IX
A STRANGER
Severine found her father seated on
a wooden bench at the end of his terrace, under a
bower of lilacs then in bloom, and taking his coffee;
for it was half-past five in the afternoon. She
saw, by the pain on her father’s face, that
he had already heard the news. In fact, the old
count had sent a valet to his friend, begging him to
come to him.
Up to the present time, old Grevin
had endeavored not to encourage his daughter’s
ambition too far; but now, in the midst of the contradictory
reflections which the melancholy death of Charles Keller
caused him, his secret escaped his lips.
“My dear child,” he said
to her, “I had formed the finest plans for your
future. Cecile was to have been Vicomtesse Keller,
for Charles, by my influence, would now have been
selected deputy. Neither Gondreville nor his
daughter Madame Keller would have refused Cecile’s
dot of sixty thousand francs a year, especially
with the prospect of a hundred thousand more which
she will some day have from you. You would have
lived in Paris with your daughter, and played your
part of mother-in-law in the upper regions of power.”
Madame Beauvisage made a sign of satisfaction.
“But we are knocked down by
the death of this charming young man, to whom the
prince royal had already given his friendship.
Now this Simon Giguet, who has thrust himself upon
the scene, is a fool, and the worst of all fools,
for he thinks himself an eagle. You are, however,
too intimate with the Giguets and the Marion household
not to put the utmost politeness into your refusal—but
you must refuse him.”
“As usual, you and I are of the same opinion,
father.”
“You can say that I have otherwise
disposed of Cecile’s hand, and that will cut
short all preposterous pretensions like that of Antonin
Goulard. Little Vinet may offer himself, and he
is preferable to the others who are smelling after
the dot; he has talent, and shrewdness, and
he belongs to the Chargeboeufs by his mother; but he
has too much character not to rule his wife, and he
is young enough to make himself loved. You would
perish between two sentiments—for I know
you by heart, my child.”
“I shall be much embarrassed
this evening at the Marions’ to know what to
say,” remarked Severine.
“Well, then, my dear,”
said her father, “send Madame Marion to me;
I’ll talk to her.”
“I knew, father, that you were
thinking of our future, but I had no idea you expected
it to be so brilliant,” said Madame Beauvisage,
taking the hands of the old man and kissing them.
“I have pondered the matter
so deeply,” said Grevin, “that in 1831
I bought the Beauseant mansion in Paris, which you
have probably seen.”
Madame de Beauvisage made a movement
of surprise on hearing this secret, until then so
carefully kept, but she did not interrupt her father.
“It will be my wedding present,”
he went on. “In 1832 I let it for seven
years to an Englishman for twenty-four thousand francs
a year, —a pretty stroke of business; for
it only cost me three hundred and twenty-five thousand
francs, of which I thus recover nearly two hundred
thousand. The lease ends in July of this year.”
Severine kissed her father on the
forehead and on both cheeks. This last revelation
so magnified her future that she was well-nigh dazzled.
“I shall advise my father,”
she said to herself, as she recrossed the bridge,
“to give only the reversion of that property
to his grandchildren, and let me have the life-interest
in it. I have no idea of letting my daughter
and son-in-law turn me out of doors; they must live
with me.”
At dessert, when the two women-servants
were safely at their own dinner in the kitchen, and
Madame Beauvisage was certain of not being overheard,
she thought it advisable to give Cecile a little lecture.
“My daughter,” she said,
“behave this evening with propriety, like a
well-bred girl; and from this day forth be more sedate.
Do not chatter heedlessly, and never walk alone with
Monsieur Giguet, or Monsieur Olivier Vinet, or the
sub-prefect, or Monsieur Martener,—in fact,
with any one, not even Achille Pigoult. You will
not marry any of the young men of Arcis, or of the
department. Your fate is to shine in Paris.
Therefore I shall now give you charming dresses, to
accustom you to elegance. We can easily find
out where the Princesse de Cadignan and the Marquise
de Cinq-Cygne get their things. I mean that you
shall cease to look provincial. You must practise
the piano for three hours every day. I shall
send for Monsieur Moise from Troyes until I know what
master I ought to get from Paris. Your talents
must all be developed, for you have only one year
more of girlhood before you. Now I have warned
you, and I shall see how you behave this evening.
You must manage to keep Simon at a distance, but without
coquetting with him.”
“Don’t be uneasy, mamma;
I intend to adore the stranger.”
These words, which made Madame Beauvisage
laugh, need some explanation.
“Ha! I haven’t seen
him yet,” said Phileas, “but everybody
is talking about him. When I want to know who
he is, I shall send the corporal or Monsieur Groslier
to ask him for his passport.”
There is no little town in France
where, at a given time, the drama or the comedy of
the stranger is not played. Often the stranger
is an adventurer who makes dupes and departs, carrying
with him the reputation of a woman, or the money of
a family. Oftener the stranger is a real stranger,
whose life remains mysterious long enough for the
town to busy itself curiously about his words and deeds.
Now the probable accession to power
of Simon Giguet was not the only serious event that
was happening in Arcis. For the last two days
the attention of the little town had been focussed
on a personage just arrived, who proved to be the
first Unknown of the present generation. The
stranger was at this moment the subject of conversation
in every household in the place. He was the beam
fallen from heaven into the city of the frogs.
The situation of Arcis-sur-Aube explains
the effect which the arrival of a stranger was certain
to produce. About eighteen miles from Troyes,
on the high-road to Paris, opposite to a farm called
“La Belle Etoile,” a county road branches
off from the main road, and leads to Arcis, crossing
the vast plains where the Seine cuts a narrow green
valley bordered with poplars, which stand out upon
the whiteness of the chalk soil of Champagne.
The main road from Arcis to Troyes is eighteen miles
in length, and makes the arch of a bow, the extremities
of which are Troyes and Arcis, so that the shortest
route from Paris to Arcis is by the county road which
turns off, as we have said, near the Belle Etoile.
The Aube is navigable only from Arcis to its mouth.
Therefore this town, standing eighteen miles from a
high-road, and separated from Troyes by monotonous
plains, is isolated more or less, and has but little
commerce or transportation either by land or water.
Arcis is, in fact, a town completely isolated, where
no travellers pass, and is attached to Troyes and
La Belle Etoile by stage-coaches only. All the
inhabitants know each other; they even know the commercial
travellers who come, now and then, on business from
the large Parisian houses. Thus, as in all provincial
towns in a like position, a stranger, if he stayed
two days, would wag the tongues and excite the imaginations
of the whole community without his name or his business
being known.
Now, Arcis being still in a state
of tranquillity three days before the morning when,
by the will of the creator of so many histories, the
present tale begins, there was seen to arrive by the
county road a stranger, driving a handsome tilbury
drawn by a valuable horse, and accompanied by a tiny
groom, no bigger than my fist, mounted on a saddle-horse.
The coach, connecting with the diligences to Troyes,
had brought from La Belle Etoile three trunks coming
from Paris, marked with no name, but belonging to
this stranger, who took up his quarters at the Mulet
inn. Every one in Arcis supposed, on the first
evening, that this personage had come with the intention
of buying the estate of Arcis; and much was said in
all households about the future owner of the chateau.
The tilbury, the traveller, his horses, his servant,
one and all appeared to belong to a man who had dropped
upon Arcis from the highest social sphere.
The stranger, no doubt fatigued, did
not show himself for a time; perhaps he spent part
of the day in arranging himself in the rooms he had
chosen, announcing his intention of staying a certain
time. He requested to see the stable where his
horses were to be kept, showed himself very exacting,
and insisted that they should be placed in stalls
apart from those of the innkeeper’s horses, and
from those of guests who might come later. In
consequence of such singular demands, the landlord
of the hotel du Mulet considered his guest to be an
Englishman.
On the evening of the first day several
attempts were made at the Mulet by inquisitive persons
to satisfy their curiosity; but no light whatever
could be obtained from the little groom, who evaded
all inquiries, not by refusals or by silence, but
by sarcasms which seemed to be beyond his years and
to prove him a corrupt little mortal.
After making a careful toilet and
dining at six o’clock, the stranger mounted
a horse, and, followed by his groom, rode off along
the road to Brienne, not returning till a very late
hour to the Mulet. The landlord, his wife, and
her maids had meantime gained no information from
a careful examination of his trunks, and the articles
about his rooms, as to the projects or the condition
of their mysterious inmate.
On the stranger’s return the
mistress of the house carried up to him the book in
which, according to police regulations, he was required
to inscribe his name, rank, the object of his journey,
and the place from which he came.
“I shall write nothing,”
he said to the mistress of the inn. “If
any one questions you, you can say I refused; and
you may send the sub-prefect to see me, for I have
no passport. I dare say that many persons will
make inquiries about me, madame, and you can tell them
just what you like. I wish you to know nothing
about me. If you worry me on this point, I shall
go to the Hotel de la Poste on the Place du Pont and
remain there for the fortnight I propose to spend here.
I should be sorry for that, because I know that you
are the sister of Gothard, one of the heroes of the
Simeuse affair.”
“Enough, monsieur,” said
the sister of the steward of Cinq-Cygne.
After such a beginning, the stranger
kept the mistress of the house a whole hour and made
her tell him all she knew of Arcis, of its fortunes,
its interests, and its functionaries. The next
day he disappeared on horseback, followed by his tiger,
returning at midnight.
We can now understand Mademoiselle
Cecile’s little joke, which Madame Beauvisage
thought to be without foundation. Beauvisage and
Cecile, surprised by the order of the day promulgated
by Severine, were enchanted. While his wife went
to dress for Madame Marion’s reception, the
father listened to the many conjectures it was natural
a girl should make in such a case. Then, fatigued
with his day, he went to bed as soon as his wife and
daughter had departed.
As may readily be supposed by those
who know anything of country towns, a crowd of persons
flocked to Madame Marion’s that evening.
The triumph of Giguet junior was thought to be a victory
won against the Comte de Gondreville, and to insure
forever the independence of Arcis in the matter of
elections. The news of the death of poor Charles
Keller was regarded as a judgment from heaven, intended
to silence all rivalries.
Antonin Goulard, Frederic Marest,
Olivier Vinet, and Monsieur Martener, the authorities
who, until then, had frequented this salon (the prevailing
opinions of which did not seem to them contrary to
the government created by the popular will in July,
1830), came as usual, possessed by curiosity to see
what attitude the Beauvisage family would take under
the circumstances.
The salon, restored to its usual condition,
showed no signs of the meeting which appeared to have
settled the destiny of Simon Giguet. By eight
o’clock four card-tables, each with four players,
were under way. The smaller salon and the dining-room
were full of people. Never, except on grand occasions,
such as balls and fete-days, had Madame Marion seen
such an influx at the door of her salon, forming as
it were the tail of a comet.
“It is the dawn of power,”
said Olivier Vinet to the mistress of the house, showing
her this spectacle, so gratifying to the heart of a
person who delighted in receiving company.
“No one knows what there is
in Simon,” replied the mother. “We
live in times when young men who persevere and are
moral and upright can aspire to everything.”
This answer was made, not so much
to Vinet as to Madame Beauvisage, who had entered
the room with her daughter and was now beginning to
offer her congratulations on the event. In order
to escape indirect appeals and pointed interpretations
of careless words, Madame Beauvisage took a vacant
place at a whist-table and devoted her mind to the
winning of one hundred fishes. One hundred fishes,
or counters, made fifty sous! When a player had
lost that sum it was talked of in Arcis for a couple
of days.
Cecile went to talk with Mademoiselle
Mollot, one of her good friends, appearing to be seized
with redoubled affection for her. Mademoiselle
Mollot was the beauty of Arcis, just as Cecile was
the heiress. Monsieur Mollot, clerk of the court,
lived on the Grande-Place in a house constructed in
the same manner as that of Beauvisage on the Place
du Pont. Madame Mollot, forever seated at the
window of her salon on the ground-floor, was attacked
(as the result of that situation) by intense, acute,
insatiable curiosity, now become a chronic and inveterate
disease. The moment a peasant entered the square
from the road to Brienne she saw him, and watched to
see what business could have brought him to Arcis;
she had no peace of mind until that peasant was explained.
She spent her life in judging the events, men, things,
and households of Arcis.
The ambition of the house of Mollot,
father, mother, and daughter, was to marry Ernestine
(an only daughter) to Antonin Goulard. Consequently
the refusal of the Beauvisage parents to entertain
the proposals of the sub-prefect had tightened the
bonds of friendship between the two families.
“There’s an impatient
man!” said Ernestine to Cecile, indicating Simon
Giguet. “He wants to come and talk with
us; but every one who comes in feels bound to congratulate
him. I’ve heard him say fifty times already:
’It is, I think, less to me than to my father
that this compliment of my fellow-citizens has been
paid; but, in any case, pray believe that I shall
be devoted not only to our general interests but to
yours individually.’ I can guess those words
by the motion of his lips, and all the while he is
looking at you with an air of martyrdom.”
“Ernestine,” replied Cecile,
“don’t leave me the whole evening; I don’t
want to listen to his proposals made under cover of
‘alases!’ and mingled with sighs.”
“Don’t you want to be
the wife of a Keeper of the Seals?”
“Ah! that’s all nonsense,” said
Cecile, laughing.
“But I assure you,” persisted
Ernestine, “that just before you came in Monsieur
Godivet, the registrar, was declaring with enthusiasm
that Simon would be Keeper of the Seals in three years.”
“Do they count on the influence
of the Comte de Gondreville?” asked the sub-prefect,
coming up to the two girls and guessing that they
were making fun of his friend Giguet.
“Ah! Monsieur Antonin,”
said the handsome Ernestine, “you who promised
my mother to find out all about the stranger,
what have you heard about him?”
“The events of to-day, Mademoiselle,
are so much more important,” said Antonin, taking
a seat beside Cecile, like a diplomat delighted to
escape general attention by conversing with two girls.
“All my career as sub-prefect or prefect is
at stake.”
“What! I thought you allowed
your friend Simon to be nominated unanimously.”
“Simon is my friend, but the
government is my master, and I expect to do my best
to prevent Simon from being elected. And here
comes Madame Mollot, who owes me her concurrence as
the wife of a man whose functions attach him to the
government.”
“I am sure we ask nothing better
than to be on your side,” replied the sheriff’s
wife. “Mollot has told me,” she continued
in a low voice, “what took place here to-day—it
is pitiable! Only one man showed talent, and
that was Achille Pigoult. Everybody agrees that
he would make a fine orator in the Chamber; and therefore,
though he has nothing, and my daughter has a dot
of sixty thousand francs, not to speak of what, as
an only child, she will inherit from us and also from
her uncle at Mollot and from my aunt Lambert at Troyes,—well,
I declare to you that if Monsieur Achille Pigoult
did us the honor to ask her to wife, I should give
her to him; yes, I should—provided always
she liked him. But the silly little goose wants
to marry as she pleases; it is Mademoiselle Beauvisage
who puts such notions into her head.”
The sub-prefect received this double
broadside like a man who knows he has thirty thousand
francs a year, and expects a prefecture.
“Mademoiselle is right,”
he said, looking at Cecile; “she is rich enough
to make a marriage of love.”
“Don’t let us talk about
marriage,” said Ernestine; “it saddens
my poor dear Cecile, who was owning to me just now
that in order not to be married for her money, but
for herself, she should like an affair with some stranger
who knew nothing of Arcis and her future expectations
as Lady Croesus, and would spin her a romance to end
in true love and a marriage.”
“That’s a very pretty
idea!” cried Olivier Vinet, joining the group
of young ladies in order to get away from the partisans
of Simon, the idol of the day. “I always
knew that Mademoiselle had as much sense as money.”
“And,” continued Ernestine,
“she has selected for the hero of her romance—”
“Oh!” interrupted Madame
Mollot, “an old man of fifty
”
“How do you know he is fifty?”
asked Olivier Vinet, laughing.
“How?” replied Madame
Mollot. “Why, this morning I was so puzzled
that I got out my opera-glass—”
“Bravo!” cried the superintendent
of ponts et chaussees, who was paying court
to the mother to obtain the daughter.
“And so,” continued Madame
Mollot, “I was able to see him shaving; with
such elegant razors!—mounted in gold, or
silver-gilt!”
“Gold! gold, of course!”
said Vinet. “When things are unknown they
should always be imagined of the finest quality.
Consequently I, not having seen this gentleman, am
perfectly sure that he is at least a count.”
This speech created a laugh; and the
laughing group excited the jealousy of a group of
dowagers and the attention of a troop of men in black
who surrounded Simon Giguet. As for the latter,
he was chafing in despair at not being able to lay
his fortune and his future at the feet of the rich
Cecile.
“Yes,” continued Vinet,
“a man distinguished for his birth, for his
manners, his fortune, his equipages,—a lion,
a dandy, a yellow-kid-glover!”
“Monsieur Olivier,” said
Ernestine, “he drives the prettiest tilbury
you ever saw.”
“What? Antonin, you never
told me he had a tilbury when we were talking about
that conspirator this morning. A tilbury!
Why, that’s an extenuating circumstance; he
can’t be a republican.”
“Mesdemoiselles, there is nothing
that I will not do in the interests of your amusement,”
said Antonin Goulard. “I will instantly
proceed to ascertain if this individual is a count,
and if he is, what kind of count.”
“You can make a report upon
him,” said the superintendent of bridges.
“For the use of all future sub-prefects,”
added Olivier Vinet.
“How can you do it?” asked Madame Mollot.
“Oh!” replied the sub-prefect,
“ask Mademoiselle Beauvisage whom she would
accept as her husband among all of us here present;
she will not answer. Allow me the same discretion.
Mesdemoiselles, restrain your anxiety; in ten minutes
you shall know whether the Unknown is a count or a
commercial traveller.”