Between midnight and one o’clock,
the Knights of Idleness began their gratuitous distribution
of comestibles to the dogs of the town. This
memorable expedition was not over till three in the
morning, the hour at which these reprobates went to
sup at Cognette’s. At half-past four, in
the early dawn, they crept home. Just as Max turned
the corner of the rue l’Avenier into the Grande
rue, Fario, who stood ambushed in a recess, struck
a knife at his heart, drew out the blade, and escaped
by the moat towards Vilatte, wiping the blade of his
knife on his handkerchief. The Spaniard washed
the handkerchief in the Riviere forcee, and returned
quietly to his lodgings at Saint-Paterne, where he
got in by a window he had left open, and went to bed:
later, he was awakened by his new watchman, who found
him fast asleep.
As he fell, Max uttered a fearful
cry which no one could mistake. Lousteau-Prangin,
son of a judge, a distant relation to the family of
the sub-delegate, and young Goddet, who lived at the
lower end of the Grande rue, ran at full speed up
the street, calling to each other,—
“They are killing Max! Help! help!”
But not a dog barked; and all the
town, accustomed to the false alarms of these nightly
prowlers, stayed quietly in their beds. When his
two comrades reached him, Max had fainted. It
was necessary to rouse Monsieur Goddet, the surgeon.
Max had recognized Fario; but when he came to his
senses, with several persons about him, and felt that
his wound was not mortal, it suddenly occurred to
him to make capital out of the attack, and he said,
in a faint voice,—
“I think I recognized that cursed painter!”
Thereupon Lousteau-Prangin ran off
to his father, the judge. Max was carried home
by Cognette, young Goddet, and two other persons.
Mere Cognette and Monsieur Goddet walked beside the
stretcher. Those who carried the wounded man
naturally looked across at Monsieur Hochon’s
door while waiting for Kouski to let them in, and saw
Monsieur Hochon’s servant sweeping the steps.
At the old miser’s, as everywhere else in the
provinces, the household was early astir. The
few words uttered by Max had roused the suspicions
of Monsieur Goddet, and he called to the woman,—
“Gritte, is Monsieur Joseph Bridau in bed?”
“Bless me!” she said,
“he went out at half-past four. I don’t
know what ailed him; he walked up and down his room
all night.”
This simple answer drew forth such
exclamations of horror that the woman came over, curious
to know what they were carrying to old Rouget’s
house.
“A precious fellow he is, that
painter of yours!” they said to her. And
the procession entered the house, leaving Gritte open-mouthed
with amazement at the sight of Max in his bloody shirt,
stretched half-fainting on a mattress.
Artists will readily guess what ailed
Joseph, and kept him restless all night. He imagined
the tale the bourgeoisie of Issoudun would tell of
him. They would say he had fleeced his uncle;
that he was everything but what he had tried to be,—a
loyal fellow and an honest artist! Ah! he would
have given his great picture to have flown like a
swallow to Paris, and thrown his uncle’s paintings
at Max’s nose. To be the one robbed, and
to be thought the robber!—what irony!
So at the earliest dawn, he had started for the poplar
avenue which led to Tivoli, to give free course to
his agitation.
While the innocent fellow was vowing,
by way of consolation, never to return to Issoudun,
Max was preparing a horrible outrage for his sensitive
spirit. When Monsieur Goddet had probed the wound
and discovered that the knife, turned aside by a little
pocket-book, had happily spared Max’s life (though
making a serious wound), he did as all doctors, and
particularly country surgeons, do; he paved the way
for his own credit by “not answering for the
patient’s life”; and then, after dressing
the soldier’s wound, and stating the verdict
of science to the Rabouilleuse, Jean-Jacques Rouget,
Kouski, and the Vedie, he left the house. The
Rabouilleuse came in tears to her dear Max, while
Kouski and the Vedie told the assembled crowd that
the captain was in a fair way to die. The news
brought nearly two hundred persons in groups about
the place Saint-Jean and the two Narettes.
“I sha’n’t be a
month in bed; and I know who struck the blow,”
whispered Max to Flore. “But we’ll
profit by it to get rid of the Parisians. I have
said I thought I recognized the painter; so pretend
that I am expected to die, and try to have Joseph Bridau
arrested. Let him taste a prison for a couple
of days, and I know well enough the mother will be
off in a jiffy for Paris when she gets him out.
And then we needn’t fear the priests they talk
of setting on the old fool.”
When Flore Brazier came downstairs,
she found the assembled crowd quite prepared to take
the impression she meant to give them. She went
out with tears in her eyes, and related, sobbing, how
the painter, “who had just the face for that
sort of thing,” had been angry with Max the
night before about some pictures he had “wormed
out” of Pere Rouget.
“That brigand—for
you’ve only got to look at him to see what he
is —thinks that if Max were dead, his uncle
would leave him his fortune; as if,” she cried,
“a brother were not more to him than a nephew!
Max is Doctor Rouget’s son. The old one
told me so before he died!”
“Ah! he meant to do the deed
just before he left Issoudun; he chose his time, for
he was going away to-day,” said one of the Knights
of Idleness.
“Max hasn’t an enemy in Issoudun,”
said another.
“Besides, Max recognized the painter,”
said the Rabouilleuse.
“Where’s that cursed Parisian? Let
us find him!” they all cried.
“Find him?” was the answer,
“why, he left Monsieur Hochon’s at daybreak.”
A Knight of Idleness ran off at once
to Monsieur Mouilleron. The crowd increased;
and the tumult became threatening. Excited groups
filled up the whole of the Grande-Narette. Others
stationed themselves before the church of Saint-Jean.
An assemblage gathered at the porte Vilatte, which
is at the farther end of the Petite-Narette. Monsieur
Lousteau-Prangin and Monsieur Mouilleron, the commissary
of police, the lieutenant of gendarmes, and two of
his men, had some difficulty in reaching the place
Saint-Jean through two hedges of people, whose cries
and exclamations could and did prejudice them against
the Parisian; who was, it is needless to say, unjustly
accused, although, it is true, circumstances told
against him.
After a conference between Max and
the magistrates, Monsieur Mouilleron sent the commissary
of police and a sergeant with one gendarme to examine
what, in the language of the ministry of the interior,
is called “the theatre of the crime.”
Then Messieurs Mouilleron and Lousteau-Prangin, accompanied
by the lieutenant of gendarmes crossed over to the
Hochon house, which was now guarded by two gendarmes
in the garden and two at the front door. The crowd
was still increasing. The whole town was surging
in the Grande rue.
Gritte had rushed terrified to her
master, crying out: “Monsieur, we shall
be pillaged! the town is in revolt; Monsieur Maxence
Gilet has been assassinated; he is dying! and they
say it is Monsieur Joseph who has done it!”
Monsieur Hochon dressed quickly, and
came downstairs; but seeing the angry populace, he
hastily retreated within the house, and bolted the
door. On questioning Gritte, he learned that his
guest had left the house at daybreak, after walking
the floor all night in great agitation, and had not
yet come in. Much alarmed, he went to find Madame
Hochon, who was already awakened by the noise, and
to whom he told the frightful news which, true or
false, was causing almost a riot in Issoudun.
“He is innocent, of course,” said Madame
Hochon.
“Before his innocence can be
proved, the crowd may get in here and pillage us,”
said Monsieur Hochon, livid with fear, for he had gold
in his cellar.
“Where is Agathe?”
“Sound asleep.”
“Ah! so much the better,”
said Madame Hochon. “I wish she may sleep
on till the matter is cleared up. Such a shock
might kill the poor child.”
But Agathe woke up and came down half-dressed;
for the evasive answers of Gritte, whom she questioned,
had disturbed both her head and heart. She found
Madame Hochon, looking very pale, with her eyes full
of tears, at one of the windows of the salon beside
her husband.
“Courage, my child. God
sends us our afflictions,” said the old lady.
“Joseph is accused—”
“Of what?”
“Of a bad action which he could
never have committed,” answered Madame Hochon.
Hearing the words, and seeing the
lieutenant of gendarmes, who at this moment entered
the room accompanied by the two gentlemen, Agathe
fainted away.
“There now!” said Monsieur
Hochon to his wife and Gritte, “carry off Madame
Bridau; women are only in the way at these times.
Take her to her room and stay there, both of you.
Sit down, gentlemen,” continued the old man.
“The mistake to which we owe your visit will
soon, I hope, be cleared up.”
“Even if it should be a mistake,”
said Monsieur Mouilleron, “the excitement of
the crowd is so great, and their minds are so exasperated,
that I fear for the safety of the accused. I should
like to get him arrested, and that might satisfy these
people.”
“Who would ever have believed
that Monsieur Maxence Gilet had inspired so much affection
in this town?” asked Lousteau-Prangin.
“One of my men says there’s
a crowd of twelve hundred more just coming in from
the faubourg de Rome,” said the lieutenant of
gendarmes, “and they are threatening death to
the assassin.”
“Where is your guest?”
said Monsieur Mouilleron to Monsieur Hochon.
“He has gone to walk in the country, I believe.”
“Call Gritte,” said the
judge gravely. “I was in hopes he had not
left the house. You are aware that the crime
was committed not far from here, at daybreak.”
While Monsieur Hochon went to find
Gritte, the three functionaries looked at each other
significantly.
“I never liked that painter’s
face,” said the lieutenant to Monsieur Mouilleron.
“My good woman,” said
the judge to Gritte, when she appeared, “they
say you saw Monsieur Joseph Bridau leave the house
this morning?”
“Yes, monsieur,” she answered, trembling
like a leaf.
“At what hour?”
“Just as I was getting up:
he walked about his room all night, and was dressed
when I came downstairs.”
“Was it daylight?”
“Barely.”
“Did he seem excited?”
“Yes, he was all of a twitter.”
“Send one of your men for my
clerk,” said Lousteau-Prangin to the lieutenant,
“and tell him to bring warrants with him—”
“Good God! don’t be in
such a hurry,” cried Monsieur Hochon. “The
young man’s agitation may have been caused by
something besides the premeditation of this crime.
He meant to return to Paris to-day, to attend to a
matter in which Gilet and Mademoiselle Brazier had
doubted his honor.”
“Yes, the affair of the pictures,”
said Monsieur Mouilleron. “Those pictures
caused a very hot quarrel between them yesterday, and
it is a word and a blow with artists, they tell me.”
“Who is there in Issoudun who
had any object in killing Gilet?” said Lousteau.
“No one,—neither a jealous husband
nor anybody else; for the fellow has never harmed
a soul.”
“But what was Monsieur Gilet
doing in the streets at four in the morning?”
remarked Monsieur Hochon.
“Now, Monsieur Hochon, you must
allow us to manage this affair in our own way,”
answered Mouilleron; “you don’t know all:
Gilet recognized your painter.”
At this instant a clamor was heard
from the other end of the town, growing louder and
louder, like the roll of thunder, as it followed the
course of the Grande-Narette.
“Here he is! here he is!—he’s
arrested!”
These words rose distinctly on the
ear above the hoarse roar of the populace. Poor
Joseph, returning quietly past the mill at Landrole
intending to get home in time for breakfast, was spied
by the various groups of people, as soon as he reached
the place Misere. Happily for him, a couple of
gendarmes arrived on a run in time to snatch him from
the inhabitants of the faubourg de Rome, who had already
pinioned him by the arms and were threatening him
with death.
“Give way! give way!”
cried the gendarmes, calling to some of their comrades
to help them, and putting themselves one before and
the other behind Bridau.
“You see, monsieur,” said
the one who held the painter, “it concerns our
skin as well as yours at this moment. Innocent
or guilty, we must protect you against the tumult
raised by the murder of Captain Gilet. And the
crowd is not satisfied with suspecting you; they declare,
hard as iron, that you are the murderer. Monsieur
Gilet is adored by all the people, who—look
at them!—want to take justice into their
own hands. Ah! didn’t we see them, in 1830,
dusting the jackets of the tax-gatherers? whose life
isn’t a bed of roses, anyway!”
Joseph Bridau grew pale as death,
and collected all his strength to walk onward.
“After all,” he said, “I am innocent.
Go on!”
Poor artist! he was forced to bear
his cross. Amid the hooting and insults and threats
from the mob, he made the dreadful transit from the
place Misere to the place Saint-Jean. The gendarmes
were obliged to draw their sabres on the furious mob,
which pelted them with stones. One of the officers
was wounded, and Joseph received several of the missiles
on his legs, and shoulders, and hat.
“Here we are!” said one
of the gendarmes, as they entered Monsieur Hochon’s
hall, “and not without difficulty, lieutenant.”
“We must now manage to disperse
the crowd; and I see but one way, gentlemen,”
said the lieutenant to the magistrates. “We
must take Monsieur Bridau to the Palais accompanied
by all of you; I and my gendarmes will make a circle
round you. One can’t answer for anything
in presence of a furious crowd of six thousand—”
“You are right,” said
Monsieur Hochon, who was trembling all the while for
his gold.
“If that’s your only way
to protect innocence in Issoudun,” said Joseph,
“I congratulate you. I came near being stoned—”
“Do you wish your friend’s
house to be taken by assault and pillaged?”
asked the lieutenant. “Could we beat back
with our sabres a crowd of people who are pushed from
behind by an angry populace that knows nothing of
the forms of justice?”
“That will do, gentlemen, let
us go; we can come to explanations later,” said
Joseph, who had recovered his self-possession.
“Give way, friends!” said
the lieutenant to the crowd; “He is arrested,
and we are taking him to the Palais.”
“Respect the law, friends!” said Monsieur
Mouilleron.
“Wouldn’t you prefer to
see him guillotined?” said one of the gendarmes
to an angry group.
“Yes, yes, they shall guillotine
him!” shouted one madman.
“They are going to guillotine him!” cried
the women.
By the time they reached the end of
the Grande-Narette the crowd were shouting: “They
are taking him to the guillotine!” “They
found the knife upon him!” “That’s
what Parisians are!” “He carries crime
on his face!”
Though all Joseph’s blood had
flown to his head, he walked the distance from the
place Saint-Jean to the Palais with remarkable calmness
and self-possession. Nevertheless, he was very
glad to find himself in the private office of Monsieur
Lousteau-Prangin.
“I need hardly tell you, gentlemen,
that I am innocent,” said Joseph, addressing
Monsieur Mouilleron, Monsieur Lousteau-Prangin, and
the clerk. “I can only beg you to assist
me in proving my innocence. I know nothing of
this affair.”
When the judge had stated all the
suspicious facts which were against him, ending with
Max’s declaration, Joseph was astounded.
“But,” said he, “it
was past five o’clock when I left the house.
I went up the Grande rue, and at half-past five I
was standing looking up at the facade of the parish
church of Saint-Cyr. I talked there with the
sexton, who came to ring the angelus, and asked him
for information about the building, which seems to
me fantastic and incomplete. Then I passed through
the vegetable-market, where some women had already
assembled. From there, crossing the place Misere,
I went as far as the mill of Landrole by the Pont
aux Anes, where I watched the ducks for five or six
minutes, and the miller’s men must have noticed
me. I saw the women going to wash; they are probably
still there. They made a little fun of me, and
declared that I was not handsome; I told them it was
not all gold that glittered. From there, I followed
the long avenue to Tivoli, where I talked with the
gardener. Pray have these facts verified; and
do not even arrest me, for I give you my word of honor
that I will stay quietly in this office till you are
convinced of my innocence.”
These sensible words, said without
the least hesitation, and with the ease of a man who
is perfectly sure of his facts, made some impression
on the magistrates.
“Yes, we must find all these
persons and summon them,” said Monsieur Mouilleron;
“but it is more than the affair of a day.
Make up your mind, therefore, in your own interests,
to be imprisoned in the Palais.”
“Provided I can write to my
mother, so as to reassure her, poor woman —oh!
you can read the letter,” he added.
This request was too just not to be
granted, and Joseph wrote the following letter:—
“Do not be uneasy, dear mother;
the mistake of which I am a victim can easily be
rectified; I have already given them the means of
doing so. To-morrow, or perhaps this evening,
I shall be at liberty. I kiss you, and beg
you to say to Monsieur and Madame Hochon how grieved
I am at this affair; in which, however, I have had
no hand,—it is the result of some chance
which, as yet, I do not understand.”
When the note reached Madame Bridau,
she was suffering from a nervous attack, and the potions
which Monsieur Goddet was trying to make her swallow
were powerless to soothe her. The reading of the
letter acted like balm; after a few quiverings, Agathe
subsided into the depression which always follows
such attacks. Later, when Monsieur Goddet returned
to his patient he found her regretting that she had
ever quitted Paris.
“Well,” said Madame Hochon
to Monsieur Goddet, “how is Monsieur Gilet?”
“His wound, though serious,
is not mortal,” replied the doctor. “With
a month’s nursing he will be all right.
I left him writing to Monsieur Mouilleron to request
him to set your son at liberty, madame,” he
added, turning to Agathe. “Oh! Max
is a fine fellow. I told him what a state you
were in, and he then remembered a circumstance which
goes to prove that the assassin was not your son;
the man wore list shoes, whereas it is certain that
Monsieur Joseph left the house in his boots—”
“Ah! God forgive him the harm he has done
me—”
The fact was, a man had left a note
for Max, after dark, written in type-letters, which
ran as follows:—
“Captain Gilet ought not to let
an innocent man suffer. He who struck the blow
promises not to strike again if Monsieur Gilet will
have Monsieur Joseph Bridau set at liberty, without
naming the man who did it.”
After reading this letter and burning
it, Max wrote to Monsieur Mouilleron stating the circumstance
of the list shoes, as reported by Monsieur Goddet,
begging him to set Joseph at liberty, and to come and
see him that he might explain the matter more at length.
By the time this letter was received,
Monsieur Lousteau-Prangin had verified, by the testimony
of the bell-ringer, the market-women and washerwomen,
and the miller’s men, the truth of Joseph’s
explanation. Max’s letter made his innocence
only the more certain, and Monsieur Mouilleron himself
escorted him back to the Hochons’. Joseph
was greeted with such overflowing tenderness by his
mother that the poor misunderstood son gave thanks
to ill-luck—like the husband to the thief,
in La Fontaine’s fable—for a mishap
which brought him such proofs of affection.
“Oh,” said Monsieur Mouilleron,
with a self-satisfied air, “I knew at once by
the way you looked at the angry crowd that you were
innocent; but whatever I may have thought, any one
who knows Issoudun must also know that the only way
to protect you was to make the arrest as we did.
Ah! you carried your head high.”
“I was thinking of something
else,” said the artist simply. “An
officer in the army told me that he was once stopped
in Dalmatia under similar circumstances by an excited
populace, in the early morning as he was returning
from a walk. This recollection came into my mind,
and I looked at all those heads with the idea of painting
a revolt of the year 1793. Besides, I kept saying
to myself: Blackguard that I am! I have
only got my deserts for coming here to look after an
inheritance, instead of painting in my studio.”
“If you will allow me to offer
you a piece of advice,” said the procureur du
roi, “you will take a carriage to-night, which
the postmaster will lend you, and return to Paris
by the diligence from Bourges.”
“That is my advice also,”
said Monsieur Hochon, who was burning with a desire
for the departure of his guests.
“My most earnest wish is to
get away from Issoudun, though I leave my only friend
here,” said Agathe, kissing Madame Hochon’s
hand. “When shall I see you again?”
“Ah! my dear, never until we
meet above. We have suffered enough here below,”
she added in a low voice, “for God to take pity
upon us.”
Shortly after, while Monsieur Mouilleron
had gone across the way to talk with Max, Gritte greatly
astonished Monsieur and Madame Hochon, Agathe, Joseph,
and Adolphine by announcing the visit of Monsieur
Rouget. Jean-Jacques came to bid his sister good-by,
and to offer her his caleche for the drive to Bourges.
“Ah! your pictures have been
a great evil to us,” said Agathe.
“Keep them, my sister,”
said the old man, who did not even now believe in
their value.
“Neighbor,” remarked Monsieur
Hochon, “our best friends, our surest defenders,
are our own relations; above all, when they are such
as your sister Agathe, and your nephew Joseph.”
“Perhaps so,” said old Rouget in his dull
way.
“We ought all to think of ending
our days in a Christian manner,” said Madame
Hochon.
“Ah! Jean-Jacques,”
said Agathe, “what a day this has been!”
“Will you accept my carriage?” asked Rouget.
“No, brother,” answered
Madame Bridau, “I thank you, and wish you health
and comfort.”
Rouget let his sister and nephew kiss
him, and then he went away without manifesting any
feeling himself. Baruch, at a hint from his grandfather,
had been to see the postmaster. At eleven o’clock
that night, the two Parisians, ensconced in a wicker
cabriolet drawn by one horse and ridden by a postilion,
quitted Issoudun. Adolphine and Madame Hochon
parted from them with tears in their eyes; they alone
regretted Joseph and Agathe.
“They are gone!” said
Francois Hochon, going, with the Rabouilleuse, into
Max’s bedroom.
“Well done! the trick succeeded,”
answered Max, who was now tired and feverish.
“But what did you say to old
Mouilleron?” asked Francois.
“I told him that I had given
my assassin some cause to waylay me; that he was a
dangerous man and likely, if I followed up the affair,
to kill me like a dog before he could be captured.
Consequently, I begged Mouilleron and Prangin to make
the most active search ostensibly, but really to let
the assassin go in peace, unless they wished to see
me a dead man.”
“I do hope, Max,” said
Flore, “that you will be quiet at night for
some time to come.”
“At any rate, we are delivered
from the Parisians!” cried Max. “The
fellow who stabbed me had no idea what a service he
was doing us.”
The next day, the departure of the
Parisians was celebrated as a victory of the provinces
over Paris by every one in Issoudun, except the more
sober and staid inhabitants, who shared the opinions
of Monsieur and Madame Hochon. A few of Max’s
friends spoke very harshly of the Bridaus.
“Do those Parisians fancy we
are all idiots,” cried one, “and think
they have only got to hold their hats and catch legacies?”
“They came to fleece, but they
have got shorn themselves,” said another; “the
nephew is not to the uncle’s taste.”
“And, if you please, they actually
consulted a lawyer in Paris—”
“Ah! had they really a plan?”
“Why, of course,—a
plan to get possession of old Rouget. But the
Parisians were not clever enough; that lawyer can’t
crow over us Berrichons!”
“How abominable!”
“That’s Paris for you!”
“The Rabouilleuse knew they
came to attack her, and she defended herself.”
“She did gloriously right!”
To the townspeople at large the Bridaus
were Parisians and foreigners; they preferred Max
and Flore.
We can imagine the satisfaction with
which, after this campaign, Joseph and Agathe re-entered
their little lodging in the rue Mazarin. On the
journey, the artist recovered his spirits, which had,
not unnaturally, been put to flight by his arrest
and twenty-four hours’ confinement; but he could
not cheer up his mother. The Court of Peers was
about to begin the trial of the military conspirators,
and that was sufficient to keep Agathe from recovering
her peace of mind. Philippe’s conduct,
in spite of the clever defender whom Desroches recommended
to him, roused suspicions that were unfavorable to
his character. In view of this, Joseph, as soon
as he had put Desroches in possession of all that
was going on at Issoudun, started with Mistigris for
the chateau of the Comte de Serizy, to escape hearing
about the trial of the conspirators, which lasted for
twenty days.
It is useless to record facts that
may be found in contemporaneous histories. Whether
it were that he played a part previously agreed upon,
or that he was really an informer, Philippe was condemned
to five years’ surveillance by the police department,
and ordered to leave Paris the same day for Autun,
the town which the director-general of police selected
as the place of his exile for five years. This
punishment resembled the detention of prisoners on
parole who have a town for a prison. Learning
that the Comte de Serizy, one of the peers appointed
by the Chamber on the court-martial, was employing
Joseph to decorate his chateau at Presles, Desroches
begged the minister to grant him an audience, and
found Monsieur de Serizy most amiably disposed toward
Joseph, with whom he had happened to make personal
acquaintance. Desroches explained the financial
condition of the two brothers, recalling the services
of the father, and the neglect shown to them under
the Restoration.
“Such injustice, monseigneur,”
said the lawyer, “is a lasting cause of irritation
and discontent. You knew the father; give the
sons a chance, at least, of making a fortune—”
And he drew a succinct picture of
the situation of the family affairs at Issoudun, begging
the all-powerful vice-president of the Council of
State to take steps to induce the director-general
of police to change Philippe’s place of residence
from Autun to Issoudun. He also spoke of Philippe’s
extreme poverty, and asked a dole of sixty francs a
month, which the minister of war ought, he said, for
mere shame’s sake, to grant to a former lieutenant-colonel.
“I will obtain all you ask of
me, for I think it just,” replied the count.
Three days later, Desroches, furnished
with the necessary authority, fetched Philippe from
the prison of the Court of Peers, and took him to
his own house, rue de Bethizy. Once there, the
young barrister read the miserable vagabond one of
those unanswerable lectures in which lawyers rate
things at their actual value; using plain terms to
qualify the conduct, and to analyze and reduce to their
simplest meaning the sentiments and ideas of clients
toward whom they feel enough interest to speak plainly.
After humbling the Emperor’s staff-officer by
reproaching him with his reckless dissipations, his
mother’s misfortunes, and the death of Madame
Descoings, he went on to tell him the state of things
at Issoudun, explaining it according to his lights,
and probing both the scheme and the character of Maxence
Gilet and the Rabouilleuse to their depths. Philippe,
who was gifted with a keen comprehension in such directions,
listened with much more interest to this part of Desroches’s
lecture than to what had gone before.
“Under these circumstances,”
continued the lawyer, “you can repair the injury
you have done to your estimable family,—so
far at least as it is reparable; for you cannot restore
life to the poor mother you have all but killed.
But you alone can—”
“What can I do?” asked Philippe.
“I have obtained a change of
residence for you from Autun to Issoudun.—”
Philippe’s sunken face, which
had grown almost sinister in expression and was furrowed
with sufferings and privation, instantly lighted up
with a flash of joy.
“And, as I was saying, you alone
can recover the inheritance of old Rouget’s
property; half of which may by this time be in the
jaws of the wolf named Gilet,” replied Desroches.
“You now know all the particulars, and it is
for you to act accordingly. I suggest no plan;
I have no ideas at all as to that; besides, everything
will depend on local circumstances. You have
to deal with a strong force; that fellow is very astute.
The way he attempted to get back the pictures your
uncle had given to Joseph, the audacity with which
he laid a crime on your poor brother’s shoulders,
all go to prove that the adversary is capable of everything.
Therefore, be prudent; and try to behave properly
out of policy, if you can’t do so out of decency.
Without telling Joseph, whose artist’s pride
would be up in arms, I have sent the pictures to Monsieur
Hochon, telling him to give them up to no one but
you. By the way, Maxence Gilet is a brave man.”
“So much the better,”
said Philippe; “I count on his courage for success;
a coward would leave Issoudun.”
“Well,—think of your
mother who has been so devoted to you, and of your
brother, whom you made your milch cow.”
“Ah! did he tell you that nonsense?” cried
Philippe.
“Am I not the friend of the
family, and don’t I know much more about you
than they do?” asked Desroches.
“What do you know?” said Philippe.
“That you betrayed your comrades.”
“I!” exclaimed Philippe.
“I! a staff-officer of the Emperor! Absurd!
Why, we fooled the Chamber of Peers, the lawyers, the
government, and the whole of the damned concern.
The king’s people were completely hood-winked.”
“That’s all very well,
if it was so,” answered the lawyer. “But,
don’t you see, the Bourbons can’t be overthrown;
all Europe is backing them; and you ought to try to
make your peace with the war department,—you
could do that readily enough if you were rich.
To get rich, you and your brother, you must lay hold
of your uncle. If you will take the trouble to
manage an affair which needs great cleverness, patience,
and caution, you have enough work before you to occupy
your five years.”
“No, no,” cried Philippe,
“I must take the bull by the horns at once.
This Maxence may alter the investment of the property
and put it in that woman’s name; and then all
would be lost.”
“Monsieur Hochon is a good adviser,
and sees clearly; consult him. You have your
orders from the police; I have taken your place in
the Orleans diligence for half-past seven o’clock
this evening. I suppose your trunk is ready;
so, now come and dine.”
“I own nothing but what I have
got on my back,” said Philippe, opening his
horrible blue overcoat; “but I only need three
things, which you must tell Giroudeau, the uncle of
Finot, to send me,—my sabre, my sword,
and my pistols.”
“You need more than that,”
said the lawyer, shuddering as he looked at his client.
“You will receive a quarterly stipend which will
clothe you decently.”
“Bless me! are you here, Godeschal?”
cried Philippe, recognizing in Desroches’s head-clerk,
as they passed out, the brother of Mariette.
“Yes, I have been with Monsieur
Desroches for the last two months.”
“And he will stay with me, I
hope, till he gets a business of his own,” said
Desroches.
“How is Mariette?” asked
Philippe, moved at his recollections.
“She is getting ready for the
opening of the new theatre.”
“It would cost her little trouble
to get my sentence remitted,” said Philippe.
“However, as she chooses!”
After a meagre dinner, given by Desroches
who boarded his head-clerk, the two lawyers put the
political convict in the diligence, and wished him
good luck.