FINAL DISAPPOINTMENT AND
ITS FIRST RESULT
The next day, Mademoiselle Cormon,
packed into the old carriole with Josette, and looking
like a pyramid on a vast sea of parcels, drove up
the rue Saint-Blaise on her way to Prebaudet, where
she was overtaken by an event which hurried on her
marriage,—an event entirely unlooked for
by either Madame Granson, du Bousquier, Monsieur de
Valois, or Mademoiselle Cormon himself. Chance
is the greatest of all artificers.
The day after her arrival at Prebaudet,
she was innocently employed, about eight o’clock
in the morning, in listening, as she breakfasted,
to the various reports of her keeper and her gardener,
when Jacquelin made a violent irruption into the dining-room.
“Mademoiselle,” he cried,
out of breath, “Monsieur l’abbe sends you
an express, the son of Mere Grosmort, with a letter.
The lad left Alencon before daylight, and he has just
arrived; he ran like Penelope! Can’t I
give him a glass of wine?”
“What can have happened, Josette?
Do you think my uncle can be—”
“He couldn’t write if
he were,” said Josette, guessing her mistress’s
fears.
“Quick! quick!” cried
Mademoiselle Cormon, as soon as she had read the first
lines. “Tell Jacquelin to harness Penelope—
Get ready, Josette; pack up everything in half an
hour. We must go back to town—”
“Jacquelin!” called Josette,
excited by the sentiment she saw on her mistress’s
face.
Jacquelin, informed by Josette, came in to say,—
“But, mademoiselle, Penelope is eating her oats.”
“What does that signify? I must start at
once.”
“But, mademoiselle, it is going to rain.”
“Then we shall get wet.”
“The house is on fire!”
muttered Josette, piqued at the silence her mistress
kept as to the contents of the letter, which she read
and reread.
“Finish your coffee, at any
rate, mademoiselle; don’t excite your blood;
just see how red you are.”
“Am I red, Josette?” she
said, going to a mirror, from which the quicksilver
was peeling, and which presented her features to her
upside down.
“Good heavens!” thought
Mademoiselle Cormon, “suppose I should look
ugly! Come, Josette; come, my dear, dress me at
once; I want to be ready before Jacquelin has harnessed
Penelope. If you can’t pack my things in
time, I will leave them here rather than lose a single
minute.”
If you have thoroughly comprehended
the positive monomania to which the desire of marriage
had brought Mademoiselle Cormon, you will share her
emotion. The worthy uncle announced in this sudden
missive that Monsieur de Troisville, of the Russian
army during the Emigration, grandson of one of his
best friends, was desirous of retiring to Alencon,
and asked his, the abbe’s hospitality, on the
ground of his friendship for his grandfather, the
Vicomte de Troisville. The old abbe, alarmed
at the responsibility, entreated his niece to return
instantly and help him to receive this guest, and do
the honors of the house; for the viscount’s
letter had been delayed, and he might descend upon
his shoulders that very night.
After reading this missive could there
be a question of the demands of Prebaudet? The
keeper and the gardener, witnesses to Mademoiselle
Cormon’s excitement, stood aside and awaited
her orders. But when, as she was about to leave
the room, they stopped her to ask for instructions,
for the first time in her life the despotic old maid,
who saw to everything at Prebaudet with her own eyes,
said, to their stupefaction, “Do what you like.”
This from a mistress who carried her administration
to the point of counting her fruits, and marking them
so as to order their consumption according to the number
and condition of each!
“I believe I’m dreaming,”
thought Josette, as she saw her mistress flying down
the staircase like an elephant to which God has given
wings.
Presently, in spite of a driving rain,
Mademoiselle Cormon drove away from Prebaudet, leaving
her factotums with the reins on their necks.
Jacquelin dared not take upon himself to hasten the
usual little trot of the peaceable Penelope, who,
like the beautiful queen whose name she bore, had
an appearance of making as many steps backward as she
made forward. Impatient with the pace, mademoiselle
ordered Jacquelin in a sharp voice to drive at a gallop,
with the whip, if necessary, to the great astonishment
of the poor beast, so afraid was she of not having
time to arrange the house suitably to receive Monsieur
de Troisville. She calculated that the grandson
of her uncle’s friend was probably about forty
years of age; a soldier just from service was undoubtedly
a bachelor; and she resolved, her uncle aiding, not
to let Monsieur de Troisville quit their house in
the condition he entered it. Though Penelope
galloped, Mademoiselle Cormon, absorbed in thoughts
of her trousseau and the wedding-day, declared again
and again that Jacquelin made no way at all.
She twisted about in the carriole without replying
to Josette’s questions, and talked to herself
like a person who is mentally revolving important designs.
The carriole at last arrived in the
main street of Alencon, called the rue Saint-Blaise
at the end toward Montagne, but near the hotel du
More it takes the name of the rue de la Porte-de-Seez,
and becomes the rue du Bercail as it enters the road
to Brittany. If the departure of Mademoiselle
Cormon made a great noise in Alencon, it is easy to
imagine the uproar caused by her sudden return on the
following day, in a pouring rain which beat her face
without her apparently minding it. Penelope at
a full gallop was observed by every one, and Jacquelin’s
grin, the early hour, the parcels stuffed into the
carriole topsy-turvy, and the evident impatience of
Mademoiselle Cormon were all noted.
The property of the house of Troisville
lay between Alencon and Mortagne. Josette knew
the various branches of the family. A word dropped
by mademoiselle as they entered Alencon had put Josette
on the scent of the affair; and a discussion having
started between them, it was settled that the expected
de Troisville must be between forty and forty-two
years of age, a bachelor, and neither rich nor poor.
Mademoiselle Cormon beheld herself speedily Vicomtesse
de Troisville.
“And to think that my uncle
told me nothing! thinks of nothing! inquires nothing!
That’s my uncle all over. He’d forget
his own nose if it wasn’t fastened to his face.”
Have you never remarked that, under
circumstances such as these, old maids become, like
Richard III., keen-witted, fierce, bold, promissory,—if
one may so use the word,—and, like inebriate
clerks, no longer in awe of anything?
Immediately the town of Alencon, speedily
informed from the farther end of the rue de Saint-Blaise
to the gate of Seez of this precipitate return, accompanied
by singular circumstances, was perturbed throughout
its viscera, both public and domestic. Cooks,
shopkeepers, street passengers, told the news from
door to door; thence it rose to the upper regions.
Soon the words: “Mademoiselle Cormon has
returned!” burst like a bombshell into all households.
At that moment Jacquelin was descending from his wooden
seat (polished by a process unknown to cabinet-makers),
on which he perched in front of the carriole.
He opened the great green gate, round at the top,
and closed in sign of mourning; for during Mademoiselle
Cormon’s absence the evening assemblies did
not take place. The faithful invited the Abbe
de Sponde to their several houses; and Monsieur de
Valois paid his debt by inviting him to dine at the
Marquis d’Esgrignon’s. Jacquelin,
having opened the gate, called familiarly to Penelope,
whom he had left in the middle of the street.
That animal, accustomed to this proceeding, turned
in of herself, and circled round the courtyard in a
manner to avoid injuring the flower-bed. Jacquelin
then took her bridle, and led the carriage to the
portico.
“Mariette!” cried Mademoiselle Cormon.
“Mademoiselle!” exclaimed
Mariette, who was occupied in closing the gate.
“Has the gentleman arrived?”
“No, mademoiselle.”
“Where’s my uncle?”
“He is at church, mademoiselle.”
Jacquelin and Josette were by this
time on the first step of the portico, holding out
their hands to manoeuvre the exit of their mistress
from the carriole as she pulled herself up by the sides
of the vehicle and clung to the curtains. Mademoiselle
then threw herself into their arms; because for the
last two years she dared not risk her weight on the
iron step, affixed to the frame of the carriage by
a horrible mechanism of clumsy bolts.
When Mademoiselle Cormon reached the
level of the portico she looked about her courtyard
with an air of satisfaction.
“Come, come, Mariette, leave that gate alone;
I want you.”
“There’s something in
the wind,” whispered Jacquelin, as Mariette
passed the carriole.
“Mariette, what provisions have
you in the house?” asked Mademoiselle Cormon,
sitting down on the bench in the long antechamber like
a person overcome with fatigue.
“I haven’t anything,”
replied Mariette, with her hands on her hips.
“Mademoiselle knows very well that during her
absence Monsieur l’abbe dines out every day.
Yesterday I went to fetch him from Mademoiselle Armande’s.”
“Where is he now?”
“Monsieur l’abbe?
Why, at church; he won’t be in before three
o’clock.”
“He thinks of nothing! he ought
to have told you to go to market. Mariette, go
at once; and without wasting money, don’t spare
it; get all there is that is good and delicate.
Go to the diligence office and see if you can send
for pates; and I want shrimps from the Brillante.
What o’clock is it?”
“A quarter to nine.”
“Good heavens! Mariette,
don’t stop to chatter. The person my uncle
expects may arrive at any moment. If we had to
give him breakfast, where should we be with nothing
in the house?”
Mariette turned back to Penelope in
a lather, and looked at Jacquelin as if she would
say, “Mademoiselle has put her hand on a husband
this time.”
“Now, Josette,” continued
the old maid, “let us see where we had better
put Monsieur de Troisville to sleep.”
With what joy she said the words,
“Put Monsieur de Troisville” (pronounced
Treville) “to sleep.” How many ideas
in those few words! The old maid was bathed in
hope.
“Will you put him in the green chamber?”
“The bishop’s room?
No; that’s too near mine,” said Mademoiselle
Cormon. “All very well for monseigneur;
he’s a saintly man.”
“Give him your uncle’s room.”
“Oh, that’s so bare; it is actually indecent.”
“Well, then, mademoiselle, why
not arrange a bed in your boudoir? It is easily
done; and there’s a fire-place. Moreau can
certainly find in his warerooms a bed to match the
hangings.”
“You are right, Josette.
Go yourself to Moreau; consult with him what to do;
I authorize you to get what is wanted. If the
bed could be put up to-night without Monsieur de Troisville
observing it (in case Monsieur de Troisville arrives
while Moreau is here), I should like it. If Moreau
won’t engage to do this, then I must put Monsieur
de Troisville in the green room, although Monsieur
de Troisville would be so very near to me.”
Josette was departing when her mistress recalled her.
“Stop! explain the matter to
Jacquelin,” she cried, in a loud nervous tone.
“Tell him to go to Moreau; I must be dressed!
Fancy if Monsieur de Troisville surprised me as I
am now! and my uncle not here to receive him!
Oh, uncle, uncle! Come, Josette; come and dress
me at once.”
“But Penelope?” said Josette, imprudently.
“Always Penelope! Penelope
this, Penelope that! Is Penelope the mistress
of this house?”
“But she is all of a lather,
and she hasn’t had time to eat her oats.”
“Then let her starve!”
cried Mademoiselle Cormon; “provided I marry,”
she thought to herself.
Hearing these words, which seemed
to her like homicide, Josette stood still for a moment,
speechless. Then, at a gesture from her mistress,
she ran headlong down the steps of the portico.
“The devil is in her, Jacquelin,”
were the first words she uttered.
Thus all things conspired on this
fateful day to produce the great scenic effect which
decided the future life of Mademoiselle Cormon.
The town was already topsy-turvy in mind, as a consequence
of the five extraordinary circumstances which accompanied
Mademoiselle Cormon’s return; to wit, the pouring
rain; Penelope at a gallop, in a lather, and blown;
the early hour; the parcels half-packed; and the singular
air of the excited old maid. But when Mariette
made an invasion of the market, and bought all the
best things; when Jacquelin went to the principal
upholsterer in Alencon, two doors from the church,
in search of a bed,—there was matter for
the gravest conjectures. These extraordinary
events were discussed on all sides; they occupied the
minds of every one, even Mademoiselle Armande herself,
with whom was Monsieur de Valois. Within two
days the town of Alencon had been agitated by such
startling events that certain good women were heard
to remark that the world was coming to an end.
This last news, however, resolved itself into a single
question, “What is happening at the Cormons?”
The Abbe de Sponde, adroitly questioned
when he left Saint-Leonard’s to take his daily
walk with the Abbe Couturier, replied with his usual
kindliness that he expected the Vicomte de Troisville,
a nobleman in the service of Russia during the Emigration,
who was returning to Alencon to settle there.
From two to five o’clock a species of labial
telegraphy went on throughout the town; and all the
inhabitants learned that Mademoiselle Cormon had at
last found a husband by letter, and was about to marry
the Vicomte de Troisville. Some said, “Moreau
has sold them a bed.” The bed was six feet
wide in that quarter; it was four feet wide at Madame
Granson’s, in the rue du Bercail; but it was
reduced to a simple couch at Monsieur du Ronceret’s,
where du Bousquier was dining. The lesser bourgeoisie
declared that the cost was eleven hundred francs.
But generally it was thought that, as to this, rumor
was counting the chickens before they were hatched.
In other quarters it was said that Mariette had made
such a raid on the market that the price of carp had
risen. At the end of the rue Saint-Blaise, Penelope
had dropped dead. This decease was doubted in
the house of the receiver-general; but at the Prefecture
it was authenticated that the poor beast had expired
as she turned into the courtyard of the hotel Cormon,
with such velocity had the old maid flown to meet
her husband. The harness-maker, who lived at the
corner of the rue de Seez, was bold enough to call
at the house and ask if anything had happened to Mademoiselle
Cormon’s carriage, in order to discover whether
Penelope was really dead. From the end of the
rue Saint-Blaise to the end of the rue du Bercail,
it was then made known that, thanks to Jacquelin’s
devotion, Penelope, that silent victim of her mistress’s
impetuosity, still lived, though she seemed to be
suffering.
Along the road to Brittany the Vicomte
de Troisville was stated to be a younger son without
a penny, for the estates in Perche belonged to the
Marquis de Troisville, peer of France, who had children;
the marriage would be, therefore, an enormous piece
of luck for a poor emigre. The aristocracy along
that road approved of the marriage; Mademoiselle Cormon
could not do better with her money. But among
the Bourgeoisie, the Vicomte de Troisville was a Russian
general who had fought against France, and was now
returning with a great fortune made at the court of
Saint-Petersburg; he was a foreigner; one of
those allies so hated by the liberals; the
Abbe de Sponde had slyly negotiated this marriage.
All the persons who had a right to call upon Mademoiselle
Cormon determined to do so that very evening.
During this transurban excitement,
which made that of Suzanne almost a forgotten affair,
Mademoiselle was not less agitated; she was filled
with a variety of novel emotions. Looking about
her salon, dining-room, and boudoir, cruel apprehensions
took possession of her. A species of demon showed
her with a sneer her old-fashioned luxury. The
handsome things she had admired from her youth up she
suddenly suspected of age and absurdity. In short,
she felt that fear which takes possession of nearly
all authors when they read over a work they have hitherto
thought proof against every exacting or blase critic:
new situations seem timeworn; the best-turned and most
highly polished phrases limp and squint; metaphors
and images grin or contradict each other; whatsoever
is false strikes the eye. In like manner this
poor woman trembled lest she should see on the lips
of Monsieur de Troisville a smile of contempt for
this episcopal salon; she dreaded the cold look he
might cast over that ancient dining-room; in short,
she feared the frame might injure and age the portrait.
Suppose these antiquities should cast a reflected
light of old age upon herself? This question
made her flesh creep. She would gladly, at that
moment, spend half her savings on refitting her house
if some fairy wand could do it in a moment. Where
is the general who has not trembled on the eve of
a battle? The poor woman was now between her Austerlitz
and her Waterloo.
“Madame la Vicomtesse de Troisville,”
she said to herself; “a noble name! Our
property will go to a good family, at any rate.”
She fell a prey to an irritation which
made every fibre of her nerves quiver to all their
papillae, long sunk in flesh. Her blood, lashed
by this new hope, was in motion. She felt the
strength to converse, if necessary, with Monsieur
de Troisville.
It is useless to relate the activity
with which Josette, Jacquelin, Mariette, Moreau, and
his agents went about their functions. It was
like the busyness of ants about their eggs. All
that daily care had already rendered neat and clean
was again gone over and brushed and rubbed and scrubbed.
The china of ceremony saw the light; the damask linen
marked “A, B, C” was drawn from depths
where it lay under a triple guard of wrappings, still
further defended by formidable lines of pins.
Above all, Mademoiselle Cormon sacrificed on the altar
of her hopes three bottles of the famous liqueurs
of Madame Amphoux, the most illustrious of all the
distillers of the tropics,—a name very dear
to gourmets. Thanks to the devotion of her lieutenants,
mademoiselle was soon ready for the conflict.
The different weapons—furniture, cookery,
provisions, in short, all the various munitions of
war, together with a body of reserve forces—were
ready along the whole line. Jacquelin, Mariette,
and Josette received orders to appear in full dress.
The garden was raked. The old maid regretted that
she couldn’t come to an understanding with the
nightingales nesting in the trees, in order to obtain
their finest trilling.
At last, about four o’clock,
at the very moment when the Abbe de Sponde returned
home, and just as mademoiselle began to think she had
set the table with the best plate and linen and prepared
the choicest dishes to no purpose, the click-clack
of a postilion was heard in the Val-Noble.
“’Tis he!” she said
to herself, the snap of the whip echoing in her heart.
True enough; heralded by all this
gossip, a post-chaise, in which was a single gentleman,
made so great a sensation coming down the rue Saint-Blaise
and turning into the rue du Cours that several little
gamains and some grown persons followed it, and stood
in groups about the gate of the hotel Cormon to see
it enter. Jacquelin, who foresaw his own marriage
in that of his mistress, had also heard the click-clack
in the rue Saint-Blaise, and had opened wide the gates
into the courtyard. The postilion, a friend of
his, took pride in making a fine turn-in, and drew
up sharply before the portico. The abbe came
forward to greet his guest, whose carriage was emptied
with a speed that highwaymen might put into the operation;
the chaise itself was rolled into the coach-house,
the gates closed, and in a few moments all signs of
Monsieur de Troisville’s arrival had disappeared.
Never did two chemicals blend into each other with
greater rapidity than the hotel Cormon displayed in
absorbing the Vicomte de Troisville.
Mademoiselle, whose heart was beating
like a lizard caught by a herdsman, sat heroically
still on her sofa, beside the fire in the salon.
Josette opened the door; and the Vicomte de Troisville,
followed by the Abbe de Sponde, presented himself to
the eyes of the spinster.
“Niece, this is Monsieur le
Vicomte de Troisville, the grandson of one of my old
schoolmates; Monsieur de Troisville, my niece, Mademoiselle
Cormon.”
“Ah! that good uncle; how well
he does it!” thought Rose-Marie-Victoire.
The Vicomte de Troisville was, to
paint him in two words, du Bousquier ennobled.
Between the two men there was precisely the difference
which separates the vulgar style from the noble style.
If they had both been present, the most fanatic liberal
would not have denied the existence of aristocracy.
The viscount’s strength had all the distinction
of elegance; his figure had preserved its magnificent
dignity. He had blue eyes, black hair, an olive
skin, and looked to be about forty-six years of age.
You might have thought him a handsome Spaniard preserved
in the ice of Russia. His manner, carriage, and
attitude, all denoted a diplomat who had seen Europe.
His dress was that of a well-bred traveller.
As he seemed fatigued, the abbe offered to show him
to his room, and was much amazed when his niece threw
open the door of the boudoir, transformed into a bedroom.
Mademoiselle Cormon and her uncle
then left the noble stranger to attend to his own
affairs, aided by Jacquelin, who brought up his luggage,
and went themselves to walk beside the river until
their guest had made his toilet. Although the
Abbe de Sponde chanced to be even more absent-minded
than usual, Mademoiselle Cormon was not less preoccupied.
They both walked on in silence. The old maid had
never before met any man as seductive as this Olympean
viscount. She might have said to herself, as
the Germans do, “This is my ideal!” instead
of which she felt herself bound from head to foot,
and could only say, “Here’s my affair!”
Then she flew to Mariette to know if the dinner could
be put back a while without loss of excellence.
“Uncle, your Monsieur de Troisville
is very amiable,” she said, on returning.
“Why, niece, he hasn’t as yet said a word.”
“But you can see it in his ways,
his manners, his face. Is he a bachelor?”
“I’m sure I don’t
know,” replied the abbe, who was thinking of
a discussion on mercy, lately begun between the Abbe
Couturier and himself. “Monsieur de Troisville
wrote me that he wanted to buy a house here.
If he was married, he wouldn’t come alone on
such an errand,” added the abbe, carelessly,
not conceiving the idea that his niece could be thinking
of marriage.
“Is he rich?”
“He is a younger son of the
younger branch,” replied her uncle. “His
grandfather commanded a squadron, but the father of
this young man made a bad marriage.”
“Young man!” exclaimed
the old maid. “It seems to me, uncle, that
he must be at least forty-five.” She felt
the strongest desire to put their years on a par.
“Yes,” said the abbe;
“but to a poor priest of seventy, Rose, a man
of forty seems a youth.”
All Alencon knew by this time that
Monsieur de Troisville had arrived at the Cormons.
The traveller soon rejoined his hosts, and began to
admire the Brillante, the garden, and the house.
“Monsieur l’abbe,”
he said, “my whole ambition is to have a house
like this.” The old maid fancied a declaration
lurked in that speech, and she lowered her eyes.
“You must enjoy it very much, mademoiselle,”
added the viscount.
“How could it be otherwise?
It has been in our family since 1574, the period at
which one of our ancestors, steward to the Duc d’Alencon,
acquired the land and built the house,” replied
Mademoiselle Cormon. “It is built on piles,”
she added.
Jacquelin announced dinner. Monsieur
de Troisville offered his arm to the happy woman,
who endeavored not to lean too heavily upon it; she
feared, as usual, to seem to make advances.
“Everything is so harmonious
here,” said the viscount, as he seated himself
at table.
“Yes, our trees are full of
birds, which give us concerts for nothing; no one
ever frightens them; and the nightingales sing at night,”
said Mademoiselle Cormon.
“I was speaking of the interior
of the house,” remarked the viscount, who did
not trouble himself to observe Mademoiselle Cormon,
and therefore did not perceive the dulness of her
mind. “Everything is so in keeping,—the
tones of color, the furniture, the general character.”
“But it costs a great deal;
taxes are enormous,” responded the excellent
woman.
“Ah! taxes are high, are they?”
said the viscount, preoccupied with his own ideas.
“I don’t know,”
replied the abbe. “My niece manages the
property of each of us.”
“Taxes are not of much importance
to the rich,” said Mademoiselle Cormon, not
wishing to be thought miserly. “As for the
furniture, I shall leave it as it is, and change nothing,—unless
I marry; and then, of course, everything here must
suit the husband.”
“You have noble principles,
mademoiselle,” said the viscount, smiling.
“You will make one happy man.”
“No one ever made to me such
a pretty speech,” thought the old maid.
The viscount complimented Mademoiselle
Cormon on the excellence of her service and the admirable
arrangements of the house, remarking that he had supposed
the provinces behind the age in that respect; but,
on the contrary, he found them, as the English say,
“very comfortable.”
“What can that word mean?”
she thought. “Oh, where is the chevalier
to explain it to me? ’Comfortable,’—there
seem to be several words in it. Well, courage!”
she said to herself. “I can’t be expected
to answer a foreign language— But,”
she continued aloud, feeling her tongue untied by
the eloquence which nearly all human creatures find
in momentous circumstances, “we have a very brilliant
society here, monsieur. It assembles at my house,
and you shall judge of it this evening, for some of
my faithful friends have no doubt heard of my return
and your arrival. Among them is the Chevalier
de Valois, a seigneur of the old court, a man of infinite
wit and taste; then there is Monsieur le Marquis d’Esgrignon
and Mademoiselle Armande, his sister” (she bit
her tongue with vexation),—“a woman
remarkable in her way,” she added. “She
resolved to remain unmarried in order to leave all
her fortune to her brother and nephew.”
“Ah!” exclaimed the viscount.
“Yes, the d’Esgrignons,—I remember
them.”
“Alencon is very gay,”
continued the old maid, now fairly launched.
“There’s much amusement: the receiver-general
gives balls; the prefect is an amiable man; and Monseigneur
the bishop sometimes honors us with a visit—”
“Well, then,” said the
viscount, smiling, “I have done wisely to come
back, like the hare, to die in my form.”
“Yes,” she said. “I, too, attach
myself or I die.”
The viscount smiled.
“Ah!” thought the old maid, “all
is well; he understands me.”
The conversation continued on generalities.
By one of those mysterious unknown and undefinable
faculties, Mademoiselle Cormon found in her brain,
under the pressure of her desire to be agreeable, all
the phrases and opinions of the Chevalier de Valois.
It was like a duel in which the devil himself pointed
the pistol. Never was any adversary better aimed
at. The viscount was far too well-bred to speak
of the excellence of the dinner; but his silence was
praise. As he drank the delicious wines which
Jacquelin served to him profusely, he seemed to feel
he was with friends, and to meet them with pleasure;
for the true connoisseur does not applaud, he enjoys.
He inquired the price of land, of houses, of estates;
he made Mademoiselle Cormon describe at length the
confluence of the Sarthe and the Brillante; he expressed
surprise that the town was placed so far from the river,
and seemed to be much interested in the topography
of the place.
The silent abbe left his niece to
throw the dice of conversation; and she truly felt
that she pleased Monsieur de Troisville, who smiled
at her gracefully, and committed himself during this
dinner far more than her most eager suitors had ever
done in ten days. Imagine, therefore, the little
attentions with which he was petted; you might have
thought him a cherished lover, whose return brought
joy to the household. Mademoiselle foresaw the
moment when the viscount wanted bread; she watched
his every look; when he turned his head she adroitly
put upon his plate a portion of some dish he seemed
to like; had he been a gourmand, she would almost
have killed him; but what a delightful specimen of
the attentions she would show to a husband! She
did not commit the folly of depreciating herself;
on the contrary, she set every sail bravely, ran up
all her flags, assumed the bearing of the queen of
Alencon, and boasted of her excellent preserves.
In fact, she fished for compliments in speaking of
herself, for she saw that she pleased the viscount;
the truth being that her eager desire had so transformed
her that she became almost a woman.
At dessert she heard, not without
emotions of delight, certain sounds in the antechamber
and salon which denoted the arrival of her usual guests.
She called the attention of her uncle and Monsieur
de Troisville to this prompt attendance as a proof
of the affection that was felt for her; whereas it
was really the result of the poignant curiosity which
had seized upon the town. Impatient to show herself
in all her glory, Mademoiselle Cormon told Jacquelin
to serve coffee and liqueurs in the salon, where he
presently set out, in view of the whole company, a
magnificent liqueur-stand of Dresden china which saw
the light only twice a year. This circumstance
was taken note of by the company, standing ready to
gossip over the merest trifle:—
“The deuce!” muttered
du Bousquier. “Actually Madame Amphoux’s
liqueurs, which they only serve at the four church
festivals!”
“Undoubtedly the marriage was
arranged a year ago by letter,” said the chief-justice
du Ronceret. “The postmaster tells me his
office has received letters postmarked Odessa for
more than a year.”
Madame Granson trembled. The
Chevalier de Valois, though he had dined with the
appetite of four men, turned pale even to the left
section of his face. Feeling that he was about
to betray himself, he said hastily,—
“Don’t you think it is
very cold to-day? I am almost frozen.”
“The neighborhood of Russia,
perhaps,” said du Bousquier.
The chevalier looked at him as if to say, “Well
played!”
Mademoiselle Cormon appeared so radiant,
so triumphant, that the company thought her handsome.
This extraordinary brilliancy was not the effect of
sentiment only. Since early morning her blood
had been whirling tempestuously within her, and her
nerves were agitated by the presentiment of some great
crisis. It required all these circumstances combined
to make her so unlike herself. With what joy did
she now make her solemn presentation of the viscount
to the chevalier, the chevalier to the viscount, and
all Alencon to Monsieur de Troisville, and Monsieur
de Troisville to all Alencon!
By an accident wholly explainable,
the viscount and chevalier, aristocrats by nature,
came instantly into unison; they recognized each other
at once as men belonging to the same sphere. Accordingly,
they began to converse together, standing before the
fireplace. A circle formed around them; and their
conversation, though uttered in a low voice, was listened
to in religious silence. To give the effect of
this scene it is necessary to dramatize it, and to
picture Mademoiselle Cormon occupied in pouring out
the coffee of her imaginary suitor, with her back
to the fireplace.
Monsieur de Valois. “Monsieur
le vicomte has come, I am told, to settle in Alencon?”
Monsieur de Troisville. “Yes,
monsieur, I am looking for a house.” [Mademoiselle
Cormon, cup in hand, turns round.] “It must be
a large house” [Mademoiselle Cormon offers him
the cup] “to lodge my whole family.” [The
eyes of the old maid are troubled.]
Monsieur de Valois. “Are you married?”
Monsieur de Troisville. “Yes,
for the last sixteen years, to a daughter of the Princess
Scherbellof.”
Mademoiselle Cormon fainted; du Bousquier,
who saw her stagger, sprang forward and received her
in his arms; some one opened the door and allowed
him to pass out with his enormous burden. The
fiery republican, instructed by Josette, found strength
to carry the old maid to her bedroom, where he laid
her out on the bed. Josette, armed with scissors,
cut the corset, which was terribly tight. Du Bousquier
flung water on Mademoiselle Cormon’s face and
bosom, which, released from the corset, overflowed
like the Loire in flood. The poor woman opened
her eyes, saw du Bousquier, and gave a cry of modesty
at the sight of him. Du Bousquier retired at
once, leaving six women, at the head of whom was Madame
Granson, radiant with joy, to take care of the invalid.
What had the Chevalier de Valois been
about all this time? Faithful to his system,
he had covered the retreat.
“That poor Mademoiselle Cormon,”
he said to Monsieur de Troisville, gazing at the assembly,
whose laughter was repressed by his cool aristocratic
glances, “her blood is horribly out of order;
she wouldn’t be bled before going to Prebaudet
(her estate),—and see the result!”
“She came back this morning
in the rain,” said the Abbe de Sponde, “and
she may have taken cold. It won’t be anything;
it is only a little upset she is subject to.”
“She told me yesterday she had
not had one for three months, adding that she was
afraid it would play her a trick at last,” said
the chevalier.
“Ha! so you are married?”
said Jacquelin to himself as he looked at Monsieur
de Troisville, who was quietly sipping his coffee.
The faithful servant espoused his
mistress’s disappointment; he divined it, and
he promptly carried away the liqueurs of Madame Amphoux,
which were offered to a bachelor, and not to the husband
of a Russian woman.
All these details were noticed and
laughed at. The Abbe de Sponde knew the object
of Monsieur de Troisville’s journey; but, absent-minded
as usual, he forgot it, not supposing that his niece
could have the slightest interest in Monsieur de Troisville’s
marriage. As for the viscount, preoccupied with
the object of his journey, and, like many husbands,
not eager to talk about his wife, he had had no occasion
to say he was married; besides, he would naturally
suppose that Mademoiselle Cormon knew it.
Du Bousquier reappeared, and was questioned
furiously. One of the six women came down soon
after, and announced that Mademoiselle Cormon was
much better, and that the doctor had come. She
intended to stay in bed, as it was necessary to bleed
her. The salon was now full. Mademoiselle
Cormon’s absence allowed the ladies present to
discuss the tragi-comic scene—embellished,
extended, historified, embroidered, wreathed, colored,
and adorned—which had just taken place,
and which, on the morrow, was destined to occupy all
Alencon.
“That good Monsieur du Bousquier!
how well he carried you!” said Josette to her
mistress. “He was really pale at the sight
of you; he loves you still.”
That speech served as closure to this
solemn and terrible evening.
Throughout the morning of the next
day every circumstance of the late comedy was known
in the household of Alencon, and—let us
say it to the shame of that town,—they
caused inextinguishable laughter. But on that
day Mademoiselle Cormon (much benefited by the bleeding)
would have seemed sublime even to the boldest scoffers,
had they witnessed the noble dignity, the splendid
Christian resignation which influenced her as she
gave her arm to her involuntary deceiver to go into
breakfast. Cruel jesters! why could you not have
seen her as she said to the viscount,—
“Madame de Troisville will have
difficulty in finding a suitable house; do me the
favor, monsieur, of accepting the use of mine during
the time you are in search of yours.”
“But, mademoiselle, I have two
sons and two daughters; we should greatly inconvenience
you.”
“Pray do not refuse me,” she said earnestly.
“I made you the same offer in
the answer I wrote to your letter,” said the
abbe; “but you did not receive it.”
“What, uncle! then you knew—”
The poor woman stopped. Josette
sighed. Neither the viscount nor the abbe observed
anything amiss. After breakfast the Abbe de Sponde
carried off his guest, as agreed upon the previous
evening, to show him the various houses in Alencon
which could be bought, and the lots of lands on which
he might build.
Left alone in the salon, Mademoiselle
Cormon said to Josette, with a deeply distressed air,
“My child, I am now the talk of the whole town.”
“Well, then, mademoiselle, you should marry.”
“But I am not prepared to make a choice.”
“Bah! if I were in your place, I should take
Monsieur du Bousquier.”
“Josette, Monsieur de Valois says he is so republican.”
“They don’t know what
they say, your gentlemen: sometimes they declare
that he robbed the republic; he couldn’t love
it if he did that,” said Josette, departing.
“That girl has an amazing amount
of sense,” thought Mademoiselle Cormon, who
remained alone, a prey to her perplexities.
She saw plainly that a prompt marriage
was the only way to silence the town. This last
checkmate, so evidently mortifying, was of a nature
to drive her into some extreme action; for persons
deficient in mind find difficulty in getting out of
any path, either good or evil, into which they have
entered.
Each of the two old bachelors had
fully understood the situation in which Mademoiselle
Cormon was about to find herself; consequently, each
resolved to call in the course of that morning to ask
after her health, and take occasion, in bachelor language,
to “press his point.” Monsieur de
Valois considered that such an occasion demanded a
painstaking toilet; he therefore took a bath and groomed
himself with extraordinary care. For the first
and last time Cesarine observed him putting on with
incredible art a suspicion of rouge. Du Bousquier,
on the other hand, that coarse republican, spurred
by a brisk will, paid no attention to his dress, and
arrived the first.
Such little things decide the fortunes
of men, as they do of empires. Kellerman’s
charge at Marengo, Blucher’s arrival at Waterloo,
Louis XIV.’s disdain for Prince Eugene, the
rector of Denain,—all these great causes
of fortune or catastrophe history has recorded; but
no one ever profits by them to avoid the small neglects
of their own life. Consequently, observe what
happens: the Duchesse de Langeais (see “History
of the Thirteen”) makes herself a nun for the
lack of ten minutes’ patience; Judge Popinot
(see “Commission in Lunacy”) puts off
till the morrow the duty of examining the Marquis d’Espard;
Charles Grandet (see “Eugenie Grandet”)
goes to Paris from Bordeaux instead of returning by
Nantes; and such events are called chance or fatality!
A touch of rouge carefully applied destroyed the hopes
of the Chevalier de Valois; could that nobleman perish
in any other way? He had lived by the Graces,
and he was doomed to die by their hand. While
the chevalier was giving this last touch to his toilet
the rough du Bousquier was entering the salon of the
desolate old maid. This entrance produced a thought
in Mademoiselle Cormon’s mind which was favorable
to the republican, although in all other respects the
Chevalier de Valois held the advantages.
“God wills it!” she said
piously, on seeing du Bousquier.
“Mademoiselle, you will not,
I trust, think my eagerness importunate. I could
not trust to my stupid Rene to bring news of your condition,
and therefore I have come myself.”
“I am perfectly recovered,”
she replied, in a tone of emotion. “I thank
you, Monsieur du Bousquier,” she added, after
a slight pause, and in a significant tone of voice,
“for the trouble you have taken, and for that
which I gave you yesterday—”
She remembered having been in his
arms, and that again seemed to her an order from heaven.
She had been seen for the first time by a man with
her laces cut, her treasures violently bursting from
their casket.
“I carried you with such joy
that you seemed to me light.”
Here Mademoiselle Cormon looked at
du Bousquier as she had never yet looked at any man
in the world. Thus encouraged, the purveyor cast
upon the old maid a glance which reached her heart.
“I would,” he said, “that
that moment had given me the right to keep you as
mine forever” [she listened with a delighted
air]; “as you lay fainting upon that bed, you
were enchanting. I have never in my life seen
a more beautiful person,—and I have seen
many handsome women. Plump ladies have this advantage:
they are superb to look upon; they have only to show
themselves and they triumph.”
“I fear you are making fun of
me,” said the old maid, “and that is not
kind when all the town will probably misinterpret what
happened to me yesterday.”
“As true as my name is du Bousquier,
mademoiselle, I have never changed in my feelings
toward you; and your first refusal has not discouraged
me.”
The old maid’s eyes were lowered.
There was a moment of cruel silence for du Bousquier,
and then Mademoiselle Cormon decided on her course.
She raised her eyelids; tears flowed from her eyes,
and she gave du Bousquier a tender glance.
“If that is so, monsieur,”
she said, in a trembling voice, “promise me
to live in a Christian manner, and not oppose my religious
customs, but to leave me the right to select my confessors,
and I will grant you my hand”; as she said the
words, she held it out to him.
Du Bousquier seized the good fat hand
so full of money, and kissed it solemnly.
“But,” she said, allowing
him to kiss it, “one thing more I must require
of you.”
“If it is a possible thing,
it is granted,” replied the purveyor.
“Alas!” returned the old
maid. “For my sake, I must ask you to take
upon yourself a sin which I feel to be enormous,—for
to lie is one of the capital sins. But you will
confess it, will you not? We will do penance
for it together” [they looked at each other tenderly].
“Besides, it may be one of those lies which the
Church permits as necessary—”
“Can she be as Suzanne says
she is?” thought du Bousquier. “What
luck! Well, mademoiselle, what is it?”
he said aloud.
“That you will take upon yourself to—”
“What?”
“To say that this marriage has
been agreed upon between us for the last six months.”
“Charming woman,” said
the purveyor, in the tone of a man willing to devote
himself, “such sacrifices can be made only for
a creature adored these ten years.”
“In spite of my harshness?” she said.
“Yes, in spite of your harshness.”
“Monsieur du Bousquier, I have misjudged you.”
Again she held out the fat red hand, which du Bousquier
kissed again.
At this moment the door opened; the
betrothed pair, looking round to see who entered,
beheld the delightful, but tardy Chevalier de Valois.
“Ah!” he said, on entering,
“I see you are about to be up, fair queen.”
She smiled at the chevalier, feeling
a weight upon her heart. Monsieur de Valois,
remarkably young and seductive, had the air of a Lauzun
re-entering the apartments of the Grande Mademoiselle
in the Palais-Royal.
“Hey! dear du Bousquier,”
said he, in a jaunty tone, so sure was he of success,
“Monsieur de Troisville and the Abbe de Sponde
are examining your house like appraisers.”
“Faith!” said du Bousquier,
“if the Vicomte de Troisville wants it, it it
is his for forty thousand francs. It is useless
to me now. If mademoiselle will permit—it
must soon be known— Mademoiselle, may I
tell it?— Yes! Well, then, be the first,
my dear Chevalier, to hear” [Mademoiselle
Cormon dropped her eyes] “of the honor that mademoiselle
has done me, the secret of which I have kept for some
months. We shall be married in a few days; the
contract is already drawn, and we shall sign it to-morrow.
You see, therefore, that my house in the rue du Cygne
is useless to me. I have been privately looking
for a purchaser for some time; and the Abbe de Sponde,
who knew that fact, has naturally taken Monsieur de
Troisville to see the house.”
This falsehood bore such an appearance
of truth that the chevalier was taken in by it.
That “my dear chevalier” was like the revenge
taken by Peter the Great on Charles XII. at Pultawa
for all his past defeats. Du Bousquier revenged
himself deliciously for the thousand little shafts
he had long borne in silence; but in his triumph he
made a lively youthful gesture by running his hands
through his hair, and in so doing he—knocked
aside his false front.
“I congratulate you both,”
said the chevalier, with an agreeable air; “and
I wish that the marriage may end like a fairy tale:
They were happy ever after, and had—many—children!”
So saying, he took a pinch of snuff. “But,
monsieur,” he added satirically, “you forget—that
you are wearing a false front.”
Du Bousquier blushed. The false
front was hanging half a dozen inches from his skull.
Mademoiselle Cormon raised her eyes, saw that skull
in all its nudity, and lowered them, abashed.
Du Bousquier cast upon the chevalier the most venomous
look that toad ever darted on its prey.
“Dogs of aristocrats who despise
me,” thought he, “I’ll crush you
some day.”
The chevalier thought he had recovered
his advantage. But Mademoiselle Cormon was not
a woman to understand the connection which the chevalier
intimated between his congratulatory wish and the false
front. Besides, even if she had comprehended it,
her word was passed, her hand given. Monsieur
de Valois saw at once that all was lost. The
innocent woman, with the two now silent men before
her, wished, true to her sense of duty, to amuse them.
“Why not play a game of piquet
together?” she said artlessly, without the slightest
malice.
Du Bousquier smiled, and went, as
the future master of the house, to fetch the piquet
table. Whether the Chevalier de Valois lost his
head, or whether he wanted to stay and study the causes
of his disaster and remedy it, certain it is that
he allowed himself to be led like a lamb to the slaughter.
He had received the most violent knock-down blow that
ever struck a man; any nobleman would have lost his
senses for less.
The Abbe de Sponde and the Vicomte
de Troisville soon returned. Mademoiselle Cormon
instantly rose, hurried into the antechamber, and
took her uncle apart to tell him her resolution.
Learning that the house in the rue du Cygne exactly
suited the viscount, she begged her future husband
to do her the kindness to tell him that her uncle knew
it was for sale. She dared not confide that lie
to the abbe, fearing his absent-mindedness. The
lie, however, prospered better than if it had been
a virtuous action. In the course of that evening
all Alencon heard the news. For the last four
days the town had had as much to think of as during
the fatal days of 1814 and 1815. Some laughed;
others admitted the marriage. These blamed it;
those approved it. The middle classes of Alencon
rejoiced; they regarded it as a victory. The
next day, among friends, the Chevalier de Valois said
a cruel thing:—
“The Cormons end as they began;
there’s only a hand’s breadth between
a steward and a purveyor.”