ONE OF CERIZET’S
FEMALE CLIENTS
The next morning, at daybreak, Theodose
went to the office of the banker of the poor, to see
the effect produced upon his enemy by the punctual
payment of the night before, and to make another effort
to get rid of his hornet.
He found Cerizet standing up, in conference
with a woman, and he received an imperative sign to
keep at a distance and not to interrupt the interview.
The barrister was therefore reduced to conjectures
as to the importance of this woman, an importance
revealed by the eager look on the face of the lender
“by the little week.” Theodose had
a presentiment, though a very vague one, that the
upshot of this conference would have some influence
on Cerizet’s own arrangements, for he suddenly
beheld on that crafty countenance the change produced
by a dawning hope.
“But, my dear mamma Cardinal—”
“Yes, my good monsieur—”
“What is it you want—?”
“It must be decided—”
These beginnings, or these ends of
sentences were the only gleams of light that the animated
conversation, carried on in the lowest tones with
lip to ear and ear to lip, conveyed to the motionless
witness, whose attention was fixed on Madame Cardinal.
Madame Cardinal was one of Cerizet’s
earliest clients; she peddled fish. If Parisians
know these creations peculiar to their soil, foreigners
have no suspicion of their existence; and Mere Cardinal
—technologically speaking, of course, deserved
all the interest she excited in Theodose. So
many women of her species may be met with in the streets
that the passers-by give them no more attention than
they give to the three thousand pictures of the Salon.
But as she stood in Cerizet’s office the Cardinal
had all the value of an isolated masterpiece; she
was a complete and perfect type of her species.
The woman was mounted on muddy sabots;
but her feet, carefully wrapped in gaiters, were still
further protected by stout and thick-ribbed stockings.
Her cotton gown, adorned with a glounce of mud, bore
the imprint of the strap which supported the fish-basket.
Her principal garment was a shawl of what was called
“rabbit’s-hair cashmere,” the two
ends of which were knotted behind, above her bustle—for
we must needs employ a fashionable word to express
the effect produced by the transversal pressure of
the basket upon her petticoats, which projected below
it, in shape like a cabbage. A printed cotton
neckerchief, of the coarsest description, gave to view
a red neck, ribbed and lined like the surface of a
pond where people have skated. Her head was covered
in a yellow silk foulard, twined in a manner that
was rather picturesque. Short and stout, and ruddy
of skin, Mere Cardinal probably drank her little drop
of brandy in the morning. She had once been handsome.
The Halle had formerly reproached her, in the boldness
of its figurative speech, for doing “a double
day’s-work in the twenty-four.” Her
voice, in order to reduce itself to the diapason of
ordinary conversation, was obliged to stifle its sound
as other voices do in a sick-room; but at such times
it came thick and muffled, from a throat accustomed
to send to the farthest recesses of the highest garret
the names of the fish in their season. Her nose,
a la Roxelane, her well-cut lips, her blue eyes, and
all that formerly made up her beauty, was now buried
in folds of vigorous flesh which told of the habits
and occupations of an outdoor life. The stomach
and bosom were distinguished for an amplitude worthy
of Rubens.
“Do you want to make me lie
in the straw?” she said to Cerizet. “What
do I care for the Toupilliers? Ain’t I a
Toupillier myself? What do you want to do with
them, those Toupilliers?”
This savage outburst was hastily repressed
by Cerizet, who uttered a prolonged “Hush-sh!”
such as all conspirators obey.
“Well, go and find out all you
can about it, and come back to me,” said Cerizet,
pushing the woman toward the door, and whispering,
as he did so, a few words in her ear.
“Well, my dear friend,”
said Theodose to Cerizet, “you have got your
money?”
“Yes,” returned Cerizet
“we have measured our claws, they are the same
length, the same strength, and the same sharpness.
What next?”
“Am I to tell Dutocq that you
received, last night, twenty-five thousand francs?”
“Oh! my dear friend, not a word,
if you love me!” cried Cerizet.
“Listen,” said Theodose.
“I must know, once for all, what you want.
I am positively determined not to remain twenty-four
hours longer on the gridiron where you have got me.
Cheat Dutocq if you will; I am utterly indifferent
to that; but I intend that you and I shall come to
an understanding. It is a fortune that I have
paid you, twenty-five thousand francs, and you must
have earned ten thousand more in your business; it
is enough to make you an honest man. Cerizet,
if you will leave me in peace, if you won’t
prevent my marriage with Mademoiselle Colleville,
I shall certainly be king’s attorney-general,
or something of that kind in Paris. You can’t
do better than make sure of an influence in that sphere.”
“Here are my conditions; and
they won’t allow of discussion; you can take
them or leave them. You will obtain for me the
lease of Thuillier’s new house for eighteen
years, and I’ll hand you back one of your five
notes cancelled, and you shall not find me any longer
in your way. But you will have to settle with
Dutocq for the remaining four notes. You got
the better of me, and I know Dutocq hasn’t
the force to stand against you.”
“I’ll agree to that, provided
you’ll pay a rent of forty-eight thousand francs
for the house, the last year in advance, and begin
the lease in October.”
“Yes; but I shall not give for
the last year’s rent more than forty-three thousand
francs; your note will pay the remainder. I have
seen the house, and examined it. It suits me very
well.”
“One last condition,”
said Theodose; “you’ll help me against
Dutocq?”
“No,” said Cerizet, “you’ll
cook him brown yourself; he doesn’t need any
basting from me; he’ll give out his gravy fast
enough. But you ought to be reasonable.
The poor fellow can’t pay off the last fifteen
thousand francs due on his practice, and you should
reflect that fifteen thousand francs would certainly
buy back your notes.”
“Well; give me two weeks to get your lease—”
“No, not a day later than Monday
next! Tuesday your notes will be in Louchard’s
hands; unless you pay them Monday, or Thuillier signs
the lease.”
“Well, Monday, so be it!”
said Theodose; “are we friends?”
“We shall be Monday,” responded Cerizet.
“Well, then, Monday you’ll
pay for my dinner,” said Theodose, laughing.
“Yes, at the Rocher de Cancale,
if I have the lease. Dutocq shall be there—we’ll
all be there—ah! it is long since I’ve
had a good laugh.”
Theodose and Cerizet shook hands,
saying, reciprocally:—
“We’ll meet soon.”
Cerizet had not calmed down so suddenly
without reasons. In the first place, as Desroches
once said, “Bile does not facilitate business,”
and the usurer had too well seen the justice of that
remark not to coolly resolve to get something out
of his position, and to squeeze the jugular vein of
the crafty Provencal until he strangled him.
“It is a fair revenge,”
Desroches said to him; “mind you extract its
quintessence. You hold that fellow.”
For ten years past Cerizet had seen
men growing rich by practising the trade of principal
tenant. The principal tenant is, in Paris, to
the owners of houses what farmers are to country landlords.
All Paris has seen one of its great tailors, building
at his own cost, on the famous site of Frascati, one
of the most sumptuous of houses, and paying, as principal
tenant, fifty thousand francs a year for the ground
rent of the house, which, at the end of nineteen years’
lease, was to become the property of the owner of
the land. In spite of the costs of construction,
which were something like seven hundred thousand francs,
the profits of those nineteen years proved, in the
end, very large.
Cerizet, always on the watch for business,
had examined the chances for gain offered by the situation
of the house which Thuillier had stolen,—as
he said to Desroches,—and he had seen the
possibility of letting it for sixty thousand at the
end of six years. There were four shops, two
on each side, for it stood on a boulevard corner.
Cerizet expected, therefore, to get clear ten thousand
a year for a dozen years, allowing for eventualities
and sundries attendant on renewal of leases.
He therefore proposed to himself to sell his money-lending
business to the widow Poiret and Cadenet for ten thousand
francs; he already possessed thirty thousand; and
the two together would enable him to pay the last
year’s rent in advance, which house-owners in
Paris usually demand as a guarantee from a principal
tenant on a long lease. Cerizet had spent a happy
night; he fell asleep in a glorious dream; he saw
himself in a fair way to do an honest business, and
to become a bourgeois like Thuillier, like Minard,
and so many others.
But he had a waking of which he did
not dream. He found Fortune standing before him,
and emptying her gilded horns of plenty at his feet
in the person of Madame Cardinal. He had always
had a liking for the woman, and had promised her for
a year past the necessary sum to buy a donkey and
a little cart, so that she could carry on her business
on a large scale, and go from Paris to the suburbs.
Madame Cardinal, widow of a porter in the corn-market,
had an only daughter, whose beauty Cerizet had heard
of from some of the mother’s cronies. Olympe
Cardinal was about thirteen years of age at the time,
1837, when Cerizet began his system of loans in the
quarter; and with a view to an infamous libertinism,
he had paid great attention to the mother, whom he
rescued from utter misery, hoping to make Olympe his
mistress. But suddenly, in 1838, the girl left
her mother, and “made her life,” to use
an expression by which the lower classes in Paris describe
the abuse of the most precious gifts of nature and
youth.
To look for a girl in Paris is to
look for a smelt in the Seine; nothing but chance
can throw her into the net. The chance came.
Mere Cardinal, who to entertain a neighbor had taken
her to the Bobino theatre, recognized in the leading
lady her own daughter, whom the first comedian had
held under his control for three years. The mother,
gratified at first at beholding her daughter in a fine
gown of gold brocade, her hair dressed like that of
a duchess, and wearing open-worked stockings, satin
shoes, and receiving the plaudits of the audience,
ended by screaming out from her seat in the gallery:—
“You shall soon hear of me,
murderer of your own mother! I’ll know
whether miserable strolling-players have the right
to come and debauch young girls of sixteen!”
She waited at the stage-door to capture
her daughter, but the first comedian and the leading
lady had no doubt jumped across the footlights and
left the theatre with the audience, instead of issuing
by the stage-door, where Madame Cardinal and her crony,
Mere Mahoudeau, made an infernal rumpus, which two
municipal guards were called upon to pacify.
Those august personages, before whom the two women
lowered the diapason of their voices, called the mother’s
attention to the fact that the girl was of legitimate
theatrical age, and that instead of screaming at the
door after the director, she could summon him before
the justice-of-peace, or the police-court, whichever
she pleased.
The next day Madame Cardinal intended
to consult Cerizet, in view of the fact that he was
a clerk in the office of the justice-of-peace; but,
before reaching his lair in the rue des Poules, she
was met by the porter of a house in which an uncle
of hers, a certain Toupillier, was living, who told
her that the old man hadn’t probably two days
to live, being then in the last extremity.
“Well, how do you expect me
to help it?” replied the widow Cardinal.
“We count on you, my dear Madame
Cardinal; we know you won’t forget the good
advice we’ll give you. Here’s the
thing. Lately, your poor uncle, not being able
to stir round, has trusted me to go and collect the
rents of his house, rue Notre-Dame de Nazareth, and
the arrears of his dividends at the Treasury, which
come to eighteen hundred francs.”
By this time the widow Cardinal’s
eyes were becoming fixed instead of wandering.
“Yes, my dear,” continued
Perrache, a hump-backed little concierge; “and,
seeing that you are the only person who ever thinks
about him, and that you come and see him sometimes,
and bring him fish, perhaps he may make a bequest
in your favor. My wife, who has been nursing him
for the last few days since he has been so ill, spoke
to him of you, but he wouldn’t have you told
about his illness. But now, don’t you see,
it is high time you should show yourself there.
It is pretty nigh two months since he has been able
to attend to business.”
“You may well think, you old
thief,” replied Madame Cardinal, hurrying at
top speed toward the rue Honore-Chevalier, where her
uncle lived in a wretched garret, “that the
hair would grow on my hand before I could ever imagine
that. What! my uncle Toupillier rich! the old
pauper of the church of Saint-Sulpice!”
“Ah!” returned the porter,
“but he fed well. He went to bed every
night with his best friend, a big bottle of Roussillon.
My wife has tasted it, though he told us it was common
stuff. The wine-merchant in the rue des Canettes
supplies it to him.”
“Don’t say a word about
all this,” said the widow, when she parted from
the man who had given her the information. “I’ll
take care and remember you—if anything
comes of it.”
Toupillier, former drum-major in the
French Guards, had been for the two years preceding
1789 in the service of the Church as beadle of Saint-Sulpice.
The Revolution deprived him of that post, and he then
dropped down into a state of abject misery. He
was even obliged to take to the profession of model,
for he enjoyed, as they say, a fine physique.
When public worship was restored, he took up his beadle’s
staff once more; but in 1816 he was dismissed, as much
on account of his immorality as for his political
opinions. Nevertheless, he was allowed to stay
about the door of the church and distribute the holy
water. Later, an unfortunate affair, which we
shall presently mention, made him lose even that position;
but, still finding means to keep to the sanctuary,
he obtained permission to be allowed as a pauper in
the porch. At this period of life, being then
seventy-two years of age, he made himself ninety-six,
and began the profession of centenarian.
In all Paris it was impossible to
find another such beard and head of hair as Toupillier’s.
As he walked he appeared bent double; he held a stick
in his shaking hand,—a hand that was covered
with lichen, like a granite rock, and with the other
he held out the classic hat with a broad brim, filthy
and battered, into which, however, there fell abundant
alms. His legs were swathed in rags and bandages,
and his feet shuffled along in miserable overshoes
of woven mat-weed, inside of which he had fastened
excellent cork soles. He washed his face with
certain compounds, which gave it an appearance of forms
of illness, and he played the senility of a centenarian
to the life. He reckoned himself a hundred years
old in 1830, at which time his actual age was eighty;
he was the head of the paupers of Saint-Sulpice, the
master of the place, and all those who came to beg
under the arcades of the church, safe from the persecutions
of the police and beneath the protection of the beadle
and the giver of holy water, were forced to pay him
a sort of tithe.
When a new heir, a bridegroom, or
some godfather left the church, saying, “Here,
this is for all of you; don’t torment any of
my party,” Toupillier, appointed by the beadle
to receive these alms, pocketed three-fourths, and
distributed only the remaining quarter among his henchmen,
whose tribute amounted to a sou a day. Money and
wine were his last two passions; but he regulated
the latter and gave himself up to the former, with
neglecting his personal comfort. He drank at night
only, after his dinner, and for twenty years he slept
in the arms of drunkenness, his last mistress.
In the early morning he was at his
post with all his faculties. From then until
his dinner, which he took at Pere Lathuile’s
(made famous by Charlet), he gnawed crusts of bread
by way of nourishment; and he gnawed them artistically,
with an air of resignation which earned him abundant
alms. The beadle and the giver of holy water,
with whom he may have had some private understanding,
would say of him:—
“He is one of the worthy poor
of the church; he used to know the rector Languet,
who built Saint-Sulpice; he was for twenty years beadle
of the church before the Revolution, and he is now
over a hundred years old.”
This little biography, well known
to all the pious attendants of the church, was, of
course, the best of his advertisements, and no hat
was so well lined as his. He bought his house
in 1826, and began to invest his money in the Funds
in 1830. From the value of the two investments
he must have made something like six thousand francs
a year, and probably turned them over by usury, after
Cerizet’s own fashion; for the sum he paid for
the house was forty thousand francs, while his investment
in 1830 was forty-eight thousand more. His niece,
deceived by the old man as much as he deceived the
functionaries and the pious souls of the church, believed
him the most miserable of paupers, and when she had
any fish that were spoiling she sometimes took them
to the aged beggar.
Consequently, she now felt it her
right to get what she could in return for her pity
and her liberality to an uncle who was likely to have
a crowd of collateral heirs; she herself being the
third and last Toupillier daughter. She had four
brothers, and her father, a porter with a hand-cart,
had told her, in her childhood, of three aunts and
four uncles, who all led an existence of the baser
sort.
After inspecting the sick man, she
went, at full speed, to consult Cerizet, telling him,
in the first place, how she had found her daughter,
and then the reasons and indications which made her
think that her uncle Toupillier was hoarding a pile
of gold in his mattress. Mere Cardinal did not
feel herself strong enough to seize upon the property,
legally or illegally, and she therefore came to confide
in Cerizet and get his advice.
So, then, the banker of the poor,
like other scavengers, had, at last, found diamonds
in the slime in which he had paddled for the last four
years, being always on the watch for some such chance,—a
chance, they say, occasionally met with in the purlieus,
which give birth to heiresses in sabots. This
was the secret of his unexpected gentleness to la
Peyrade, the man whose ruin he had vowed. It is
easy to imagine the anxiety with which he awaited
the return of Madame Cardinal, to whom this wily schemer
of nefarious plots had given means to verify her suspicions
as to the existence of the hoarded treasure, promising
her complete success if she would trust him to obtain
for her so rich a harvest. He was not the man
to shrink from a crime, above all, when he saw that
others could commit it, while he obtained the benefits.
“Well, monsieur,” cried
the fishwife, entering Cerizet’s den with a
face as much inflamed by cupidity as by the haste of
her movements, “my uncle sleeps on more than
a hundred thousand francs in gold, and I am certain
that those Perraches, by dint of nursing him, have
smelt the rat.”
“Shared among forty heirs that
won’t be much to each,” said Cerizet.
“Listen to me, Mere Cardinal: I’ll
marry your daughter; give her your uncle’s gold,
and I’ll guarantee to you a life-interest in
the house and the dividends from the money in the
Funds.”
“We sha’n’t run any risk?”
“None, whatever.”
“Agreed, then,” said the
widow Cardinal, holding out her hand to her future
son-in-law. “Six thousand francs a year;
hey! what a fine life I’ll have.”
“With a son-in-law like me!” added Cerizet.
“I shall be a bourgeoisie of Paris!”
“Now,” resumed Cerizet,
after a pause, “I must study the ground.
Don’t leave your uncle alone a minute; tell
the Perraches that you expect a doctor. I’ll
be the doctor, and when I get there you must seem not
to know me.”
“Aren’t you sly, you old
rogue,” said Madame Cardinal, with a punch on
Cerizet’s stomach by way of farewell.
An hour later, Cerizet, dressed in
black, disguised by a rusty wig and an artificially
painted physiognomy, arrived at the house in the rue
Honore-Chevalier in the regulation cabriolet.
He asked the porter to tell him how to find the lodging
of an old beggar named Toupillier.
“Is monsieur the doctor whom
Madame Cardinal expects?” asked Perrache.
Cerizet had no doubt reflected on
the gravity of the affair he was undertaking, for
he avoided giving an answer to that question.
“Is this the way?” he
said, turning at random to one side of the courtyard.
“No, monsieur,” replied
Perrache, who then took him to the back stairs of
the house, which led up to the wretched attic occupied
by the pauper.
Nothing remained for the inquisitive
porter to do but to question the driver of the cabriolet;
to which employment we will leave him, while we pursue
our own inquiries elsewhere.