
- Marquis de Valorsay--that is to say, Madame Leon was hired to
- watch her and to render an account of all she said and did.
-
- Her first impulse was to denounce and dismiss this miserable
- hypocrite; but as she was returning to the house, an idea which an
- old diplomatist need not have been ashamed of entered her mind.
- She said to herself that as Madame Leon was unmasked she was no
- longer to be feared; so why should she be sent away? A known spy
- can undoubtedly be made a most valuable auxiliary. Why shouldn't
- I make use of this wicked woman?" thought Mademoiselle Marguerite.
- "I can conceal from her what I don't wish her to know, and with a
- little skill I can make her carry to her employers such
- information as will serve my plans. By watching her, I shall soon
- discover my enemy; and who knows if, by this means, I may not
- succeed in finding an explanation of the fatality that pursues
- me?"
-
- When Mademoiselle Marguerite returned to her place beside the
- count's bedside, she had calmly and irrevocably made up her mind.
- She would not only retain Madame Leon in her service, but she
- would display even greater confidence in her than before. Such a
- course was most repugnant to Marguerite's loyal, truthful nature;
- but reason whispered to her that in fighting with villains, it is
- often necessary to use their weapons; and she had her honor, her
- life, and her future to defend. A strange and but imperfectly
- defined suspicion had entered her mind. To-night, for the first
- time, she thought she could discover a mysterious connection
- between Pascal's misfortunes and her own. Was it mere chance
- which had struck them at the same time, and in much the same
- manner? Who would have profited by the abominable crime which had
- dishonored her lover, had it not been for M. de Chalusse's death
- and her own firmness? Evidently the Marquis de Valorsay, for whom
- Pascal's flight had left the field clear.
-
- All these thoughts were well calculated to drive away sleep; but
- the poor girl was only twenty, and it was the second night she had
- watched by the count's bedside. Thus at last fatigue overcame
- her, and she fell asleep.
-
- In the morning, about seven o'clock, Madame Leon was obliged to
- shake her to rouse her from the kind of lethargy into which she
- had fallen. "Mademoiselle," said the housekeeper, in her honeyed
- voice; "dear mademoiselle, wake up at once!"
-
- "What is the matter? What is it?"
-
- "Ah! how can I explain? My dear young lady, the undertaker's men
- have come to make arrangements for the ceremony."
-
- Those in charge of the last rites had indeed arrived, and their
- heavy tread could be heard in the hall and in the courtyard. M.
- Casimir, who was bursting with self-sufficiency, hurried here,
- there? and everywhere, indicating, with an imperious gesture,
- where he wished the black hangings, embroidered with silver and
- emblazoned with the De Chalusse arms, to be suspended. As the
- magistrate had given him carte-blanche, he deemed it proper, as he
- remarked to Concierge Bourigeau, to have everything done in grand
- style. But he took good care not to reveal the fact that he had
- exacted a very handsome commission from all the people he
- employed. The hundred francs derived from Chupin had only whetted
- his appetite for more. At all events, he had certainly spared no
- pains in view of having everything as magnificent as possible; and
- it was not until he considered the display thoroughly satisfactory
- that he went to warn Mademoiselle Marguerite. "I come to beg
- mademoiselle to retire to her own room," he said.
-
- "Retire--why?"
-
- He did not reply by words, but pointed to the bed on which the
- body was lying, and the poor girl realized that the moment of
- eternal separation had come. She rose, and dragged herself to the
- bedside. Death had now effaced all traces of the count's last
- agony. His face wore its accustomed expression again, and it
- might have been fancied that he was asleep. For a long time
- Mademoiselle Marguerite stood looking at him, as if to engrave the
- features she would never behold again upon her memory.
- "Mademoiselle," insisted M. Casimir; "mademoiselle, do not remain
- here."
-
- She heard him, and summoning all her strength, she leaned over the
- bed, kissed M. de Chalusse, and went away. But she was too late,
- for in passing through the hall she encountered the undertakers,
- who carried on their shoulders a long metallic case enclosed in
- two oaken ones. And she had scarcely reached her own room before
- a smell of resin told her that the men were closing the coffin
- which contained all that was mortal of M. de Chalusse, her father.
-
- So, none of those terrible details, which so increase one's grief,
- were spared her. But she had already suffered so much that she
- had reached a state of gloomy apathy, almost insensibility; and
- the exercise of her faculties was virtually suspended. Whiter
- than marble, she fell, rather than seated herself, on a chair,
- scarcely perceiving Madame Leon, who had followed her.
-
- The worthy housekeeper was greatly excited, and not without cause.
- As there were no relations, it had been decided that M. de
- Fondege, the count's oldest friend, should do the honors of the
- mansion to the persons invited to attend the funeral; and he had
- sworn that he would be under arms at daybreak, and that they might
- positively depend upon him. But the hour fixed for the ceremony
- was approaching, several persons had already arrived, and yet M.
- de Fondege had not put in an appearance. "It is
- incomprehensible," exclaimed Madame Leon. "The General is usually
- punctuality personified. He must have met with some accident."
- And in her anxiety she stationed herself at the window, whence she
- could command a view of the courtyard, carefully scrutinizing
- every fresh arrival.
-
- At last, about half-past nine o'clock, she suddenly exclaimed:
- "Here he is! Do you hear, mademoiselle, here's the General!"
-
- A moment later, indeed, there was a gentle rap at the door, and M.
- de Fondege entered. "Ah, I'm late!" he exclaimed; "but, dash it
- all! it's not my fault!" And, struck by Mademoiselle Marguerite's
- immobility, he advanced and took her hand. "And you, my dear
- little one, what is the matter with you?" he asked. "Have you
- been ill? You are frightfully pale."
-
- She succeeded in shaking off the torpor which was stealing over
- her, and replied in a faint voice; "I am not ill, monsieur."
-
- "So much the better, my dear child, so much the better. It is our
- little heart that is suffering, is it not? Yes--yes--I understand.
- But your old friends will console you. You received my wife's
- letter, did you not? Ah, well! what she told you, she will do--she
- will do it. And to prove it, in spite of her illness, she
- followed me--in fact, she is here!"
-
-
-
- XXI.
-
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite sprang to her feet, quivering with
- indignation. Her eyes sparkled and her lips trembled as she threw
- back her head with a superb gesture of scorn, which loosened her
- beautiful dark hair, and caused it to fall in rippling masses over
- her shoulders. "Ah! Madame de Fondege is here!" she repeated, in
- a tone of crushing contempt--"Madame de Fondege, your wife, here!"
-
- It seemed to her an impossibility to receive the hypocrite who had
- written the letter of the previous evening--the accomplice of the
- scoundrels who took advantage of her wretchedness and isolation.
- Her heart revolted at the thought of meeting this woman, who had
- neither conscience nor shame, who could stoop so low as to
- intrigue for the millions which she fancied had been stolen.
- Mademoiselle Marguerite was about to forbid her to enter, or to
- retire herself, when the thought of her determination to act
- stealthily restrained her. She instantly realized her imprudence,
- and, mastering herself with a great effort, she murmured: "Madame
- de Fondege is too kind! How can I ever express my gratitude?"
-
- Madame de Fondege must have heard this, for at the same moment she
- entered the room. She was short, and very stout--a faded blonde,
- with her complexion spoilt by a multitude of freckles. She had
- very large hands, broad, thick feet, and a shrill voice; and the
- vulgarity of her appearance was all the more noticeable on account
- of her pretensions to elegance. For although her father had been
- a wood-merchant, she boasted of her exalted birth, and endeavored
- to impress people with the magnificence of her style of living,
- though her fortune was problematical, and her household conducted
- in the most frugal style. Her attire suggested a continual
- conflict between elegance and economy--between real poverty and
- feigned prodigality. She wore a corsage and overskirt of black
- satin; but the upper part of the underskirt, which was not
- visible, was made of lute-string costing thirty sous a yard, and
- her laces were Chantilly only in appearance. Still, her love of
- finery had never carried her so far as shop-lifting, or induced
- her to part with her honor for gewgaws--irregularities which are
- so common nowadays, even among wives and mothers of families, that
- people are no longer astonished to hear of them.
-
- No--Madame de Fondege was a faithful wife, in the strict and legal
- sense of the word. But how she revenged herself! She was
- "virtuous;" but so dangerously virtuous that one might have
- supposed she was so against her will, and that she bitterly
- regretted it. She ruled her husband with a rod of iron. And he
- who was so terrible in appearance, he who twirled his ferocious
- mustaches in such a threatening manner, he who swore horribly
- enough to make an old hussar blush, became more submissive than a
- child, and more timid than a lamb when he was beside his wife. He
- trembled when she turned her pale blue eyes upon him in a certain
- fashion. And woe to him if he ventured to rebel. She suppressed
- his pocket-money, and during these penitential seasons he was
- reduced to the necessity of asking his friends to lend him twenty-
- franc pieces, which he generally forgot to return.
-
- Madame de Fondege was, as a rule, most imperious, envious, and
- spiteful in disposition; but on coming to the Hotel de Chalusse
- she had provided herself with any amount of sweetness and
- sensibility, and when she entered the room, she held her
- handkerchief to her lips as if to stifle her sobs. The General
- led her toward Mademoiselle Marguerite, and, in a semi-solemn,
- semi-sentimental tone, he exclaimed: "Dear Athenais, this is the
- daughter of my best and oldest friend. I know your heart--I know
- that she will find in you a second mother."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite stood speechless and rigid. Persuaded
- that Madame de Fondege was about to throw her arms round her neck
- and kiss her, she was imposing the most terrible constraint upon
- herself, in order to conceal her horror and aversion. But she was
- unnecessarily alarmed. The hypocrisy of the General's wife was
- superior to that of Madame Leon. Madame de Fondege contented
- herself with pressing Mademoiselle Marguerite's hands and
- faltering: "What a misfortune! So young--so sudden! It is
- frightful!" And, as she received no reply, she added, with an air
- of sorrowful dignity: "I dare not ask your full confidence, my
- dear unfortunate child. Confidence can be born only of long
- acquaintance and mutual esteem. But you will learn to know me.
- You will give me that sweet name of mother when I shall have
- deserved it."
-
- Standing at a little distance off, the General listened with the
- air of a man who has a profound respect for his wife's ability.
- "Now the ice is broken," he thought, "it will be strange if
- Athenais doesn't do whatever she pleases with that little savage."
-
- His hopes were so brightly reflected upon his countenance, that
- Madame Leon, who was furtively watching him, became alarmed. "Ah!
- what do these people want?" she said to herself; "and what do all
- these endearments mean? Upon my word, I must warn my patron at
- once." And, fancying that no one noticed her, she slipped quietly
- and noiselessly from the room.
-
- But Mademoiselle Marguerite was on the watch. Determined to
- fathom the plotting that was going on around her, and frustrate
- it, she realized that everything depended upon her watchfulness
- and her ability to profit even by the most futile incidents. She
- had noticed the General's triumphant smile, and the look of
- anxiety that had suddenly clouded Madame Leon's face. so, without
- troubling herself about "the proprieties," she asked M. and Madame
- de Fondege to excuse her for a second, and darted alter the
- housekeeper. Ah! she did not need to go far. Leaning over the
- banisters, she saw Madame Leon and the Marquis de Valorsay in
- earnest conversation in the hall below; the marquis as phlegmatic
- and as haughty as usual, but the house-keeper fairly excited.
- Marguerite at once understood that as Madame Leon knew that the
- marquis was among the funeral guests, she had gone to warn him of
- Madame de Fondege's presence. This trivial circumstance proved
- that M. de Fondege's interests were opposed to those of M. de
- Valorsay; that they must, therefore, hate each other, and that,
- with a little patience and skill, she might utilize them, one
- against the other. It also proved that Madame Leon was the
- Marquis de Valorsay's paid spy and that he must therefore have
- long been aware of Pascal's existence. But she lacked the time to
- follow out this train of thought. Her absence might awaken the
- Fondeges' suspicions; and her success depended on letting them
- suppose that she was their dupe. She therefore returned to them
- as soon as possible, excusing herself for her abrupt departure as
- well as she could; but she was not accustomed to deceive, and her
- embarrassment might have betrayed her had it not been for the
- General, who fortunately interrupted her by saying: "I, too, must
- excuse myself, my dear child; but Madame de Fondege will remain
- with you. I must fulfil a sacred duty. They are waiting for me
- downstairs, and they are no doubt becoming impatient. It is the
- first time in my life that I was ever behind time."
-
- The General was right in losing no more time. At least a hundred
- and fifty guests had assembled in the reception-rooms on the
- ground floor, and they were beginning to think it very strange
- that they should be kept waiting in this style. And yet curiosity
- somewhat tempered their impatience. Some of the strange
- circumstances attending the count's death had been noised abroad;
- and some well-informed persons declared that a fabulous sum of
- money had been stolen by a young girl. It is true, they did not
- think this embezzlement a positive crime. It certainly proved
- that the young lady in question possessed a strong and determined
- character; and many of the proudest among the guests would gladly
- have taken the place of De Valorsay, who, it was rumored, was
- about to marry the pretty thief and her millions.
-
- The person who was most disturbed by the delay was the master of
- the ceremonies. Arrayed in his best uniform, his thin legs
- encased in black silk stockings, his mantle thrown gracefully over
- his shoulders, and his cocked hat under his arm, he was looking
- anxiously about for some one in the assembled crowd to whom he
- could give the signal for departure. He was already talking of
- starting off when M. de Fondege appeared. The friends of M. de
- Chalusse who were to hold the cords of the pall came forward.
- There was a moment's confusion, then the hearse started, and the
- whole cortege filed out of the courtyard.
-
- Deep silence followed, so deep that the noise made in closing the
- heavy gates came upon one with startling effect. "Ah!" moaned
- Madame de Fondege, "it is over."
-
- Marguerite's only reply was a despairing gesture. It would have
- been impossible for her to articulate a syllable--her tears were
- choking her. What would she not have given to be alone at this
- moment--to have been able to abandon herself without constraint to
- her emotions! Alas! prudence condemned her to play a part even
- now. The thought of her future and her honor lent her strength to
- submit to the deceitful consolations of a woman whom she knew to
- be a dangerous enemy. And the General's wife was by no means
- sparing of her consolatory phrases; in fact, it was only after a
- long homily on the uncertainty of life below that she ventured to
- approach the subject of her letter of the previous evening. "For
- it is necessary to face the inevitable," she pursued. "The
- troublesome realities of life have no respect for our grief. So
- it is with you, my dear child; you would find a bitter pleasure in
- giving vent to your sorrow, but you are compelled to think of your
- future. As M. de Chalusse has no heirs, this house will be
- closed--you can remain here no longer."
-
- "I know it, madame."
-
- "Where will you go?"
-
- "Alas! I don't know."
-
- Madame de Fondege raised her handkerchief to her eyes as if to
- wipe a furtive tear away, and then, almost roughly, she exclaimed:
- "I must tell you the truth, my child. Listen to me. I see only
- two courses for you to adopt. Either to ask the protection of
- some respectable family, or to enter a convent. This is your only
- hope of safety."
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite bowed her head, without replying. To
- learn the plans which the General's wife had formed she must let
- her disclose them. However, the girl's silence seemed to make
- Madame de Fondege uncomfortable, and at last she resumed: "Is it
- possible that you think of braving the perils of life alone? I
- cannot believe it! It would be madness. Young, beautiful, and
- attractive as you are, it is impossible for you to live
- unprotected. Even if you had sufficient strength of character to
- lead a pure and honest life, the world would none the less refuse
- you its esteem. Mere prejudice, you say? You are quite right; but
- it is nevertheless true that a young girl who braves public
- opinion is lost."
-
- It was easy to see by Madame de Fondege's earnestness that she
- feared Mademoiselle Marguerite would avail herself of this
- opportunity of recovering her liberty. "What shall I do, then?"
- asked the girl.
-
- "There is the convent."
-
- "But I love life."
-
- "Then ask the protection of some respectable family."
-
- "The idea of being in any one's charge is disagreeable to me."
-
- Strange to say, Madame de Fondege did not protest, did not speak
- of her own house. She was too proud for that. Having once
- offered hospitality, she thought it would arouse suspicion if she
- insisted. So she contented herself with enumerating the arguments
- for and against the two propositions. remarking from time to
- time: "Come, you must decide! Don't wait until the last moment!"
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite had already decided but before announcing
- her decision she wished to confer with the only friend she had in
- the world--the old justice of the peace. On the previous evening
- he had said to her: "Farewell until to-morrow," and knowing that
- his work in the house had not been concluded, she was extremely
- surprised that he had not yet put in an appearance.
-
- While conversing with Madame de Fondege she had dexterously
- avoided compromising herself in any way when suddenly a servant
- appeared and announced the magistrate's arrival. He entered the
- room, with his usual benevolent smile upon his lips, but his
- searching eyes were never once taken off Madame de Fondege's face.
- He bowed, made a few polite remarks, and then addressing
- Marguerite, he said: "I must speak with you, mademoiselle, at
- once. You may tell madame, however, that you will certainly
- return in less than a quarter of an hour."
-
- Marguerite followed him, and when they were alone in the count's
- study and the doors had been carefully closed, the magistrate
- exclaimed: "I have been thinking a great deal of you, my child, a
- great deal; and it seems to me that I can explain certain things
- which worried you yesterday. But first of all, what has happened
- since I left you?"
-
- Briefly, but with remarkable precision, Marguerite recounted the
- various incidents which had occurred--her useless journey to the
- Rue d'Ulm, Madame Leon's strange midnight ramble and conversation
- with the Marquis de Valorsay, Madame de Fondege's letter, and
- lastly, her visit and all that she had said.
-
- The magistrate listened with his eyes fixed on his ring "This is
- very serious, very serious," he said at last. "Perhaps you are
- right. Perhaps M. Ferailleur is innocent. And yet, why should he
- abscond? why should he leave the country?"
-
- "Ah! monsieur, Pascal's flight is only feigned. He is in Paris--
- concealed somewhere--I'm sure of it; and I know a man who will
- find him for me. Only one thing puzzles me--his silence. To
- disappear without a word, without giving me any sign of life----"
-
- The magistrate interrupted her by a gesture. "I see nothing
- surprising in that since your companion is the Marquis de
- Valorsay's spy. How do you know that she has not intercepted or
- destroyed some letter from M. Pascal?"
-
- Mademoiselle Marguerite turned pale. "Great Heavens! how blind I
- have been!" she exclaimed. "I did not think of that. Oh, the
- wretch! if one could only question her and make her confess her
- crime. It is horrible to think that if I wish to arrive at the
- truth, I must remain with her and treat her in the future just as
- I have treated her till now."
-
- But the magistrate was not the man to wander from the subject he
- was investigating. "Let us return to Madame de Fondege," said he.
- "She is extremely unwilling to see you go out into the world
- alone. Why?--through affection? No. Why, then? This is what we
- must ascertain. Secondly, she seems indifferent as to whether you
- accept her hospitality or enter a convent."
-
- "She seems to prefer that I should enter a convent."
-
- "Very well. What conclusion can we draw from that? Simply, that
- the Fondege family don't particularly care about keeping you with
- them, or marrying you to their son. If they don't desire this, it
- is because they are perfectly sure that the missing money was not
- taken by you. Now, let me ask, how can they be so certain? Simply
- because they know where the missing millions are--and if they
- know----"
-
- "Ah! monsieur, it is because they've stolen them!"
-
- The magistrate was silent. He had turned the bezel of his ring
- inside, a sure sign of stormy weather, so his clerk would have
- said--and though he had his features under excellent control he
- could not entirely conceal some signs of a severe mental conflict
- he was undergoing. "Well, yes, my child," he said, at last.
- "Yes, it is my conviction that the Fondeges possess the millions
- you saw in the count's escritoire, and which we have been unable
- to find. How they obtained possession of the money I can't
- conceive--but they have it, or else logic is no longer logic." He
- paused again for a moment, and then he resumed, more slowly: "In
- acquainting you with my opinion on this subject, I have given you,
- a young girl, almost a child, a proof of esteem and confidence
- which, it seems to me, few men are worthy of; for I may be
- deceived, and a magistrate ought not to accuse a person unless he
- is absolutely certain of his guilt. So you must forget what I
- have just told you, Mademoiselle Marguerite."
-
- She looked at him with an air of utter astonishment. "You advise
- me to forget," she murmured, "you wish me to forget."
-
- "Yes; you must conceal these suspicions in the deepest recesses of
- your heart, until the time comes when you have sufficient proof to
- convict the culprits. It is true that it will be a difficult task
- to collect such proofs; but it is not impossible, with the aid of
- time, which divulges so many crimes. And you may count upon me; I
- will give you the benefit of all my influence and experience. It
- shall never be said that I allowed a defenceless girl to be
- crushed while I saw any chance of saving her."
-
- Tears came to Mademoiselle Marguerite's eyes. So the world was
- not composed entirely of scoundrels! "Ah! how kind you are,
- monsieur," she said; "how kind you are!"
-
- "To be sure!" he interrupted, in a benevolent tone. "But, my
- child, you must help yourself. Remember this: if the Fondeges
- suspect our suspicions, all is lost. Repeat this to yourself at
- every moment in the day--and be discreet, impenetrable; for people
- with unclean consciences and hands are always distrustful of
- others."
-
- There was no necessity to say anything more on this point; and so,
- with a sudden change of tone he asked: "Have you any plan?"
-
- She felt that she could, and ought, to confide everything to this
- worthy old man, and so rising to her feet, with a look of energy
- and determination on her face, she replied in a firm voice: "My
- decision is taken, monsieur, subject, of course, to your approval.
- In the first place I shall keep Madame Leon with me, in whatever
- capacity she likes, it doesn't matter what. Through her I shall
- no doubt be able to watch the Marquis de Valorsay, and perhaps
- eventually discover his hopes and his aim. In the second place, I
- shall accept the hospitality offered me by the General and his
- wife. With them, I shall be in the very centre of the intrigue,
- and in a position to collect proofs of their infamy."
-
- The magistrate gave vent to an exclamation of delight. "You are a
- brave girl, Mademoiselle Marguerite," he said, "and at the same
- time a prudent one. Yes; that is the proper course to pursue."
-
- Nothing now remained save to make arrangements for her departure.
- She possessed some very handsome diamonds and other costly jewels;
- should she keep them? "They are undoubtedly mine," said she; "but
- after the infamous accusations levelled at me, I can't consent to
- take them away with me. They are worth a very handsome amount. I
- shall leave them with you, monsieur. If the courts restore them
- to me later--well--I shall take them--and not without pleasure, I
- frankly confess." Then as the magistrate questioned her anxiously
- as to her resources, she replied: "Oh! I'm not without money. M.
- de Chalusse was generosity itself, and my tastes are very simple.
- From the money he gave me for my clothes I saved more than eight
- thousand francs in less than six months. That is more than
- sufficient to maintain me for a year."
-
- The magistrate then explained that when the court took possession
- of this immense estate, it would surely allow her a certain sum.
- For whether the count was her father or not, he was at any rate
- her officially appointed guardian, and she would be considered a
- minor. And in support of his assertion, he quoted Article 367 of
- the Civil Code, which says: "In the event of the officially
- appointed guardian dying without adopting, his ward, the said ward
- shall be furnished during her minority with the means of
- subsistence from the said guardian's estate," etc., etc.
-
- "An additional reason why I should give up my jewels," said
- Mademoiselle Marguerite.
-
- The only point that now remained was to decide upon some plan by
- which she could communicate with her friend, the magistrate,
- without the knowledge of the General or his wife. The magistrate
- accordingly explained a system of correspondence which would defy
- the closest surveillance, and then added: "Now, make haste back to
- your visitor. Who knows what suspicions your absence may have
- caused her?"
-
- But Mademoiselle Marguerite had one more request to make. She had
- often seen in M. de Chalusse's possession a little note-book, in
- which he entered the names and addresses of the persons with whom
- he had business transactions. M. Fortunat's address must be
- there, so she asked and obtained permission to examine this note-
- book, and to her great joy, under the letter "F," she found the
- entry: "Fortunat (Isidore), No. 28 Place de la Bourse." "Ah! I'm
- sure that I shall find Pascal now!" she exclaimed. And after once
- more thanking the magistrate, she returned to her room again.
-
- Madame de Fondege was awaiting her with feverish impatience. "How
- long you stayed!" she cried.
-
- "I had so many explanations to give, madame."
-
- "How you are tormented, my poor child!"
-
- "Oh, shamefully!"
-
- This furnished Madame de Fondege with another excuse for
- proffering her advice. But Mademoiselle Marguerite would not
- allow herself to be convinced at once. She raised a great many
- objections, and parleyed for a long time before telling Madame de
- Fondege that she would be happy to accept the hospitality which
- had been offered her. And her consent was by no means
- unconditional. She insisted on paying her board, and expressed
- the wish to retain the services of Madame Leon to whom she was so
- much attached. The worthy housekeeper was present at this
- conference. For an instant she had feared that Mademoiselle
- Marguerite suspected her manoeuvres but her fears were now
- dispelled, and she even congratulated herself on her skilfulness.
- Everything was arranged, and the agreement had been sealed with a
- kiss, when the General returned about four o'clock. "Ah, my
- dear!" cried his wife, "what happiness! We have a daughter!"
-
- But even this intelligence was scarcely sufficient to revive her
- husband's drooping spirits. He had almost fainted when he heard
- the earth falling on M. de Chalusse's coffin; and this display of
- weakness on the part of a man adorned with such terrible and
- ferocious mustaches had excited no little comment. "Yes, it is a
- great happiness!" he now replied. "But thunder and lightning! I
- never doubted the dear girl's heart!"
-
- Still both he and his wife could scarcely conceal their
- disappointment when the magistrate informed them that their
- beloved daughter would not take her diamonds. "Dash it!" growled
- the General. "I recognize her father in this! What delicacy!
- almost too much, perhaps!"
-
- However, when the magistrate informed him that the court would
- undoubtedly order the restitution of the jewels, his face
- brightened again, and he went down to superintend the removal of
- Mademoiselle Marguerite's trunks, which were being loaded on one
- of the vehicles of the establishment.
-
- Then the moment of departure came. Mademoiselle Marguerite
- acknowledged the parting remarks of the servants, who were
- secretly delighted to be freed from her presence, and then, before
- entering the carriage, she cast a long, sad look upon this
- princely mansion which she had once had the right to believe her
- own, but which she was, alas! now leaving, in all probability, for
- ever.
-
-
-
- The conclusion of this exciting narrative will be found in the
- volume called "Baron Trigault's Vengeance."
-
-
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Count's Millions by Emile Gaboriau
-
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