* * * *
“Madame,” said Monsieur
de Soulas, addressing the Baroness, while waiting
till his soup was cool enough to swallow, and affecting
to give a romantic turn to his narrative, “one
fine morning the mail coach dropped at the Hotel National
a gentleman from Paris, who, after seeking apartments,
made up his mind in favor of the first floor in Mademoiselle
Galard’s house, Rue du Perron. Then the
stranger went straight to the Mairie, and had himself
registered as a resident with all political qualifications.
Finally, he had his name entered on the list of the
barristers to the Court, showing his title in due form,
and he left his card on all his new colleagues, the
Ministerial officials, the Councillors of the Court,
and the members of the bench, with the name, ‘ALBERT
SAVARON.’”
“The name of Savaron is famous,”
said Mademoiselle de Watteville, who was strong in
heraldic information. “The Savarons of Savarus
are one of the oldest, noblest, and richest families
in Belgium.”
“He is a Frenchman, and no man’s
son,” replied Amedee de Soulas. “If
he wishes to bear the arms of the Savarons of Savarus,
he must add a bar-sinister. There is no one left
of the Brabant family but a Mademoiselle de Savarus,
a rich heiress, and unmarried.”
“The bar-sinister is, of course,
the badge of a bastard; but the bastard of a Comte
de Savarus is noble,” answered Rosalie.
“Enough, that will do, mademoiselle!”
said the Baroness.
“You insisted on her learning
heraldry,” said Monsieur de Watteville, “and
she knows it very well.”
“Go on, I beg, Monsieur de Soulas.”
“You may suppose that in a town
where everything is classified, known, pigeon-holed,
ticketed, and numbered, as in Besancon, Albert Savaron
was received without hesitation by the lawyers of the
town. They were satisfied to say, ’Here
is a man who does not know his Besancon. Who
the devil can have sent him here? What can he
hope to do? Sending his card to the Judges instead
of calling in person! What a blunder!’ And
so, three days after, Savaron had ceased to exist.
He took as his servant old Monsieur Galard’s
man—Galard being dead—Jerome,
who can cook a little. Albert Savaron was all
the more completely forgotten, because no one had
seen him or met him anywhere.”
“Then, does he not go to mass?”
asked Madame de Chavoncourt.
“He goes on Sundays to Saint-Pierre,
but to the early service at eight in the morning.
He rises every night between one and two in the morning,
works till eight, has his breakfast, and then goes
on working. He walks in his garden, going round
fifty, or perhaps sixty times; then he goes in, dines,
and goes to bed between six and seven.”
“How did you learn all that?”
Madame de Chavoncourt asked Monsieur de Soulas.
“In the first place, madame,
I live in the Rue Neuve, at the corner of the Rue
du Perron; I look out on the house where this mysterious
personage lodges; then, of course, there are communications
between my tiger and Jerome.”
“And you gossip with Babylas?”
“What would you have me do out riding?”
“Well—and how was
it that you engaged a stranger for your defence?”
asked the Baroness, thus placing the conversation in
the hands of the Vicar-General.
“The President of the Court
played this pleader a trick by appointing him to defend
at the Assizes a half-witted peasant accused of forgery.
But Monsieur Savaron procured the poor man’s
acquittal by proving his innocence and showing that
he had been a tool in the hands of the real culprits.
Not only did his line of defence succeed, but it led
to the arrest of two of the witnesses, who were proved
guilty and condemned. His speech struck the Court
and the jury. One of these, a merchant, placed
a difficult case next day in the hands of Monsieur
Savaron, and he won it. In the position in which
we found ourselves, Monsieur Berryer finding it impossible
to come to Besancon, Monsieur de Garcenault advised
him to employ this Monsieur Albert Savaron, foretelling
our success. As soon as I saw him and heard him,
I felt faith in him, and I was not wrong.”
“Is he then so extraordinary?”
asked Madame de Chavoncourt.
“Certainly, madame,” replied the Vicar-General.
“Well, tell us about it,” said Madame
de Watteville.
“The first time I saw him,”
said the Abbe de Grancey, “he received me in
his outer room next the ante-room—old Galard’s
drawing-room—which he has had painted like
old oak, and which I found entirely lined with law-books,
arranged on shelves also painted as old oak. The
painting and the books are the sole decoration of
the room, for the furniture consists of an old writing
table of carved wood, six old armchairs covered with
tapestry, window curtains of gray stuff bordered with
green, and a green carpet over the floor. The
ante-room stove heats this library as well. As
I waited there I did not picture my advocate as a
young man. But this singular setting is in perfect
harmony with his person; for Monsieur Savaron came
out in a black merino dressing-gown tied with a red
cord, red slippers, a red flannel waistcoat, and a
red smoking-cap.”
“The devil’s colors!” exclaimed
Madame de Watteville.
“Yes,” said the Abbe;
“but a magnificent head. Black hair already
streaked with a little gray, hair like that of Saint
Peter and Saint Paul in pictures, with thick shining
curls, hair as stiff as horse-hair; a round white
throat like a woman’s; a splendid forehead,
furrowed by the strong median line which great schemes,
great thoughts, deep meditations stamp on a great
man’s brow; an olive complexion marbled with
red, a square nose, eyes of flame, hollow cheeks,
with two long lines, betraying much suffering, a mouth
with a sardonic smile, and a small chin, narrow, and
too short; crow’s feet on his temples; deep-set
eyes, moving in their sockets like burning balls;
but, in spite of all these indications of a violently
passionate nature, his manner was calm, deeply resigned,
and his voice of penetrating sweetness, which surprised
me in Court by its easy flow; a true orator’s
voice, now clear and appealing, sometimes insinuating,
but a voice of thunder when needful, and lending itself
to sarcasm to become incisive.
“Monsieur Albert Savaron is
of middle height, neither stout nor thin. And
his hands are those of a prelate.
“The second time I called on
him he received me in his bed-room, adjoining the
library, and smiled at my astonishment when I saw there
a wretched chest of drawers, a shabby carpet, a camp-bed,
and cotton window-curtains. He came out of his
private room, to which no one is admitted, as Jerome
informed me; the man did not go in, but merely knocked
at the door.
“The third time he was breakfasting
in his library on the most frugal fare; but on this
occasion, as he had spent the night studying our documents,
as I had my attorney with me, and as that worthy Monsieur
Girardet is long-winded, I had leisure to study the
stranger. He certainly is no ordinary man.
There is more than one secret behind that face, at
once so terrible and so gentle, patient and yet impatient,
broad and yet hollow. I saw, too, that he stooped
a little, like all men who have some heavy burden
to bear.”
“Why did so eloquent a man leave
Paris? For what purpose did he come to Besancon?”
asked pretty Madame de Chavoncourt. “Could
no one tell him how little chance a stranger has of
succeeding here? The good folks of Besancon will
make use of him, but they will not allow him to make
use of them. Why, having come, did he make so
little effort that it needed a freak of the President’s
to bring him forward?”
“After carefully studying that
fine head,” said the Abbe, looking keenly at
the lady who had interrupted him, in such a way as
to suggest that there was something he would not tell,
“and especially after hearing him this morning
reply to one of the bigwigs of the Paris Bar, I believe
that this man, who may be five-and-thirty, will by
and by make a great sensation.”
“Why should we discuss him?
You have gained your action, and paid him,”
said Madame de Watteville, watching her daughter, who,
all the time the Vicar-General had been speaking,
seemed to hang on his lips.
The conversation changed, and no more
was heard of Albert Savaron.
The portrait sketched by the cleverest
of the Vicars-General of the diocese had all the greater
charm for Rosalie because there was a romance behind
it. For the first time in her life she had come
across the marvelous, the exceptional, which smiles
on every youthful imagination, and which curiosity,
so eager at Rosalie’s age, goes forth to meet
half-way. What an ideal being was this Albert—gloomy,
unhappy, eloquent, laborious, as compared by Mademoiselle
de Watteville to that chubby fat Count, bursting with
health, paying compliments, and talking of the fashions
in the very face of the splendor of the old counts
of Rupt. Amedee had cost her many quarrels and
scoldings, and, indeed, she knew him only too well;
while this Albert Savaron offered many enigmas to
be solved.
“Albert Savaron de Savarus,” she repeated
to herself.
Now, to see him, to catch sight of
him! This was the desire of the girl to whom
desire was hitherto unknown. She pondered in her
heart, in her fancy, in her brain, the least phrases
used by the Abbe de Grancey, for all his words had
told.
“A fine forehead!” said
she to herself, looking at the head of every man seated
at the table; “I do not see one fine one.—Monsieur
de Soulas’ is too prominent; Monsieur de Grancey’s
is fine, but he is seventy, and has no hair, it is
impossible to see where his forehead ends.”
“What is the matter, Rosalie; you are eating
nothing?”
“I am not hungry, mamma,”
said she. “A prelate’s hands——”
she went on to herself. “I cannot remember
our handsome Archbishop’s hands, though he confirmed
me.”
Finally, in the midst of her coming
and going in the labyrinth of her meditations, she
remembered a lighted window she had seen from her
bed, gleaming through the trees of the two adjoining
gardens, when she had happened to wake in the night.
. . . “Then that was his light!”
thought she. “I might see him!—I
will see him.”
“Monsieur de Grancey, is the
Chapter’s lawsuit quite settled?” said
Rosalie point-blank to the Vicar-General, during a
moment of silence.
Madame de Watteville exchanged rapid
glances with the Vicar-General.
“What can that matter to you,
my dear child?” she said to Rosalie, with an
affected sweetness which made her daughter cautious
for the rest of her days.
“It might be carried to the
Court of Appeal, but our adversaries will think twice
about that,” replied the Abbe.
“I never could have believed
that Rosalie would think about a lawsuit all through
a dinner,” remarked Madame de Watteville.
“Nor I either,” said Rosalie,
in a dreamy way that made every one laugh. “But
Monsieur de Grancey was so full of it, that I was
interested.”
The company rose from table and returned
to the drawing-room. All through the evening
Rosalie listened in case Albert Savaron should be
mentioned again; but beyond the congratulations offered
by each newcomer to the Abbe on having gained his
suit, to which no one added any praise of the advocate,
no more was said about it. Mademoiselle de Watteville
impatiently looked forward to bedtime. She had
promised herself to wake at between two and three
in the morning, and to look at Albert’s dressing-room
windows. When the hour came, she felt almost
pleasure in gazing at the glimmer from the lawyer’s
candles that shone through the trees, now almost bare
of their leaves. By the help of the strong sight
of a young girl, which curiosity seems to make longer,
she saw Albert writing, and fancied she could distinguish
the color of the furniture, which she thought was
red. From the chimney above the roof rose a thick
column of smoke.
“While all the world is sleeping,
he is awake—like God!” thought she.
The education of girls brings with
it such serious problems—for the future
of a nation is in the mother—that the University
of France long since set itself the task of having
nothing to do with it. Here is one of these problems:
Ought girls to be informed on all points? Ought
their minds to be under restraint? It need not
be said that the religious system is one of restraint.
If you enlighten them, you make them demons before
their time; if you keep them from thinking, you end
in the sudden explosion so well shown by Moliere in
the character of Agnes, and you leave this suppressed
mind, so fresh and clear-seeing, as swift and as logical
as that of a savage, at the mercy of an accident.
This inevitable crisis was brought on in Mademoiselle
de Watteville by the portrait which one of the most
prudent Abbes of the Chapter of Besancon imprudently
allowed himself to sketch at a dinner party.
Next morning, Mademoiselle de Watteville,
while dressing, necessarily looked out at Albert Savaron
walking in the garden adjoining that of the Hotel
de Rupt.
“What would have become of me,”
thought she, “if he had lived anywhere else?
Here I can, at any rate, see him.—What is
he thinking about?”
Having seen this extraordinary man,
though at a distance, the only man whose countenance
stood forth in contrast with crowds of Besancon faces
she had hitherto met with, Rosalie at once jumped at
the idea of getting into his house, of ascertaining
the reason of so much mystery, of hearing that eloquent
voice, of winning a glance from those fine eyes.
All this she set her heart on, but how could she achieve
it?
All that day she drew her needle through
her embroidery with the obtuse concentration of a
girl who, like Agnes, seems to be thinking of nothing,
but who is reflecting on things in general so deeply,
that her artifice is unfailing. As a result of
this profound meditation, Rosalie thought she would
go to confession. Next morning, after Mass, she
had a brief interview with the Abbe Giroud at Saint-Pierre,
and managed so ingeniously that the hour of her confession
was fixed for Sunday morning at half-past seven, before
the eight o’clock Mass. She committed herself
to a dozen fibs in order to find herself, just for
once, in the church at the hour when the lawyer came
to Mass. Then she was seized with an impulse
of extreme affection for her father; she went to see
him in his workroom, and asked him for all sorts of
information on the art of turning, ending by advising
him to turn larger pieces, columns. After persuading
her father to set to work on some twisted pillars,
one of the difficulties of the turner’s art,
she suggested that he should make use of a large heap
of stones that lay in the middle of the garden to
construct a sort of grotto on which he might erect
a little temple or Belvedere in which his twisted pillars
could be used and shown off to all the world.
At the climax of the pleasure the
poor unoccupied man derived from this scheme, Rosalie
said, as she kissed him, “Above all, do not tell
mamma who gave you the notion; she would scold me.”
“Do not be afraid!” replied
Monsieur de Watteville, who groaned as bitterly as
his daughter under the tyranny of the terrible descendant
of the Rupts.
So Rosalie had a certain prospect
of seeing ere long a charming observatory built, whence
her eye would command the lawyer’s private room.
And there are men for whose sake young girls can carry
out such masterstrokes of diplomacy, while, for the
most part, like Albert Savaron, they know it not.
The Sunday so impatiently looked for
arrived, and Rosalie dressed with such carefulness
as made Mariette, the ladies’-maid, smile.
“It is the first time I ever
knew mademoiselle to be so fidgety,” said Mariette.
“It strikes me,” said
Rosalie, with a glance at Mariette, which brought
poppies to her cheeks, “that you too are more
particular on some days than on others.”
As she went down the steps, across
the courtyard, and through the gates, Rosalie’s
heart beat, as everybody’s does in anticipation
of a great event. Hitherto, she had never known
what it was to walk in the streets; for a moment she
had felt as though her mother must read her schemes
on her brow, and forbid her going to confession, and
she now felt new blood in her feet, she lifted them
as though she trod on fire. She had, of course,
arranged to be with her confessor at a quarter-past
eight, telling her mother eight, so as to have about
a quarter of an hour near Albert. She got to
church before Mass, and after a short prayer, went
to see if the Abbe Giroud were in his confessional,
simply to pass the time; and she thus placed herself
in such a way as to see Albert as he came into church.
The man must have been atrociously
ugly who did not seem handsome to Mademoiselle de
Watteville in the frame of mind produced by her curiosity.
And Albert Savaron, who was really very striking, made
all the more impression on Rosalie because his mien,
his walk, his carriage, everything down to his clothing,
had the indescribable stamp which can only be expressed
by the word Mystery.
He came in. The church, till
now gloomy, seemed to Rosalie to be illuminated.
The girl was fascinated by his slow and solemn demeanor,
as of a man who bears a world on his shoulders and
whose deep gaze, whose very gestures, combine to express
a devastating or absorbing thought. Rosalie now
understood the Vicar-General’s words in their
fullest extent. Yes, those eyes of tawny brown,
shot with golden lights, covered ardor which revealed
itself in sudden flashes. Rosalie, with a recklessness
which Mariette noted, stood in the lawyer’s
way, so as to exchange glances with him; and this glance
turned her blood, for it seethed and boiled as though
its warmth were doubled.
As soon as Albert had taken a seat,
Mademoiselle de Watteville quickly found a place whence
she could see him perfectly during all the time the
Abbe might leave her. When Mariette said, “Here
is Monsieur Giroud,” it seemed to Rosalie that
the interview had lasted no more than a few minutes.
By the time she came out from the confessional, Mass
was over. Albert had left the church.
“The Vicar-General was right,”
thought she. “He is unhappy. Why
should this eagle—for he has the eyes of
an eagle—swoop down on Besancon? Oh,
I must know everything! But how?”
Under the smart of this new desire
Rosalie set the stitches of her worsted-work with
exquisite precision, and hid her meditations under
a little innocent air, which shammed simplicity to
deceive Madame de Watteville.
From that Sunday, when Mademoiselle
de Watteville had met that look, or, if you please,
received this baptism of fire—a fine expression
of Napoleon’s which may be well applied to love—she
eagerly promoted the plan for the Belvedere.
“Mamma,” said she one
day when two columns were turned, “my father
has taken a singular idea into his head; he is turning
columns for a Belvedere he intends to erect on the
heap of stones in the middle of the garden. Do
you approve of it? It seems to me—”
“I approve of everything your
father does,” said Madame de Watteville drily,
“and it is a wife’s duty to submit to her
husband even if she does not approve of his ideas.
Why should I object to a thing which is of no importance
in itself, if only it amuses Monsieur de Watteville?”
“Well, because from thence we
shall see into Monsieur de Soulas’ rooms, and
Monsieur de Soulas will see us when we are there.
Perhaps remarks may be made—”
“Do you presume, Rosalie, to
guide your parents, and think you know more than they
do of life and the proprieties?”
“I say no more, mamma.
Besides, my father said that there would be a room
in the grotto, where it would be cool, and where we
can take coffee.”
“Your father has had an excellent
idea,” said Madame de Watteville, who forthwith
went to look at the columns.
She gave her entire approbation to
the Baron de Watteville’s design, while choosing
for the erection of this monument a spot at the bottom
of the garden, which could not be seen from Monsieur
de Soulas’ windows, but whence they could perfectly
see into Albert Savaron’s rooms. A builder
was sent for, who undertook to construct a grotto,
of which the top should be reached by a path three
feet wide through the rock-work, where periwinkles
would grow, iris, clematis, ivy, honeysuckle, and
Virginia creeper. The Baroness desired that the
inside should be lined with rustic wood-work, such
as was then the fashion for flower-stands, with a
looking-glass against the wall, an ottoman forming
a box, and a table of inlaid bark. Monsieur de
Soulas proposed that the floor should be of asphalt.
Rosalie suggested a hanging chandelier of rustic wood.
“The Wattevilles are having
something charming done in their garden,” was
rumored in Besancon.
“They are rich, and can afford
a thousand crowns for a whim—”
“A thousand crowns!” exclaimed Madame
de Chavoncourt.
“Yes, a thousand crowns,”
cried young Monsieur de Soulas. “A man has
been sent for from Paris to rusticate the interior
but it will be very pretty. Monsieur de Watteville
himself is making the chandelier, and has begun to
carve the wood.”
“Berquet is to make a cellar under it,”
said an Abbe.
“No,” replied young Monsieur
de Soulas, “he is raising the kiosk on a concrete
foundation, that it may not be damp.”
“You know the very least things
that are done in that house,” said Madame de
Chavoncourt sourly, as she looked at one of her great
girls waiting to be married for a year past.
Mademoiselle de Watteville, with a
little flush of pride in thinking of the success of
her Belvedere, discerned in herself a vast superiority
over every one about her. No one guessed that
a little girl, supposed to be a witless goose, had
simply made up her mind to get a closer view of the
lawyer Savaron’s private study.
Albert Savaron’s brilliant defence
of the Cathedral Chapter was all the sooner forgotten
because the envy of the other lawyers was aroused.
Also, Savaron, faithful to his seclusion, went nowhere.
Having no friends to cry him up, and seeing no one,
he increased the chances of being forgotten which
are common to strangers in Besancon. Nevertheless,
he pleaded three times at the Commercial Tribunal in
three knotty cases which had to be carried to the superior
Court. He thus gained as clients four of the
chief merchants of the place, who discerned in him
so much good sense and sound legal purview that they
placed their claims in his hands.
On the day when the Watteville family
inaugurated the Belvedere, Savaron also was founding
a monument. Thanks to the connections he had
obscurely formed among the upper class of merchants
in Besancon, he was starting a fortnightly paper,
called the Eastern Review, with the help of
forty shares of five hundred francs each, taken up
by his first ten clients, on whom he had impressed
the necessity for promoting the interests of Besancon,
the town where the traffic should meet between Mulhouse
and Lyons, and the chief centre between Mulhouse and
Rhone.
To compete with Strasbourg, was it
not needful that Besancon should become a focus of
enlightenment as well as of trade? The leading
questions relating to the interests of Eastern France
could only be dealt with in a review. What a
glorious task to rob Strasbourg and Dijon of their
literary importance, to bring light to the East of
France, and compete with the centralizing influence
of Paris! These reflections, put forward by Albert,
were repeated by the ten merchants, who believed them
to be their own.
Monsieur Savaron did not commit the
blunder of putting his name in front; he left the
finance of the concern to his chief client, Monsieur
Boucher, connected by marriage with one of the great
publishers of important ecclesiastical works; but he
kept the editorship, with a share of the profits as
founder. The commercial interest appealed to
Dole, to Dijon, to Salins, to Neufchatel, to the Jura,
Bourg, Nantua, Lous-le-Saulnier. The concurrence
was invited of the learning and energy of every scientific
student in the districts of le Bugey, la Bresse, and
Franche Comte. By the influence of commercial
interests and common feeling, five hundred subscribers
were booked in consideration of the low price; the
Review cost eight francs a quarter.
To avoid hurting the conceit of the
provincials by refusing their articles, the lawyer
hit on the good idea of suggesting a desire for the
literary management of this Review to Monsieur
Boucher’s eldest son, a young man of two-and-twenty,
very eager for fame, to whom the snares and woes of
literary responsibilities were utterly unknown.
Albert quietly kept the upper hand and made Alfred
Boucher his devoted adherent. Alfred was the
only man in Besancon with whom the king of the bar
was on familiar terms. Alfred came in the morning
to discuss the articles for the next number with Albert
in the garden. It is needless to say that the
trial number contained a “Meditation” by
Alfred, which Savaron approved. In his conversations
with Alfred, Albert would let drop some great ideas,
subjects for articles of which Alfred availed himself.
And thus the merchant’s son fancied he was making
capital out of the great man. To Alfred, Albert
was a man of genius, of profound politics. The
commercial world, enchanted at the success of the
Review, had to pay up only three-tenths of their
shares. Two hundred more subscribers, and the
periodical would pay a dividend to the share-holders
of five per cent, the editor remaining unpaid.
This editing, indeed, was beyond price.
After the third number the Review
was recognized for exchange by all the papers published
in France, which Albert henceforth read at home.
This third number included a tale signed “A.
S.,” and attributed to the famous lawyer.
In spite of the small attention paid by the higher
circle of Besancon to the Review which was accused
of Liberal views, this, the first novel produced in
the county, came under discussion that mid-winter
at Madame de Chavoncourt’s.
“Papa,” said Rosalie,
“a Review is published in Besancon; you
ought to take it in; and keep it in your room, for
mamma would not let me read it, but you will lend
it to me.”
Monsieur de Watteville, eager to obey
his dear Rosalie, who for the last five months had
given him so many proofs of filial affection, —Monsieur
de Watteville went in person to subscribe for a year
to the Eastern Review, and lent the four numbers
already out to his daughter. In the course of
the night Rosalie devoured the tale—the
first she had ever read in her life—but
she had only known life for two months past.
Hence the effect produced on her by this work must
not be judged by ordinary rules. Without prejudice
of any kind as to the greater or less merit of this
composition from the pen of a Parisian who had thus
imported into the province the manner, the brilliancy,
if you will, of the new literary school, it could not
fail to be a masterpiece to a young girl abandoning
all her intelligence and her innocent heart to her
first reading of this kind.
Also, from what she had heard said,
Rosalie had by intuition conceived a notion of it
which strangely enhanced the interest of this novel.
She hoped to find in it the sentiments, and perhaps
something of the life of Albert. From the first
pages this opinion took so strong a hold on her, that
after reading the fragment to the end she was certain
that it was no mistake. Here, then, is this confession,
in which, according to the critics of Madame de Chavoncourt’s
drawing-room, Albert had imitated some modern writers
who, for lack of inventiveness, relate their private
joys, their private griefs, or the mysterious events
of their own life.
* * * *