It was one o’clock in the morning,
during the winter of 1829-30, but in the Vicomtesse
de Grandlieu’s salon two persons stayed on who
did not belong to her family circle. A young
and good-looking man heard the clock strike, and took
his leave. When the courtyard echoed with the
sound of a departing carriage, the Vicomtesse looked
up, saw that no one was present save her brother and
a friend of the family finishing their game of piquet,
and went across to her daughter. The girl, standing
by the chimney-piece, apparently examining a transparent
fire-screen, was listening to the sounds from the
courtyard in a way that justified certain maternal
fears.
“Camille,” said the Vicomtesse,
“if you continue to behave to young Comte de
Restaud as you have done this evening, you will oblige
me to see no more of him here. Listen, child,
and if you have any confidence in my love, let me
guide you in life. At seventeen one cannot judge
of past or future, nor of certain social considerations.
I have only one thing to say to you. M. de Restaud
has a mother, a mother who would waste millions of
francs; a woman of no birth, a Mlle. Goriot; people
talked a good deal about her at one time. She
behaved so badly to her own father, that she certainly
does not deserve to have so good a son. The young
Count adores her, and maintains her in her position
with dutifulness worthy of all praise, and he is extremely
good to his brother and sister.—But however
admirable his behavior may be,” the Vicomtesse
added with a shrewd expression, “so long as his
mother lives, any family would take alarm at the idea
of intrusting a daughter’s fortune and future
to young Restaud.”
“I overheard a word now and
again in your talk with Mlle. de Grandlieu,”
cried the friend of the family, “and it made
me anxious to put in a word of my own.—I
have won, M. le Comte,” he added, turning to
his opponent. “I shall throw you over and
go to your niece’s assistance.”
“See what it is to have an attorney’s
ears!” exclaimed the Vicomtesse. “My
dear Derville, how could you know what I was saying
to Camille in a whisper?”
“I knew it from your looks,”
answered Derville, seating himself in a low chair
by the fire.
Camille’s uncle went to her
side, and Mme. de Grandlieu took up her position
on a hearth stool between her daughter and Derville.
“The time has come for telling
a story, which should modify your judgment as to Ernest
de Restaud’s prospects.”
“A story?” cried Camille. “Do
begin at once, monsieur.”
The glance that Derville gave the
Vicomtesse told her that this tale was meant for her.
The Vicomtesse de Grandlieu, be it said, was one of
the greatest ladies in the Faubourg Saint-Germain,
by reason of her fortune and her ancient name; and
though it may seem improbable that a Paris attorney
should speak so familiarly to her, or be so much at
home in her house, the fact is nevertheless easily
explained.
When Mme. de Grandlieu returned
to France with the Royal family, she came to Paris,
and at first lived entirely on the pension allowed
her out of the Civil List by Louis XVIII.—an
intolerable position. The Hotel de Grandlieu
had been sold by the Republic. It came to Derville’s
knowledge that there were flaws in the title, and he
thought that it ought to return to the Vicomtesse.
He instituted proceedings for nullity of contract,
and gained the day. Encouraged by this success,
he used legal quibbles to such purpose that he compelled
some institution or other to disgorge the Forest of
Liceney. Then he won certain lawsuits against
the Canal d’Orleans, and recovered a tolerably
large amount of property, with which the Emperor had
endowed various public institutions. So it fell
out that, thanks to the young attorney’s skilful
management, Mme. de Grandlieu’s income reached
the sum of some sixty thousand francs, to say nothing
of the vast sums returned to her by the law of indemnity.
And Derville, a man of high character, well informed,
modest, and pleasant in company, became the house-friend
of the family.
By his conduct of Mme. de Grandlieu’s
affairs he had fairly earned the esteem of the Faubourg
Saint-Germain, and numbered the best families among
his clients; but he did not take advantage of his popularity,
as an ambitious man might have done. The Vicomtesse
would have had him sell his practice and enter the
magistracy, in which career advancement would have
been swift and certain with such influence at his
disposal; but he persistently refused all offers.
He only went into society to keep up his connections,
but he occasionally spent an evening at the Hotel
de Grandlieu. It was a very lucky thing for him
that his talents had been brought into the light by
his devotion to Mme. de Grandlieu, for his practice
otherwise might have gone to pieces. Derville
had not an attorney’s soul. Since Ernest
de Restaud had appeared at the Hotel de Grandlieu,
and he had noticed that Camille felt attracted to
the young man, Derville had been as assiduous in his
visits as any dandy of the Chausee-d’Antin newly
admitted to the noble Faubourg. At a ball only
a few days before, when he happened to stand near
Camille, and said, indicating the Count:
“It is a pity that yonder youngster
has not two or three million francs, is it not?”
“Is it a pity? I do not
think so,” the girl answered. “M.
de Restaud has plenty of ability; he is well educated,
and the Minister, his chief, thinks well of him.
He will be a remarkable man, I have no doubt.
‘Yonder youngster’ will have as much money
as he wishes when he comes into power.”
“Yes, but suppose that he were rich already?”
“Rich already?” repeated
Camille, flushing red. “Why all the girls
in the room would be quarreling for him,” she
said, glancing at the quadrilles.
“And then,” retorted the
attorney, “Mlle. de Grandlieu might not be the
one towards whom his eyes are always turned? That
is what that red color means! You like him, do
you not? Come, speak out.”
Camille suddenly rose to go.
“She loves him,” Derville thought.
Since that evening, Camille had been
unwontedly attentive to the attorney, who approved
of her liking for Ernest de Restaud. Hitherto,
although she knew well that her family lay under great
obligations to Derville, she had felt respect rather
than real friendship for him, their relation was more
a matter of politeness than of warmth of feeling;
and by her manner, and by the tones of her voice, she
had always made him sensible of the distance which
socially lay between them. Gratitude is a charge
upon the inheritance which the second generation is
apt to repudiate.