XII
On the morrow of this death Eugenie
felt a new motive for attachment to the house in which
she was born, where she had suffered so much, where
her mother had just died. She could not see the
window and the chair on its castors without weeping.
She thought she had mistaken the heart of her old
father when she found herself the object of his tenderest
cares. He came in the morning and gave her his
arm to take her to breakfast; he looked at her for
hours together with an eye that was almost kind; he
brooded over her as though she had been gold.
The old man was so unlike himself, he trembled so
often before his daughter, that Nanon and the Cruchotines,
who witnessed his weakness, attributed it to his great
age, and feared that his faculties were giving away.
But the day on which the family put on their mourning,
and after dinner, to which meal Maitre Cruchot (the
only person who knew his secret) had been invited,
the conduct of the old miser was explained.
“My dear child,” he said
to Eugenie when the table had been cleared and the
doors carefully shut, “you are now your mother’s
heiress, and we have a few little matters to settle
between us. Isn’t that so, Cruchot?”
“Yes.”
“Is it necessary to talk of them to-day, father?”
“Yes, yes, little one; I can’t
bear the uncertainty in which I’m placed.
I think you don’t want to give me pain?”
“Oh! father—”
“Well, then! let us settle it all to-night.”
“What is it you wish me to do?”
“My little girl, it is not for me to say.
Tell her, Cruchot.”
“Mademoiselle, your father does
not wish to divide the property, nor sell the estate,
nor pay enormous taxes on the ready money which he
may possess. Therefore, to avoid all this, he
must be released from making the inventory of his
whole fortune, part of which you inherit from your
mother, and which is now undivided between you and
your father—”
“Cruchot, are you quite sure
of what you are saying before you tell it to a mere
child?”
“Let me tell it my own way, Grandet.”
“Yes, yes, my friend. Neither
you nor my daughter wish to rob me,—do
you, little one?”
“But, Monsieur Cruchot, what am I to do?”
said Eugenie impatiently.
“Well,” said the notary,
“it is necessary to sign this deed, by which
you renounce your rights to your mother’s estate
and leave your father the use and disposition, during
his lifetime, of all the property undivided between
you, of which he guarantees you the capital.”
“I do not understand a word
of what you are saying,” returned Eugenie; “give
me the deed, and show me where I am to sign it.”
Pere Grandet looked alternately at
the deed and at his daughter, at his daughter and
at the deed, undergoing as he did so such violent
emotion that he wiped the sweat from his brow.
“My little girl,” he said,
“if, instead of signing this deed, which will
cost a great deal to record, you would simply agree
to renounce your rights as heir to your poor dear,
deceased mother’s property, and would trust
to me for the future, I should like it better.
In that case I will pay you monthly the good round
sum of a hundred francs. See, now, you could
pay for as many masses as you want for anybody —Hein!
a hundred francs a month—in livres?”
“I will do all you wish, father.”
“Mademoiselle,” said the
notary, “it is my duty to point out to you that
you are despoiling yourself without guarantee—”
“Good heavens! what is all that to me?”
“Hold your tongue, Cruchot!
It’s settled, all settled,” cried Grandet,
taking his daughter’s hand and striking it with
his own. “Eugenie, you won’t go back
on your word?—you are an honest girl, hein?”
“Oh! father!—”
He kissed her effusively, and pressed
her in his arms till he almost choked her.
“Go, my good child, you restore
your father’s life; but you only return to him
that which he gave you: we are quits. This
is how business should be done. Life is a business.
I bless you! you are a virtuous girl, and you love
your father. Do just what you like in future.
To-morrow, Cruchot,” he added, looking at the
horrified notary, “you will see about preparing
the deed of relinquishment, and then enter it on the
records of the court.”
The next morning Eugenie signed the
papers by which she herself completed her spoliation.
At the end of the first year, however, in spite of
his bargain, the old man had not given his daughter
one sou of the hundred francs he had so solemnly pledged
to her. When Eugenie pleasantly reminded him
of this, he could not help coloring, and went hastily
to his secret hiding-place, from whence he brought
down about a third of the jewels he had taken from
his nephew, and gave them to her.
“There, little one,” he
said in a sarcastic tone, “do you want those
for your twelve hundred francs?”
“Oh! father, truly? will you really give them
to me?”
“I’ll give you as many
more next year,” he said, throwing them into
her apron. “So before long you’ll
get all his gewgaws,” he added, rubbing his
hands, delighted to be able to speculate on his daughter’s
feelings.
Nevertheless, the old man, though
still robust, felt the importance of initiating his
daughter into the secrets of his thrift and its management.
For two consecutive years he made her order the household
meals in his presence and receive the rents, and he
taught her slowly and successively the names and remunerative
capacity of his vineyards and his farms. About
the third year he had so thoroughly accustomed her
to his avaricious methods that they had turned into
the settled habits of her own life, and he was able
to leave the household keys in her charge without
anxiety, and to install her as mistress of the house.
* * * *
Five years passed away without a single
event to relieve the monotonous existence of Eugenie
and her father. The same actions were performed
daily with the automatic regularity of clockwork.
The deep sadness of Mademoiselle Grandet was known
to every one; but if others surmised the cause, she
herself never uttered a word that justified the suspicions
which all Saumur entertained about the state of the
rich heiress’s heart. Her only society was
made up of the three Cruchots and a few of their particular
friends whom they had, little by little, introduced
into the Grandet household. They had taught her
to play whist, and they came every night for their
game. During the year 1827 her father, feeling
the weight of his infirmities, was obliged to initiate
her still further into the secrets of his landed property,
and told her that in case of difficulty she was to
have recourse to Maitre Cruchot, whose integrity was
well known to him.
Towards the end of this year the old
man, then eighty-two, was seized by paralysis, which
made rapid progress. Dr. Bergerin gave him up.
Eugenie, feeling that she was about to be left alone
in the world, came, as it were, nearer to her father,
and clasped more tightly this last living link of
affection. To her mind, as in that of all loving
women, love was the whole of life. Charles was
not there, and she devoted all her care and attention
to the old father, whose faculties had begun to weaken,
though his avarice remained instinctively acute.
The death of this man offered no contrast to his life.
In the morning he made them roll him to a spot between
the chimney of his chamber and the door of the secret
room, which was filled, no doubt, with gold. He
asked for an explanation of every noise he heard, even
the slightest; to the great astonishment of the notary,
he even heard the watch-dog yawning in the court-yard.
He woke up from his apparent stupor at the day and
hour when the rents were due, or when accounts had
to be settled with his vine-dressers, and receipts
given. At such times he worked his chair forward
on its castors until he faced the door of the inner
room. He made his daughter open it, and watched
while she placed the bags of money one upon another
in his secret receptacles and relocked the door.
Then she returned silently to her seat, after giving
him the key, which he replaced in his waistcoat pocket
and fingered from time to time. His old friend
the notary, feeling sure that the rich heiress would
inevitably marry his nephew the president, if Charles
Grandet did not return, redoubled all his attentions;
he came every day to take Grandet’s orders,
went on his errands to Froidfond, to the farms and
the fields and the vineyards, sold the vintages, and
turned everything into gold and silver, which found
their way in sacks to the secret hiding-place.
At length the last struggle came,
in which the strong frame of the old man slowly yielded
to destruction. He was determined to sit at the
chimney-corner facing the door of the secret room.
He drew off and rolled up all the coverings which
were laid over him, saying to Nanon, “Put them
away, lock them up, for fear they should be stolen.”
So long as he could open his eyes,
in which his whole being had now taken refuge, he
turned them to the door behind which lay his treasures,
saying to his daughter, “Are they there? are
they there?” in a tone of voice which revealed
a sort of panic fear.
“Yes, my father,” she would answer.
“Take care of the gold—put gold before
me.”
Eugenie would then spread coins on
a table before him, and he would sit for hours together
with his eyes fixed upon them, like a child who, at
the moment it first begins to see, gazes in stupid
contemplation at the same object, and like the child,
a distressful smile would flicker upon his face.
“It warms me!” he would
sometimes say, as an expression of beatitude stole
across his features.
When the cure of the parish came to
administer the last sacraments, the old man’s
eyes, sightless, apparently, for some hours, kindled
at the sight of the cross, the candlesticks, and the
holy-water vessel of silver; he gazed at them fixedly,
and his wen moved for the last time. When the
priest put the crucifix of silver-gilt to his lips,
that he might kiss the Christ, he made a frightful
gesture, as if to seize it; and that last effort cost
him his life. He called Eugenie, whom he did
not see, though she was kneeling beside him bathing
with tears his stiffening hand, which was already
cold.
“My father, bless me!” she entreated.
“Take care of it all. You
will render me an account yonder!” he said,
proving by these last words that Christianity must
always be the religion of misers.
* * *
*
Eugenie Grandet was now alone in the
world in that gray house, with none but Nanon to whom
she could turn with the certainty of being heard and
understood,—Nanon the sole being who loved
her for herself and with whom she could speak of her
sorrows. La Grande Nanon was a providence for
Eugenie. She was not a servant, but a humble friend.
After her father’s death Eugenie learned from
Maitre Cruchot that she possessed an income of three
hundred thousand francs from landed and personal property
in the arrondissement of Saumur; also six millions
invested at three per cent in the Funds (bought at
sixty, and now worth seventy-six francs); also two
millions in gold coin, and a hundred thousand francs
in silver crown-pieces, besides all the interest which
was still to be collected. The sum total of her
property reached seventeen millions.
“Where is my cousin?” was her one thought.
The day on which Maitre Cruchot handed
in to his client a clear and exact schedule of the
whole inheritance, Eugenie remained alone with Nanon,
sitting beside the fireplace in the vacant hall, where
all was now a memory, from the chair on castors which
her mother had sat in, to the glass from which her
cousin drank.
“Nanon, we are alone—”
“Yes, mademoiselle; and if I
knew where he was, the darling, I’d go on foot
to find him.”
“The ocean is between us,” she said.
While the poor heiress wept in company
of an old servant, in that cold dark house, which
was to her the universe, the whole province rang,
from Nantes to Orleans, with the seventeen millions
of Mademoiselle Grandet. Among her first acts
she had settled an annuity of twelve hundred francs
on Nanon, who, already possessed of six hundred more,
became a rich and enviable match. In less than
a month that good soul passed from single to wedded
life under the protection of Antoine Cornoiller, who
was appointed keeper of all Mademoiselle Grandet’s
estates. Madame Cornoiller possessed one striking
advantage over her contemporaries. Although she
was fifty-nine years of age, she did not look more
than forty. Her strong features had resisted the
ravages of time. Thanks to the healthy customs
of her semi-conventual life, she laughed at old age
from the vantage-ground of a rosy skin and an iron
constitution. Perhaps she never looked as well
in her life as she did on her marriage-day. She
had all the benefits of her ugliness, and was big
and fat and strong, with a look of happiness on her
indestructible features which made a good many people
envy Cornoiller.
“Fast colors!” said the draper.
“Quite likely to have children,”
said the salt merchant. “She’s pickled
in brine, saving your presence.”
“She is rich, and that fellow
Cornoiller has done a good thing for himself,”
said a third man.
When she came forth from the old house
on her way to the parish church, Nanon, who was loved
by all the neighborhood, received many compliments
as she walked down the tortuous street. Eugenie
had given her three dozen silver forks and spoons
as a wedding present. Cornoiller, amazed at such
magnificence, spoke of his mistress with tears in
his eyes; he would willingly have been hacked in pieces
in her behalf. Madame Cornoiller, appointed housekeeper
to Mademoiselle Grandet, got as much happiness out
of her new position as she did from the possession
of a husband. She took charge of the weekly accounts;
she locked up the provisions and gave them out daily,
after the manner of her defunct master; she ruled
over two servants,—a cook, and a maid whose
business it was to mend the house-linen and make mademoiselle’s
dresses. Cornoiller combined the functions of
keeper and bailiff. It is unnecessary to say
that the women-servants selected by Nanon were “perfect
treasures.” Mademoiselle Grandet thus had
four servants, whose devotion was unbounded.
The farmers perceived no change after Monsieur Grandet’s
death; the usages and customs he had sternly established
were scrupulously carried out by Monsieur and Madame
Cornoiller.
At thirty years of age Eugenie knew
none of the joys of life. Her pale, sad childhood
had glided on beside a mother whose heart, always
misunderstood and wounded, had known only suffering.
Leaving this life joyfully, the mother pitied the
daughter because she still must live; and she left
in her child’s soul some fugitive remorse and
many lasting regrets. Eugenie’s first and
only love was a wellspring of sadness within her.
Meeting her lover for a few brief days, she had given
him her heart between two kisses furtively exchanged;
then he had left her, and a whole world lay between
them. This love, cursed by her father, had cost
the life of her mother and brought her only sorrow,
mingled with a few frail hopes. Thus her upward
spring towards happiness had wasted her strength and
given her nothing in exchange for it. In the
life of the soul, as in the physical life, there is
an inspiration and a respiration; the soul needs to
absorb the sentiments of another soul and assimilate
them, that it may render them back enriched.
Were it not for this glorious human phenomenon, there
would be no life for the heart; air would be wanting;
it would suffer, and then perish. Eugenie had
begun to suffer. For her, wealth was neither
a power nor a consolation; she could not live except
through love, through religion, through faith in the
future. Love explained to her the mysteries of
eternity. Her heart and the Gospel taught her
to know two worlds; she bathed, night and day, in
the depths of two infinite thoughts, which for her
may have had but one meaning. She drew back within
herself, loving, and believing herself beloved.
For seven years her passion had invaded everything.
Her treasuries were not the millions whose revenues
were rolling up; they were Charles’s dressing-case,
the portraits hanging above her bed, the jewels recovered
from her father and proudly spread upon a bed of wool
in a drawer of the oaken cabinet, the thimble of her
aunt, used for a while by her mother, which she wore
religiously as she worked at a piece of embroidery,—a
Penelope’s web, begun for the sole purpose of
putting upon her finger that gold so rich in memories.
It seemed unlikely that Mademoiselle
Grandet would marry during the period of her mourning.
Her genuine piety was well known. Consequently
the Cruchots, whose policy was sagely guided by the
old abbe, contented themselves for the time being
with surrounding the great heiress and paying her
the most affectionate attentions. Every evening
the hall was filled with a party of devoted Cruchotines,
who sang the praises of its mistress in every key.
She had her doctor in ordinary, her grand almoner,
her chamberlain, her first lady of honor, her prime
minister; above all, her chancellor, a chancellor who
would fain have said much to her. If the heiress
had wished for a train-bearer, one would instantly
have been found. She was a queen, obsequiously
flattered. Flattery never emanates from noble
souls; it is the gift of little minds, who thus still
further belittle themselves to worm their way into
the vital being of the persons around whom they crawl.
Flattery means self-interest. So the people who,
night after night, assembled in Mademoiselle Grandet’s
house (they called her Mademoiselle de Froidfond)
outdid each other in expressions of admiration.
This concert of praise, never before bestowed upon
Eugenie, made her blush under its novelty; but insensibly
her ear became habituated to the sound, and however
coarse the compliments might be, she soon was so accustomed
to hear her beauty lauded that if any new-comer had
seemed to think her plain, she would have felt the
reproach far more than she might have done eight years
earlier. She ended at last by loving the incense,
which she secretly laid at the feet of her idol.
By degrees she grew accustomed to be treated as a
sovereign and to see her court pressing around her
every evening.
Monsieur de Bonfons was the hero of
the little circle, where his wit, his person, his
education, his amiability, were perpetually praised.
One or another would remark that in seven years he
had largely increased his fortune, that Bonfons brought
in at least ten thousand francs a year, and was surrounded,
like the other possessions of the Cruchots, by the
vast domains of the heiress.
“Do you know, mademoiselle,”
said an habitual visitor, “that the Cruchots
have an income of forty thousand francs among them!”
“And then, their savings!”
exclaimed an elderly female Cruchotine, Mademoiselle
de Gribeaucourt.
“A gentleman from Paris has
lately offered Monsieur Cruchot two hundred thousand
francs for his practice,” said another.
“He will sell it if he is appointed juge
de paix.”
“He wants to succeed Monsieur
de Bonfons as president of the Civil courts, and is
taking measures,” replied Madame d’Orsonval.
“Monsieur le president will certainly be made
councillor.”
“Yes, he is a very distinguished
man,” said another,—“don’t
you think so, mademoiselle?”
Monsieur de Bonfons endeavored to
put himself in keeping with the role he sought to
play. In spite of his forty years, in spite of
his dusky and crabbed features, withered like most
judicial faces, he dressed in youthful fashions, toyed
with a bamboo cane, never took snuff in Mademoiselle
de Froidfond’s house, and came in a white cravat
and a shirt whose pleated frill gave him a family
resemblance to the race of turkeys. He addressed
the beautiful heiress familiarly, and spoke of her
as “Our dear Eugenie.” In short, except
for the number of visitors, the change from loto to
whist, and the disappearance of Monsieur and Madame
Grandet, the scene was about the same as the one with
which this history opened. The pack were still
pursuing Eugenie and her millions; but the hounds,
more in number, lay better on the scent, and beset
the prey more unitedly. If Charles could have
dropped from the Indian Isles, he would have found
the same people and the same interests. Madame
des Grassins, to whom Eugenie was full of kindness
and courtesy, still persisted in tormenting the Cruchots.
Eugenie, as in former days, was the central figure
of the picture; and Charles, as heretofore, would
still have been the sovereign of all. Yet there
had been some progress. The flowers which the
president formerly presented to Eugenie on her birthdays
and fete-days had now become a daily institution.
Every evening he brought the rich heiress a huge and
magnificent bouquet, which Madame Cornoiller placed
conspicuously in a vase, and secretly threw into a
corner of the court-yard when the visitors had departed.
Early in the spring, Madame des Grassins
attempted to trouble the peace of the Cruchotines
by talking to Eugenie of the Marquis de Froidfond,
whose ancient and ruined family might be restored if
the heiress would give him back his estates through
marriage. Madame des Grassins rang the changes
on the peerage and the title of marquise, until, mistaking
Eugenie’s disdainful smile for acquiescence,
she went about proclaiming that the marriage with
“Monsieur Cruchot” was not nearly as certain
as people thought.
“Though Monsieur de Froidfond
is fifty,” she said, “he does not look
older than Monsieur Cruchot. He is a widower,
and he has children, that’s true. But then
he is a marquis; he will be peer of France; and in
times like these where you will find a better match?
I know it for a fact that Pere Grandet, when he put
all his money into Froidfond, intended to graft himself
upon that stock; he often told me so. He was
a deep one, that old man!”
“Ah! Nanon,” said
Eugenie, one night as she was going to bed, “how
is it that in seven years he has never once written
to me?”