While the foregoing plot was progressing,
Philippe was walking arm in arm with his uncle along
the boulevard Baron.
“The two great tacticians are
coming to close quarters at last,” thought Monsieur
Hochon as he watched the colonel marching off with
his uncle; “I am curious to see the end of the
game, and what becomes of the stake of ninety thousand
francs a year.”
“My dear uncle,” said
Philippe, whose phraseology had a flavor of his affinities
in Paris, “you love this girl, and you are devilishly
right. She is damnably handsome! Instead
of billing and cooing she makes you trot like a valet;
well, that’s all simple enough; but she wants
to see you six feet underground, so that she may marry
Max, whom she adores.”
“I know that, Philippe, but I love her all the
same.”
“Well, I have sworn by the soul
of my mother, who is your own sister,” continued
Philippe, “to make your Rabouilleuse as supple
as my glove, and the same as she was before that scoundrel,
who is unworthy to have served in the Imperial Guard,
ever came to quarter himself in your house.”
“Ah! if you could do that!—”
said the old man.
“It is very easy,” answered
Philippe, cutting his uncle short. “I’ll
kill Max as I would a dog; but—on one condition,”
added the old campaigner.
“What is that?” said Rouget,
looking at his nephew in a stupid way.
“Don’t sign that power
of attorney which they want of you before the third
of December; put them off till then. Your torturers
only want it to enable them to sell the fifty thousand
a year you have in the Funds, so that they may run
off to Paris and pay for their wedding festivities
out of your millions.”
“I am afraid so,” replied Rouget.
“Well, whatever they may say
or do to you, put off giving that power of attorney
until next week.”
“Yes; but when Flore talks to
me she stirs my very soul, till I don’t know
what I do. I give you my word, when she looks
at me in a certain way, her blue eyes seem like paradise,
and I am no longer master of myself,—especially
when for some days she had been harsh to me.”
“Well, whether she is sweet
or sour, don’t do more than promise to sign
the paper, and let me know the night before you are
going to do it. That will answer. Maxence
shall not be your proxy unless he first kills me.
If I kill him, you must agree to take me in his place,
and I’ll undertake to break in that handsome
girl and keep her at your beck and call. Yes,
Flore shall love you, and if she doesn’t satisfy
you—thunder! I’ll thrash her.”
“Oh! I never could allow
that. A blow struck at Flore would break my heart.”
“But it is the only way to govern
women and horses. A man makes himself feared,
or loved, or respected. Now that is what I wanted
to whisper in your ear—Good-morning, gentlemen,”
he said to Mignonnet and Carpentier, who came up at
the moment; “I am taking my uncle for a walk,
as you see, and trying to improve him; for we are in
an age when children are obliged to educate their
grandparents.”
They all bowed to each other.
“You behold in my dear uncle
the effects of an unhappy passion. Those two
want to strip him of his fortune and leave him in the
lurch—you know to whom I refer? He
sees the plot; but he hasn’t the courage to
give up his SUGAR-PLUM for a few days so as to baffle
it.”
Philippe briefly explained his uncle’s position.
“Gentlemen,” he remarked,
in conclusion, “you see there are no two ways
of saving him: either Colonel Bridau must kill
Captain Gilet, or Captain Gilet must kill Colonel
Bridau. We celebrate the Emperor’s coronation
on the day after to-morrow; I rely upon you to arrange
the seats at the banquet so that I shall sit opposite
to Gilet. You will do me the honor, I hope, of
being my seconds.”
“We will appoint you to preside,
and sit ourselves on either side of you. Max,
as vice-president, will of course sit opposite,”
said Mignonnet.
“Oh! the scoundrel will have
Potel and Renard with him,” said Carpentier.
“In spite of all that Issoudun now knows and
says of his midnight maraudings, those two worthy
officers, who have already been his seconds, remain
faithful to him.”
“You see how it all maps out,
uncle,” said Philippe. “Therefore,
sign no paper before the third of December; the next
day you shall be free, happy, and beloved by Flore,
without having to coax for it.”
“You don’t know him, Philippe,”
said the terrified old man. “Maxence has
killed nine men in duels.”
“Yes; but ninety thousand francs
a year didn’t depend on it,” answered
Philippe.
“A bad conscience shakes the
hand,” remarked Mignonnet sententiously.
“In a few days from now,”
resumed Philippe, “you and the Rabouilleuse
will be living together as sweet as honey,—that
is, after she gets through mourning. At first
she’ll twist like a worm, and yelp, and weep;
but never mind, let the water run!”
The two soldiers approved of Philippe’s
arguments, and tried to hearten up old Rouget, with
whom they walked about for nearly two hours.
At last Philippe took his uncle home, saying as they
parted:—
“Don’t take any steps
without me. I know women. I have paid for
one, who cost me far more than Flore can ever cost
you. But she taught me how to behave to the fair
sex for the rest of my days. Women are bad children;
they are inferior animals to men; we must make them
fear us; the worst condition in the world is to be
governed by such brutes.”
It was about half-past two in the
afternoon when the old man got home. Kouski opened
the door in tears,—that is, by Max’s
orders, he gave signs of weeping.
“Oh! Monsieur, Madame has
gone away, and taken Vedie with her!”
“Gone—a—way!” said
the old man in a strangled voice.
The blow was so violent that Rouget
sat down on the stairs, unable to stand. A moment
after, he rose, looked about the hall, into the kitchen,
went up to his own room, searched all the chambers,
and returned to the salon, where he threw himself
into a chair, and burst into tears.
“Where is she?” he sobbed.
“Oh! where is she? where is Max?”
“I don’t know,”
answered Kouski. “The captain went out without
telling me.”
Gilet thought it politic to be seen
sauntering about the town. By leaving the old
man alone with his despair, he knew he should make
him feel his desertion the more keenly, and reduce
him to docility. To keep Philippe from assisting
his uncle at this crisis, he had given Kouski strict
orders not to open the door to any one. Flore
away, the miserable old man grew frantic, and the
situation of things approached a crisis. During
his walk through the town, Maxence Gilet was avoided
by many persons who a day or two earlier would have
hastened to shake hands with him. A general reaction
had set in against him. The deeds of the Knights
of Idleness were ringing on every tongue. The
tale of Joseph Bridau’s arrest, now cleared
up, disgraced Max in the eyes of all; and his life
and conduct received in one day their just award.
Gilet met Captain Potel, who was looking for him, and
seemed almost beside himself.
“What’s the matter with you, Potel?”
“My dear fellow, the Imperial
Guard is being black-guarded all over the town!
These civilians are crying you down! and it goes to
the bottom of my heart.”
“What are they complaining of?” asked
Max.
“Of what you do at night.”
“As if we couldn’t amuse ourselves a little!”
“But that isn’t all,” said Potel.
Potel belonged to the same class as
the officer who replied to the burgomasters:
“Eh! your town will be paid for, if we do burn
it!” So he was very little troubled about the
deeds of the Order of Idleness.
“What more?” inquired Gilet.
“The Guard is against the Guard.
It is that that breaks my heart. Bridau has set
all these bourgeois on you. The Guard against
the Guard! no, it ought not to be! You can’t
back down, Max; you must meet Bridau. I had a
great mind to pick a quarrel with the low scoundrel
myself and send him to the shades; I wish I had, and
then the bourgeois wouldn’t have seen the spectacle
of the Guard against the Guard. In war times,
I don’t say anything against it. Two heroes
of the Guard may quarrel, and fight,—but
at least there are no civilians to look on and sneer.
No, I say that big villain never served in the Guard.
A guardsman would never behave as he does to another
guardsman, under the very eyes of the bourgeois; impossible!
Ah! it’s all wrong; the Guard is disgraced—and
here, at Issoudun! where it was once so honored.”
“Come, Potel, don’t worry
yourself,” answered Max; “even if you do
not see me at the banquet—”
“What! do you mean that you
won’t be there the day after to-morrow?”
cried Potel, interrupting his friend. “Do
you wish to be called a coward? and have it said you
are running away from Bridau? No, no! The
unmounted grenadiers of the Guard can not draw back
before the dragoons of the Guard. Arrange your
business in some other way and be there!”
“One more to send to the shades!”
said Max. “Well, I think I can manage my
business so as to get there—For,”
he thought to himself, “that power of attorney
ought not to be in my name; as old Heron says, it
would look too much like theft.”
This lion, tangled in the meshes Philippe
Bridau was weaving for him, muttered between his teeth
as he went along; he avoided the looks of those he
met and returned home by the boulevard Vilatte, still
talking to himself.
“I will have that money before
I fight,” he said. “If I die, it shall
not go to Philippe. I must put it in Flore’s
name. She will follow my instructions, and go
straight to Paris. Once there, she can marry,
if she chooses, the son of some marshal of France
who has been sent to the right-about. I’ll
have that power of attorney made in Baruch’s
name, and he’ll transfer the property by my order.”
Max, to do him justice, was never
more cool and calm in appearance than when his blood
and his ideas were boiling. No man ever united
in a higher degree the qualities which make a great
general. If his career had not been cut short
by his captivity at Cabrera, the Emperor would certainly
have found him one of those men who are necessary to
the success of vast enterprises. When he entered
the room where the hapless victim of all these comic
and tragic scenes was still weeping, Max asked the
meaning of such distress; seemed surprised, pretended
that he knew nothing, and heard, with well-acted amazement,
of Flore’s departure. He questioned Kouski,
to obtain some light on the object of this inexplicable
journey.
“Madame said like this,”
Kouski replied, “—that I was to tell
monsieur she had taken twenty thousand francs in gold
from his drawer, thinking that monsieur wouldn’t
refuse her that amount as wages for the last twenty-two
years.”
“Wages?” exclaimed Rouget.
“Yes,” replied Kouski.
“Ah! I shall never come back,” she
said to Vedie as she drove away. “Poor
Vedie, who is so attached to monsieur, remonstrated
with madame. ‘No, no,’ she answered,
’he has no affection for me; he lets his nephew
treat me like the lowest of the low’; and she
wept—oh! bitterly.”
“Eh! what do I care for Philippe?”
cried the old man, whom Max was watching. “Where
is Flore? how can we find out where she is?”
“Philippe, whose advice you
follow, will help you,” said Max coldly.
“Philippe?” said the old
man, “what has he to do with the poor child?
There is no one but you, my good Max, who can find
Flore. She will follow you—you could
bring her back to me—”
“I don’t wish to oppose Monsieur Bridau,”
observed Max.
“As for that,” cried Rouget,
“if that hinders you, he told me he meant to
kill you.”
“Ah!” exclaimed Gilet, laughing, “we
will see about it!”
“My friend,” said the
old man, “find Flore, and I will do all she
wants of me.”
“Some one must have seen her
as she passed through the town,” said Maxence
to Kouski. “Serve dinner; put everything
on the table, and then go and make inquiries from
place to place. Let us know, by dessert, which
road Mademoiselle Brazier has taken.”
This order quieted for a time the
poor creature, who was moaning like a child that has
lost its nurse. At this moment Rouget, who hated
Max, thought his tormentor an angel. A passion
like that of this miserable old man for Flore is astonishingly
like the emotions of childhood. At six o’clock,
the Pole, who had merely taken a walk, returned to
announce that Flore had driven towards Vatan.
“Madame is going back to her
own people, that’s plain,” said Kouski.
“Would you like to go to Vatan
to-night?” said Max. “The road is
bad, but Kouski knows how to drive, and you’ll
make your peace better to-night than to-morrow morning.”
“Let us go!” cried Rouget.
“Put the horse in quietly,”
said Max to Kouski; “manage, if you can, that
the town shall not know of this nonsense, for Monsieur
Rouget’s sake. Saddle my horse,”
he added in a whisper. “I will ride on ahead
of you.”
Monsieur Hochon had already notified
Philippe of Flore’s departure; and the colonel
rose from Monsieur Mignonnet’s dinner-table to
rush to the place Saint-Jean; for he at once guessed
the meaning of this clever strategy. When Philippe
presented himself at his uncle’s house, Kouski
answered through a window that Monsieur Rouget was
unable to see any one.
“Fario,” said Philippe
to the Spaniard, who was stationed in the Grande-Narette,
“go and tell Benjamin to mount his horse; it
is all-important that I shall know what Gilet does
with my uncle.”
“They are now putting the horse
into the caleche,” said Fario, who had been
watching the Rouget stable.
“If they go towards Vatan,”
answered Philippe, “get me another horse, and
come yourself with Benjamin to Monsieur Mignonnet’s.”
“What do you mean to do?”
asked Monsieur Hochon, who had come out of his own
house when he saw Philippe and Fario standing together.
“The genius of a general, my
dear Monsieur Hochon,” said Philippe, “consists
not only in carefully observing the enemy’s movements,
but also in guessing his intentions from those movements,
and in modifying his own plan whenever the enemy interferes
with it by some unexpected action. Now, if my
uncle and Max drive out together, they are going to
Vatan; Maxence will have promised to reconcile him
with Flore, who ’fugit ad salices,’—the
manoeuvre is General Virgil’s. If that’s
the line they take, I don’t yet know what I
shall do; I shall have some hours to think it over,
for my uncle can’t sign a power of attorney at
ten o’clock at night; the notaries will all be
in bed. If, as I rather fancy, Max goes on in
advance of my uncle to teach Flore her lesson, —which
seems necessary and probable,—the rogue
is lost! you will see the sort of revenge we old soldiers
take in a game of this kind. Now, as I need a
helper for this last stroke, I must go back to Mignonnet’s
and make an arrangement with my friend Carpentier.”
Shaking hands with Monsieur Hochon,
Philippe went off down the Petite-Narette to Mignonnet’s
house. Ten minutes later, Monsieur Hochon saw
Max ride off at a quick trot; and the old miser’s
curiosity was so powerfully excited that he remained
standing at his window, eagerly expecting to hear
the wheels of the old demi-fortune, which was not
long in coming. Jean-Jacques’s impatience
made him follow Max within twenty minutes. Kouski,
no doubt under orders from his master, walked the
horse through the town.
“If they get to Paris, all is
lost,” thought Monsieur Hochon.
At this moment, a lad from the faubourg
de Rome came to the Hochon house with a letter for
Baruch. The two grandsons, much subdued by the
events of the morning, had kept their rooms of their
own accord during the day. Thinking over their
prospects, they saw plainly that they had better be
cautious with their grandparents. Baruch knew
very well the influence which his grandfather Hochon
exerted over his grandfather and grandmother Borniche:
Monsieur Hochon would not hesitate to get their property
for Adolphine if his conduct were such as to make them
pin their hopes on the grand marriage with which his
grandfather had threatened him that morning.
Being richer than Francois, Baruch had the most to
lose; he therefore counselled an absolute surrender,
with no other condition than the payment of their
debt to Max. As for Francois, his future was
entirely in the hands of his grandfather; he had no
expectations except from him, and by the guardianship
account, he was now his debtor. The two young
men accordingly gave solemn promises of amendment,
prompted by their imperilled interests, and by the
hope Madame Hochon held out, that the debt to Max should
be paid.
“You have done very wrong,”
she said to them; “repair it by future good
conduct, and Monsieur Hochon will forget it.”
So, when Francois had read the letter
which had been brought for Baruch, over the latter’s
shoulder, he whispered in his ear, “Ask grandpapa’s
advice.”
“Read this,” said Baruch,
taking the letter to old Hochon.
“Read it to me yourself; I haven’t my
spectacles.”
My dear Friend,—I hope you
will not hesitate, under the serious circumstances
in which I find myself, to do me the service of receiving
a power of attorney from Monsieur Rouget. Be at
Vatan to-morrow morning at nine o’clock.
I shall probably send you to Paris, but don’t
be uneasy; I will furnish you with money for the journey,
and join you there immediately. I am almost sure
I shall be obliged to leave Issoudun, December third.
Adieu. I count on your friendship;
rely on that of your friend,
Maxence
“God be praised!” exclaimed
Monsieur Hochon; “the property of that old idiot
is saved from the claws of the devil.”
“It will be if you say so,”
said Madame Hochon; “and I thank God,—who
has no doubt heard my prayers. The prosperity
of the wicked is always fleeting.”
“You must go to Vatan, and accept
the power of attorney from Monsieur Rouget,”
said the old man to Baruch. “Their object
is to get fifty thousand francs a year transferred
to Mademoiselle Brazier. They will send you to
Paris, and you must seem to go; but you are to stop
at Orleans, and wait there till you hear from me.
Let no one—not a soul —know
where you lodge; go to the first inn you come to in
the faubourg Bannier, no matter if it is only a post-house—”
“Look here!” cried Francois,
who had rushed to the window at the sudden noise of
wheels in the Grande-Narette. “Here’s
something new! —Pere Rouget and Colonel
Bridau coming back together in the caleche, Benjamin
and Captain Carpentier following on horseback!”
“I’ll go over,”
cried Monsieur Hochon, whose curiosity carried the
day over every other feeling.
Monsieur Hochon found old Rouget in
his bedroom, writing the following letter at his nephew’s
dictation:
Mademoiselle,—If you do not
start to return here the moment you receive this
letter, your conduct will show such ingratitude for
all my goodness that I shall revoke the will I have
made in your favor, and give my property to my nephew
Philippe. You will understand that Monsieur
Gilet can no longer be my guest after staying with
you at Vatan. I send this letter by Captain Carpentier,
who will put it into your own hands. I hope you
will listen to his advice; he will speak to you
with authority from me. Your affectionate
J.-J. Rouget.
“Captain Carpentier and I MET
my uncle, who was so foolish as to follow Mademoiselle
Brazier and Monsieur Gilet to Vatan,” said Philippe,
with sarcastic emphasis, to Monsieur Hochon. “I
have made my uncle see that he was running his head
into a noose; for that girl will abandon him the moment
she gets him to sign a power of attorney, by which
they mean to obtain the income of his money in the
Funds. That letter will bring her back under
his roof, the handsome runaway! this very night, or
I’m mistaken. I promise to make her as pliable
as a bit of whalebone for the rest of her days, if
my uncle allows me to take Maxence Gilet’s place;
which, in my opinion, he ought never to have had in
the first place. Am I not right?—and
yet here’s my uncle bemoaning himself!”
“Neighbor,” said Monsieur
Hochon, “you have taken the best means to get
peace in your household. Destroy your will, and
Flore will be once more what she used to be in the
early days.”
“No, she will never forgive
me for what I have made her suffer,” whimpered
the old man; “she will no longer love me.”
“She shall love you, and closely
too; I’ll take care of that,” said Philippe.
“Come, open your eyes!”
exclaimed Monsieur Hochon. “They mean to
rob you and abandon you.”
“Oh! I was sure of it!” cried the
poor imbecile.
“See, here is a letter Maxence
has written to my grandson Borniche,” said old
Hochon. “Read it.”
“What infamy!” exclaimed
Carpentier, as he listened to the letter, which Rouget
read aloud, weeping.
“Is that plain enough, uncle?”
demanded Philippe. “Hold that hussy by
her interests and she’ll adore you as you deserve.”
“She loves Maxence too well;
she will leave me,” cried the frightened old
man.
“But, uncle, Maxence or I,—one
or the other of us—won’t leave our
footsteps in the dust of Issoudun three days hence.”
“Well then go, Monsieur Carpentier,”
said Rouget; “if you promise me to bring her
back, go! You are a good man; say to her in my
name all you think you ought to say.”
“Captain Carpentier will whisper
in her ear that I have sent to Paris for a woman whose
youth and beauty are captivating; that will bring
the jade back in a hurry!”
The captain departed, driving himself
in the old caleche; Benjamin accompanied him on horseback,
for Kouski was nowhere to be found. Though threatened
by the officers with arrest and the loss of his situation,
the Pole had gone to Vatan on a hired horse, to warn
Max and Flore of the adversary’s move.
After fulfilling his mission, Carpentier, who did
not wish to drive back with Flore, was to change places
with Benjamin, and take the latter’s horse.
When Philippe was told of Kouski’s
flight he said to Benjamin, “You will take the
Pole’s place, from this time on. It is all
mapping out, papa Hochon!” cried the lieutenant-colonel.
“That banquet will be jovial!”
“You will come and live here,
of course,” said the old miser.
“I have told Fario to send me
all my things,” answered Philippe. “I
shall sleep in the room adjoining Gilet’s apartment,—if
my uncle consents.”
“What will come of all this?”
cried the terrified old man.
“Mademoiselle Flore Brazier
is coming, gentle as a paschal lamb,” replied
Monsieur Hochon.
“God grant it!” exclaimed Rouget, wiping
his eyes.
“It is now seven o’clock,”
said Philippe; “the sovereign of your heart
will be here at half-past eleven: you’ll
never see Gilet again, and you will be as happy ever
after as a pope.—If you want me to succeed,”
he whispered to Monsieur Hochon, “stay here till
the hussy comes; you can help me in keeping the old
man up to his resolution; and, together, we’ll
make that crab-girl see on which side her bread is
buttered.”
Monsieur Hochon felt the reasonableness
of the request and stayed: but they had their
hands full, for old Rouget gave way to childish lamentations,
which were only quieted by Philippe’s repeating
over and over a dozen times:—
“Uncle, you will see that I
am right when Flore returns to you as tender as ever.
You shall be petted; you will save your property:
be guided by my advice, and you’ll live in paradise
for the rest of your days.”
When, about half-past eleven, wheels
were heard in the Grande-Narette, the question was,
whether the carriage were returning full or empty.
Rouget’s face wore an expression of agony, which
changed to the prostration of excessive joy when he
saw the two women, as the carriage turned to enter
the courtyard.
“Kouski,” said Philippe,
giving a hand to Flore to help her down. “You
are no longer in Monsieur Rouget’s service.
You will not sleep here to-night; get your things
together, and go. Benjamin takes your place.”
“Are you the master here?” said Flore
sarcastically.
“With your permission,”
replied Philippe, squeezing her hand as if in a vice.
“Come! we must have an understanding, you and
I”; and he led the bewildered woman out into
the place Saint-Jean.
“My fine lady,” began
the old campaigner, stretching out his right hand,
“three days hence, Maxence Gilet will be sent
to the shades by that arm, or his will have taken
me off guard. If I die, you will be the mistress
of my poor imbecile uncle; ‘bene sit.’
If I remain on my pins, you’ll have to walk
straight, and keep him supplied with first-class happiness.
If you don’t, I know girls in Paris who are,
with all due respect, much prettier than you; for they
are only seventeen years old: they would make
my uncle excessively happy, and they are in my interests.
Begin your attentions this very evening; if the old
man is not as gay as a lark to-morrow morning, I have
only a word to say to you; it is this, pay attention
to it,—there is but one way to kill a man
without the interference of the law, and that is to
fight a duel with him; but I know three ways to get
rid of a woman: mind that, my beauty!”
During this address, Flore shook like
a person with the ague.
“Kill Max—?” she
said, gazing at Philippe in the moonlight.
“Come, here’s my uncle.”
Old Rouget, turning a deaf ear to
Monsieur Hochon’s remonstrances, now came out
into the street, and took Flore by the hand, as a miser
might have grasped his treasure; he drew her back
to the house and into his own room and shut the door.
“This is Saint-Lambert’s
day, and he who deserts his place, loses it,”
remarked Benjamin to the Pole.
“My master will shut your mouth
for you,” answered Kouski, departing to join
Max who established himself at the hotel de la Poste.
On the morrow, between nine and eleven
o’clock, all the women talked to each other
from door to door throughout the town. The story
of the wonderful change in the Rouget household spread
everywhere. The upshot of the conversations was
the same on all sides,—
“What will happen at the banquet
between Max and Colonel Bridau?”
Philippe said but few words to the
Vedie,—“Six hundred francs’
annuity, or dismissal.” They were enough,
however, to keep her neutral, for a time, between
the two great powers, Philippe and Flore.
Knowing Max’s life to be in
danger, Flore became more affectionate to Rouget than
in the first days of their alliance. Alas! in
love, a self-interested devotion is sometimes more
agreeable than a truthful one; and that is why many
men pay so much for clever deceivers. The Rabouilleuse
did not appear till the next morning, when she came
down to breakfast with Rouget on her arm. Tears
filled her eyes as she beheld, sitting in Max’s
place, the terrible adversary, with his sombre blue
eyes, and the cold, sinister expression on his face.
“What is the matter, mademoiselle?”
he said, after wishing his uncle good-morning.
“She can’t endure the
idea of your fighting Maxence,” said old Rouget.
“I have not the slightest desire
to kill Gilet,” answered Philippe. “He
need only take himself off from Issoudun and go to
America on a venture. I should be the first to
advise you to give him an outfit, and to wish him
a safe voyage. He would soon make a fortune there,
and that is far more honorable than turning Issoudun
topsy-turvy at night, and playing the devil in your
household.”
“Well, that’s fair enough,”
said Rouget, glancing at Flore.
“A-mer-i-ca!” she ejaculated, sobbing.
“It is better to kick his legs
about in a free country than have them rot in a pine
box in France. However, perhaps you think he is
a good shot, and can kill me; it’s on the cards,”
observed the colonel.
“Will you let me speak to him?”
said Flore, imploring Philippe in a humble and submissive
tone.
“Certainly; he can come here
and pack up his things. I will stay with my uncle
during that time; for I shall not leave the old man
again,” replied Philippe.
“Vedie,” cried Flore,
“run to the hotel, and tell Monsieur Gilet that
I beg him—”
“—to come and get
his belongings,” said Philippe, interrupting
Flore’s message.
“Yes, yes, Vedie; that will
be a good pretext to see me; I must speak to him.”
Terror controlled her hatred; and
the shock which her whole being experienced when she
first encountered this strong and pitiless nature
was now so overwhelming that she bowed before Philippe
just as Rouget had been in the habit of bending before
her. She anxiously awaited Vedie’s return.
The woman brought a formal refusal from Max, who requested
Mademoiselle Brazier to send his things to the hotel
de la Poste.
“Will you allow me to take them
to him?” she said to Jean-Jacques Rouget.
“Yes, but will you come back?” said the
old man.
“If Mademoiselle is not back
by midday, you will give me a power of attorney to
attend to your property,” said Philippe, looking
at Flore. “Take Vedie with you, to save
appearances, mademoiselle. In future you are
to think of my uncle’s honor.”
Flore could get nothing out of Max.
Desperate at having allowed himself, before the eyes
of the whole town, to be routed out of his shameless
position, Gilet was too proud to run away from Philippe.
The Rabouilleuse combated this objection, and proposed
that they should fly together to America; but Max,
who did not want Flore without her money, and yet
did not wish the girl to see the bottom of his heart,
insisted on his intention of killing Philippe.
“We have committed a monstrous
folly,” he said. “We ought all three
to have gone to Paris and spent the winter there;
but how could one guess, from the mere sight of that
fellow’s big carcass, that things would turn
out as they have? The turn of events is enough
to make one giddy! I took the colonel for one
of those fire-eaters who haven’t two ideas in
their head; that was the blunder I made. As I
didn’t have the sense to double like a hare
in the beginning, I’ll not be such a coward
as to back down before him. He has lowered me
in the estimation of this town, and I cannot get back
what I have lost unless I kill him.”
“Go to America with forty thousand
francs. I’ll find a way to get rid of that
scoundrel, and join you. It would be much wiser.”
“What would people say of me?”
he exclaimed. “No; I have buried nine already.
The fellow doesn’t seem as if he knew much; he
went from school to the army, and there he was always
fighting till 1815; then he went to America, and I
doubt if the brute ever set foot in a fencing-alley;
while I have no match with the sabre. The sabre
is his arm; I shall seem very generous in offering
it to him,—for I mean, if possible, to
let him insult me,—and I can easily run
him through. Unquestionably, it is my wisest
course. Don’t be uneasy; we shall be masters
of the field in a couple of days.”
That it was that a stupid point of
honor had more influence over Max than sound policy.
When Flore got home she shut herself up to cry at
ease. During the whole of that day gossip ran
wild in Issoudun, and the duel between Philippe and
Maxence was considered inevitable.
“Ah! Monsieur Hochon,”
said Mignonnet, who, accompanied by Carpentier, met
the old man on the boulevard Baron, “we are very
uneasy; for Gilet is clever with all weapons.”
“Never mind,” said the
old provincial diplomatist; “Philippe has managed
this thing well from the beginning. I should never
have thought that big, easy-going fellow would have
succeeded as he has. The two have rolled together
like a couple of thunder-clouds.”
“Oh!” said Carpentier,
“Philippe is a remarkable man. His conduct
before the Court of Peers was a masterpiece of diplomacy.”
“Well, Captain Renard,”
said one of the townsfolk to Max’s friend.
“They say wolves don’t devour each other,
but it seems that Max is going to set his teeth in
Colonel Bridau. That’s pretty serious among
you gentlemen of the Old Guard.”
“You make fun of it, do you?
Because the poor fellow amused himself a little at
night, you are all against him,” said Potel.
“But Gilet is a man who couldn’t stay
in a hole like Issoudun without finding something
to do.”
“Well, gentlemen,” remarked
another, “Max and the colonel must play out
their game. Bridau had to avenge his brother.
Don’t you remember Max’s treachery to
the poor lad?”
“Bah! nothing but an artist,” said Renard.
“But the real question is about
the old man’s property,” said a third.
“They say Monsieur Gilet was laying hands on
fifty thousand francs a year, when the colonel turned
him out of his uncle’s house.”
“Gilet rob a man! Come,
don’t say that to any one but me, Monsieur Canivet,”
cried Potel. “If you do, I’ll make
you swallow your tongue, —and without any
sauce.”
Every household in town offered prayers
for the honorable Colonel Bridau.