V
THE PERPLEXITIES OF THE
GOVERNMENT IN ARCIS
At this moment several groups of bourgeois,
electors and non-electors, were standing before the
Chateau d’Arcis, the iron gates of which open
on the square near to the door of Madame Marion’s
house. This square is a piece of open ground
from which issue several roads and several streets.
In it is a covered market. Opposite to the chateau,
on the other side of the square, which is neither
paved nor macadamized, and where the rain has made
various little gutters, is a fine esplanade, called
the Avenue of Sighs. Is that to the honor or to
the blame of the leaders of the town? This singular
ambibology is no doubt a stroke of native wit.
Two handsome side avenues, planted
with lindens, lead from the square to a circular boulevard
which forms another promenade, though usually deserted,
where more dirt and rubbish than promenaders may commonly
be seen.
At the height of the discussion which
Achille Pigoult was dramatizing with a coolness and
courage worthy of a member of a real parliament, four
personages were walking down one of the linden avenues
which led from the Avenue of Sighs. When they
reached the square, they stopped as if by common consent,
and looked at the inhabitants of Arcis, who were humming
before the chateau like so many bees before returning
to their hives at night. The four promenaders
were the whole ministerial conclave of Arcis, namely:
the sub-prefect, the procureur-du-roi, his
substitute, and the examining-judge, Monsieur Martener.
The judge of the court, Monsieur Michu, was, as we
know already, a partisan of the Elder Branch and a
devoted adherent of the house of Cinq-Cygne.
“No, I don’t understand
the action of the government,” repeated the
sub-prefect, Antonin Goulard, pointing to the groups
which seemed to be thickening. “At such
an important crisis to leave me without instructions!”
“In that you are like the rest
of us,” said Olivier Vinet, the substitute,
smiling.
“Why do you blame the government?”
asked the procureur-du-roi, Frederic Marest.
“The ministry is much embarrassed,”
remarked young Martener. “It knows that
this arrondissement belongs, in a certain way, to the
Kellers, and it is very desirous not to thwart them.
It is forced to keep on good terms with the only man
who is comparable to Monsieur de Talleyrand.
It is not to the prefect, but to the Comte de Gondreville
that you ought to send the commissary of police.”
“Meanwhile,” said Frederic
Marest, “the Opposition is bestirring itself;
you see yourselves the influence of Monsieur Giguet.
Our mayor, Monsieur Beauvisage, is presiding over
that preparatory meeting.”
“After all,” said Olivier
Vinet slyly to the sub-prefect, “Simon Giguet
is your friend and schoolmate; he will belong to the
Thiers’ party; you risk nothing in supporting
his election.”
“The present ministry could
dismiss me before its fall,” replied the sub-prefect,
“and who knows when I should be reappointed?”
“Collinet, the grocer!—that
makes the sixty-sixth elector who has entered the
Giguet house,” said Monsieur Martener, who was
practising his trade as examining-judge by counting
the electors.
“If Charles Keller is the ministerial
candidate,” resumed the sub-prefect, “I
ought to have been told of it; the government makes
a mistake in giving time for Simon Giguet to get hold
of the electors.”
These four individuals had now reached,
walking slowly, the spot where the avenue ceases and
becomes an open square.
“There’s Monsieur Groslier,”
said the judge, catching sight of a man on horseback.
This was the commissary of police;
he saw the government of Arcis collected on the public
square, and he rode up to the four gentlemen.
“Well, Monsieur Groslier?”
said the sub-prefect, taking the commissary a little
apart from his three colleagues.
“Monsieur,” said the commissary
of police in a low voice, “Monsieur la prefet
has sent me to tell you some sad news; Monsieur le
Vicomte Charles Keller is dead. The news reached
Paris by telegram night before last, and the two Messieurs
Keller, the Comte de Gondreville, the Marechale Carigliano,
in fact the whole family are now at Gondreville.
Abd-el-Kader has resumed the offensive in Africa; the
war is being vigorously carried on. This poor
young man was among the first victims of the renewal
of hostilities. You will receive confidential
instructions, so Monsieur le prefet told me, in relation
to the coming election.”
“By whom?” asked the sub-prefect.
“If I knew that, the matter
would not be confidential,” replied the commissary.
“In fact, I think the prefect himself does not
know. He told me that the matter would be a secret
one between you and the ministry.”
Then he rode on, after seeing the
sub-prefect lay his fingers on his lips as a warning
to keep silence.
“Well, what news from the prefecture?”
said the procureur-du-roi, when Goulard returned
to the group of the three functionaries.
“Nothing satisfactory,”
replied Goulard, stepping quickly, as if he wanted
to get away from the others, who now walked silently
toward the middle of the square, somewhat piqued by
the manner of the sub-prefect. There Monsieur
Martener noticed old Madame Beauvisage, the mother
of Phileas, surrounded by nearly all the bourgeois
on the square, to whom she was apparently relating
something. A solicitor, named Sinot, who numbered
all the royalists of Arcis among his clients, and
who had not gone to the Giguet meeting, now detached
himself from the group, and running to the door of
the Marion house rang the bell violently.
“What can be the matter?”
said Frederic Marest, dropping his eyeglass, and calling
the attention of his colleagues to this circumstance.
“The matter is, messieurs,”
said the sub-prefect, thinking it useless to keep
a secret which was evidently known to the other party,
“that Charles Keller has been killed in Africa,
and that this event doubles the chances of Simon Giguet.
You know Arcis; there can be no other ministerial
candidate than Charles Keller. Any other man would
find the whole local patriotism of the place arrayed
against him.
“Will they really elect such
an idiot as Simon Giguet?” said Olivier Vinet,
laughing.
This young substitute, then only twenty-three
years of age, was the son of one of our most famous
attorney-generals, who had come into power with the
Revolution of July; he therefore owed his early entrance
into public life to the influence of his father.
The latter, always elected deputy by the town of Provins,
is one of the buttresses of the Centre in the Chamber.
Therefore the son, whose mother was a Demoiselle de
Chargeboeuf [see “Pierrette”], had a certain
air of assurance, both in his functions and in his
personal behavior, that plainly showed the backing
of his father. He expressed his opinion on men
and things without reserve; for he confidently expected
not to stay very long at Arcis, but to receive his
appointment as procureur-du-roi at Versailles,
a sure step to a post in Paris.
The confident air of this little Vinet,
and the sort of assumption which the certainty of
making his way gave to him, was all the more irritating
to Frederic Marest, his superior, because a biting
wit accompanied the rather undisciplined habits and
manners of his young subordinate. Frederic Marest,
procureur-du-roi, a man about forty years of
age, who had spent six years of his life under the
Restoration in becoming a substitute only to be neglected
and left in Arcis by the government of July, in spite
of the fact that he had some eighteen thousand francs
a year of his own, was perpetually kept on the rack
between the necessity of winning the good graces of
young Vinet’s father—a touchy attorney-general
who might become Keeper of the Seals—and
of keeping his own dignity.
Olivier Vinet, slender in figure,
with a pallid face, lighted by a pair of malicious
green eyes, was one of those sarcastic young gentlemen,
inclined to dissipation, who nevertheless know how
to assume the pompous, haughty, and pedantic air with
which magistrates arm themselves when they once reach
the bench. The tall, stout, heavy, and grave
procureur-du-roi had lately invented a system
by which he hoped to keep out of trouble with the
exasperating Olivier; he treated him as a father would
treat a spoilt child.
“Olivier,” he replied
to his substitute, slapping him on the shoulder, “a
man of your capacity ought to reflect that Maitre Giguet
is very likely to become deputy. You’d
have made that remark just as readily before the people
of Arcis as before us, who are safe friends.”
“There is one thing against
Giguet,” observed Monsieur Martener.
This good young man, rather heavy
but full of capacity, the son of a physician in Provins,
owed his place to Vinet’s father, who was long
a lawyer in Provins and still continued to be the
patron of his people as the Comte de Gondreville was
the patron of the people of Arcis.
“What is that?” asked the sub-prefect.
“Local patriotism is always
bitterly against a man who is imposed upon the electors,”
replied the examining-judge, “but when it happens
that the good people of Arcis have to elevate one
of their own equals to the Chamber, envy and jealousy
are stronger than patriotism.”
“That is very simple,”
said the procureur-du-roi, “and very true.
If you can manage to collect fifty ministerial votes
you will find yourself master of the coming election,”
he added, addressing the sub-prefect.
“It will do if you produce a
candidate of the same calibre as Simon Giguet,”
said Olivier Vinet.
The sub-prefect allowed an expression
of satisfaction to appear upon his features, which
did not escape the notice of his three companions,
with whom, moreover, he had a full understanding.
All four being bachelors, and tolerably rich, they
had formed, without premeditation, an alliance against
the dulness of the provinces. The three functionaries
had already remarked the sort of jealousy that Goulard
felt for Giguet, which a few words on their antecedents
will explain.
Antonin Goulard, the son of a former
huntsman to the house of Simeuse, enriched by the
purchase of the confiscated property of emigres
was, like Simon Giguet, a son of Arcis. Old Goulard,
his father, left the abbey of Valpreux (corruption
of Val-des-Preux) to live in Arcis after the death
of his wife, and he sent his son to the imperial lyceum,
where Colonel Giguet had already placed his son Simon.
The two schoolmates subsequently went through their
legal studies in Paris together, and their intimacy
was continued in the amusements of youth. They
promised to help each other to success in life whenever
they entered upon their different careers. But
fate willed that they should end by being rivals.
In spite of Goulard’s manifest
advantages, in spite of the cross of the Legion of
honor which the Comte de Gondreville had obtained for
him in default of promotion, the offer of his heart
and position had been frankly declined when, about
six months before this history begins, he had privately
presented himself to Madame Beauvisage as a suitor
for her daughter’s hand. No step of that
nature is ever taken secretly in the provinces.
The procureur-du-roi, Frederic Marest, whose
fortune, buttonhole, and position were about on a par
with those of Antonin Goulard, had received a like
refusal, three years earlier, based on the difference
of ages. Consequently, the two officials were
on terms of strict politeness with the Beauvisage family,
and laughed at them severally in private. Both
had divined and communicated to each other the real
motive of the candidacy of Simon Giguet, for they
fully understood the hopes of Madame Marion; and they
were bent on preventing her nephew from marrying the
heiress whose hand had been refused to them.
“God grant that I may be master
of this election,” said Goulard, “and
that the Comte de Gondreville may get me made a prefect,
for I have no more desire than you to spend the rest
of my days here, though I was born in Arcis.”
“You have a fine opportunity
to be elected deputy yourself, my chief,” said
Olivier Vinet to Marest. “Come and see my
father, who will, I think, arrive here from Provins
in a few hours. Let us propose to him to have
you chosen as ministerial candidate.”
“Halt!” said Antonin;
“the ministry has its own views about the deputy
of Arcis.”
“Ah, bah!” exclaimed Vinet,
“there are two ministries: the one that
thinks it makes elections, and another that thinks
it profits by them.”
“Don’t let us complicate
Antonin’s difficulties,” said Frederic
Marest, winking at his substitute.
The four officials, who had crossed
the open square and were close to the Mulet inn, now
saw Poupart leaving the house of Madame Marion and
coming towards them. A moment later, and the porte
cochere of that house vomited the sixty-seven
conspirators.
“So you went to that meeting?”
said Antonin Goulard to Poupart.
“I shall never go again, monsieur
le sous-prefet,” said the innkeeper. “The
son of Monsieur Keller is dead, and I have now no object
in going there. God has taken upon himself to
clear the ground.”
“Well, Pigoult, what happened?”
cried Olivier Vinet, catching sight of the young notary.
“Oh!” said Pigoult, on
whose forehead the perspiration, which had not dried,
bore testimony to his efforts, “Simon has just
told some news that made them all unanimous.
Except five persons,—Poupart, my grandfather,
Mollot, Sinot, and I,—all present swore,
as at the Jeu de Paume, to employ every means to promote
the triumph of Simon Giguet, of whom I have made a
mortal enemy. Oh! we got warm, I can tell you!
However, I led the Giguets to fulminate against the
Gondrevilles. That puts the old count on my side.
No later than to-morrow he will hear what the soi-disant
patriots of Arcis have said about him and his corruptions
and his infamies, to free their necks, as they called
it, of his yoke.”
“Unanimous, were they?” said Olivier Vinet,
laughing.
“Unanimous, to-day,” remarked Monsieur
Martener.
“Oh!” exclaimed Pigoult,
“the general sentiment of the electors is for
one of their own townsmen. Whom can you oppose
to Simon Giguet,—a man who has just spent
two hours in explaining the word progress.”
“Take old Grevin!” cried the sub-prefect.
“He has no such ambition,”
replied Pigoult. “But we must first of all
consult the Comte de Gondreville. Look, look!”
he added; “see the attentions with which Simon
is taking him that gilded booby, Beauvisage.”
And he pointed to the candidate, who
was holding the mayor by the arm and whispering in
his ear. Beauvisage meantime was bowing right
and left to the inhabitants, who gazed at him with
the deference which provincials always testify to
the richest man in their locality.
“But there’s no use cajoling
him,” continued Pigoult. “Cecile’s
hand does not depend on either her father or her mother.”
“On whom, then?”
“On my old patron, Monsieur
Grevin. Even if Simon is elected deputy, the
town is not won.”
Though the sub-prefect and Frederic
Marest tried to get an explanation of these words,
Pigoult refused to give the reason of an exclamation
which seemed to them big with meaning and implying
a certain knowledge of the plans of the Beauvisage
family.
All Arcis was now in a commotion,
not only on account of the fatal event which had just
overtaken the Gondreville family, but because of the
great resolution come to at the Giguet house, where
Madame Marion and her three servants were hurriedly
engaged in putting everything in its usual order,
ready to receive her customary guests, whose curiosity
would probably bring them that evening in large numbers.