Theconference
While Ursula was playing variations
on Weber’s “Last Thought” to her
godfather, a plot was hatching in the Minoret-Levraults’
dining-room which was destined to have a lasting effect
on the events of this drama. The breakfast, noisy
as all provincial breakfasts are, and enlivened by
excellent wines brought to Nemours by the canal either
from Burgundy or Touraine, lasted more than two hours.
Zelie had sent for oysters, salt-water fish, and other
gastronomical delicacies to do honor to Desire’s
return. The dining-room, in the center of which
a round table offered a most appetizing sight, was
like the hall of an inn. Content with the size
of her kitchens and offices, Zelie had built a pavilion
for the family between the vast courtyard and a garden
planted with vegetables and full of fruit-trees.
Everything about the premises was solid and plain.
The example of Levrault-Levrault had been a warning
to the town. Zelie forbade her builder to lead
her into such follies. The dining-room was, therefore,
hung with varnished paper and furnished with walnut
chairs and sideboards, a porcelain stove, a tall clock,
and a barometer. Though the plates and dishes
were of common white china, the table shone with handsome
linen and abundant silverware. After Zelie had
served the coffee, coming and going herself like shot
in a decanter,—for she kept but one servant,
—and when Desire, the budding lawyer, had
been told of the event of the morning and its probably
consequences, the door was closed, and the notary
Dionis was called upon to speak. By the silence
in the room and the looks that were cast on that authoritative
face, it was easy to see the power that such men exercise
over families.
“My dear children,” said
he, “your uncle having been born in 1746, is
eighty-three years old at the present time; now, old
men are given to folly, and that little—”
“Viper!” cried Madame Massin.
“Hussy!” said Zelie.
“Let us call her by her own name,” said
Dionis.
“Well, she’s a thief,” said Madame
Cremiere.
“A pretty thief,” remarked Desire.
“That little Ursula,”
went on Dionis, “has managed to get hold of his
heart. I have been thinking of your interests,
and I did not wait until now before making certain
inquiries; now this is what I have discovered about
that young—”
“Marauder,” said the collector.
“Inveigler,” said the clerk of the court.
“Hold your tongue, friends,”
said the notary, “or I’ll take my hat and
be off.”
“Come, come, papa,” cried
Minoret, pouring out a little glass of rum and offering
it to the notary; “here, drink this, it comes
from Rome itself; and now go on.”
“Ursula is, it is true, the
legitimate daughter of Joseph Mirouet; but her father
was the natural son of Valentin Mirouet, your uncle’s
father-in-law. Being therefore an illegitimate
niece, any will the doctor might make in her favor
could probably be contested; and if he leaves her
his fortune in that way you could bring a suit against
Ursula. This, however, might turn out ill for
you, in case the court took the view that there was
no relationship between Ursula and the doctor.
Still, the suit would frighten an unprotected girl,
and bring about a compromise—”
“The law is so rigid as to the
rights of natural children,” said the newly
fledged licentiate, eager to parade his knowledge,
“that by the judgment of the court of appeals
dated July 7, 1817, a natural child can claim nothing
from his natural grandfather, not even a maintenance.
So you see the illegitimate parentage is made retrospective.
The law pursues the natural child even to its legitimate
descent, on the ground that benefactions done to grandchildren
reach the natural son through that medium. This
is shown by articles 757, 908, and 911 of the civil
Code. The royal court of Paris, by a decision
of the 26th of January of last year, cut off a legacy
made to the legitimate child of a natural son by his
grandfather, who, as grandfather, was as distant to
a natural grandson as the doctor, being an uncle,
is to Ursula.”
“All that,” said Goupil,
“seems to me to relate only to the bequests
made by grandfathers to natural descendants. Ursula
is not a blood relation of Doctor Minoret. I
remember a decision of the royal court at Colmar,
rendered in 1825, just before I took my degree, which
declared that after the decease of a natural child
his descendants could no longer be prohibited from
inheriting. Now, Ursula’s father is dead.”
Goupil’s argument produced what
journalists who report the sittings of legislative
assemblies are wont to call “profound sensation.”
“What does that signify?”
cried Dionis. “The actual case of the bequest
of an uncle to an illegitimate child may not yet have
been presented for trial; but when it is, the sternness
of French law against such children will be all the
more firmly applied because we live in times when
religion is honored. I’ll answer for it
that out of such a suit as I propose you could get
a compromise,—especially if they see you
are determined to carry Ursula to a court of appeals.”
Here the joy of the heirs already
fingering their gold was made manifest in smiles,
shrugs, and gestures round the table, and prevented
all notice of Goupil’s dissent. This elation,
however, was succeeded by deep silence and uneasiness
when the notary uttered his next word, a terrible
“But!”
As if he had pulled the string of
a puppet-show, starting the little people in jerks
by means of machinery, Dionis beheld all eyes turned
on him and all faces rigid in one and the same pose.
“But no law prevents
your uncle from adopting or marrying Ursula,”
he continued. “As for adoption, that could
be contested, and you would, I think, have equity
on your side. The royal courts would never trifle
with questions of adoptions; you would get a hearing
there. It is true the doctor is an officer of
the Legion of honor, and was formerly surgeon to the
ex-emperor; but, nevertheless, he would get the worst
of it. Moreover, you would have due warning in
case of adoption—but how about marriage?
Old Minoret is shrewd enough to go to Paris and marry
her after a year’s domicile, and give her a million
by the marriage contract. The only thing, therefore,
that really puts your property in danger is your uncle’s
marriage with the girl.”
Here the notary paused.
“There’s another danger,”
said Goupil, with a knowing air,—“that
of a will made in favor of a third person, old Bongrand
for instance, who will hold the property in trust
for Mademoiselle Ursula—”
“If you tease your uncle,”
continued Dionis, cutting short his head-clerk, “if
you are not all of you very polite to Ursula, you will
drive him into either a marriage or into making that
private trust which Goupil speaks of,—though
I don’t think him capable of that; it is a dangerous
thing. As for marriage, that is easy to prevent.
Desire there has only got to hold out a finger to
the girl; she’s sure to prefer a handsome young
man, cock of the walk in Nemours, to an old one.”
“Mother,” said Desire
to Zelie’s ear, as much allured by the millions
as by Ursula’s beauty, “If I married her
we should get the whole property.”
“Are you crazy?—you,
who’ll some day have fifty thousand francs a
year and be made a deputy! As long as I live you
never shall cut your throat by a foolish marriage.
Seven hundred thousand francs, indeed! Why, the
mayor’s only daughter will have fifty thousand
a year, and they have already proposed her to me—”
This reply, the first rough speech
his mother had ever made to him, extinguished in Desire’s
breast all desire for a marriage with the beautiful
Ursula; for his father and he never got the better
of any decision once written in the terrible blue
eyes of Zelie Minoret.
“Yes, but see here, Monsieur
Dionis,” cried Cremiere, whose wife had been
nudging him, “if the good man took the thing
seriously and married his goddaughter to Desire, giving
her the reversion of all the property, good-by to
our share in it; if he lives five years longer uncle
may be worth a million.”
“Never!” cried Zelie,
“never in my life shall Desire marry the daughter
of a bastard, a girl picked up in the streets out of
charity. My son will represent the Minorets after
the death of his uncle, and the Minorets have five
hundred years of good bourgeoisie behind them.
That’s equal to the nobility. Don’t
be uneasy, any of you; Desire will marry when we find
a chance to put him in the Chamber of deputies.”
This lofty declaration was backed by Goupil, who said:—
“Desire, with an allowance of
twenty-four thousand francs a year, will be president
of a royal court or solicitor-general; either office
leads to the peerage. A foolish marriage would
ruin him.”
The heirs were now all talking at
once; but they suddenly held their tongues when Minoret
rapped on the table with his fist to keep silence
for the notary.
“Your uncle is a worthy man,”
continued Dionis. “He believes he’s
immortal; and, like most clever men, he’ll let
death overtake him before he has made a will.
My advice therefore is to induce him to invest his
capital in a way that will make it difficult for him
to disinherit you, and I know of an opportunity, made
to hand. That little Portenduere is in Saint-Pelagie,
locked-up for one hundred and some odd thousand francs’
worth of debt. His old mother knows he is in
prison; she is crying like a Magdalen. The abbe
is to dine with her; no doubt she wants to talk to
him about her troubles. Well, I’ll go and
see your uncle to-night and persuade him to sell his
five per cent consols, which are now at 118, and lend
Madame de Portenduere, on the security of her farm
at Bordieres and her house here, enough to pay the
debts of the prodigal son. I have a right as notary
to speak to him in behalf of young Portenduere; and
it is quite natural that I should wish to make him
change his investments; I get deeds and commissions
out of the business. If I become his adviser I’ll
propose to him other land investments for his surplus
capital; I have some excellent ones now in my office.
If his fortune were once invested in landed estate
or in mortgage notes in this neighbourhood, it could
not take wings to itself very easily. It is easy
to make difficulties between the wish to realize and
the realization.”
The heirs, struck with the truth of
this argument (much cleverer than that of Monsieur
Josse), murmured approval.
“You must be careful,”
said the notary in conclusion, “to keep your
uncle in Nemours, where his habits are known, and where
you can watch him. Find him a lover for the girl
and you’ll prevent his marrying her himself.”
“Suppose she married the lover?”
said Goupil, seized by an ambitious desire.
“That wouldn’t be a bad
thing; then you could figure up the loss; the old
man would have to say how much he gives her,”
replied the notary. “But if you set Desire
at her he could keep the girl dangling on till the
old man died. Marriages are made and unmade.”
“The shortest way,” said
Goupil, “if the doctor is likely to live much
longer, is to marry her to some worthy young man who
will get her out of your way by settling at Sens,
or Montargis, or Orleans with a hundred thousand francs
in hand.”
Dionis, Massin, Zelie, and Goupil,
the only intelligent heads in the company, exchanged
four thoughtful smiles.
“He’d be a worm at the core,” whispered
Zelie to Massin.
“How did he get here?” returned the clerk.
“That will just suit you!”
cried Desire to Goupil. “But do you think
you can behave decently enough to satisfy the old man
and the girl?”
“In these days,” whispered
Zelie again in Massin’s year, “notaries
look out for no interests but their own. Suppose
Dionis went over to Ursula just to get the old man’s
business?”
“I am sure of him,” said
the clerk of the court, giving her a sly look out
of his spiteful little eyes. He was just going
to add, “because I hold something over him,”
but he withheld the words.
“I am quite of Dionis’s opinion,”
he said aloud.
“So am I,” cried Zelie,
who now suspected the notary of collusion with the
clerk.
“My wife has voted!” said
the post master, sipping his brandy, though his face
was already purple from digesting his meal and absorbing
a notable quantity of liquids.
“And very properly,” remarked the collector.
“I shall go and see the doctor after dinner,”
said Dionis.
“If Monsieur Dionis’s
advice is good,” said Madame Cremiere to Madame
Massin, “we had better go and call on our uncle,
as we used to do, every Sunday evening, and behave
exactly as Monsieur Dionis has told us.”
“Yes, and be received as he
received us!” cried Zelie. “Minoret
and I have more than forty thousand francs a year,
and yet he refused our invitations! We are quite
his equals. If I don’t know how to write
prescriptions I know how to paddle my boat as well
as he—I can tell him that!”
“As I am far from having forty
thousand francs a year,” said Madame Massin,
rather piqued, “I don’t want to lose ten
thousand.”
“We are his nieces; we ought
to take care of him, and then besides we shall see
how things are going,” said Madame Cremiere;
“you’ll thank us some day, cousin.”
“Treat Ursula kindly,”
said the notary, lifting his right forefinger to the
level of his lips; “remember old Jordy left her
his savings.”
“You have managed those fools
as well as Desroches, the best lawyer in Paris, could
have done,” said Goupil to his patron as they
left the post-house.
“And now they are quarreling
over my fee,” replied the notary, smiling bitterly.
The heirs, after parting with Dionis
and his clerk, met again in the square, with face
rather flushed from their breakfast, just as vespers
were over. As the notary predicted, the Abbe Chaperon
had Madame de Portenduere on his arm.
“She dragged him to vespers,
see!” cried Madame Massin to Madame Cremiere,
pointing to Ursula and the doctor, who were leaving
the church.
“Let us go and speak to him,”
said Madame Cremiere, approaching the old man.
The change in the faces of his relatives
(produced by the conference) did not escape Doctor
Minoret. He tried to guess the reason of this
sudden amiability, and out of sheer curiosity encouraged
Ursula to stop and speak to the two women, who were
eager to greet her with exaggerated affection and
forced smiles.
“Uncle, will you permit me to
come and see you to-night?” said Madame Cremiere.
“We feared sometimes we were in your way—but
it is such a long time since our children have paid
you their respects; our girls are old enough now to
make dear Ursula’s acquaintance.”
“Ursula is a little bear, like
her name,” replied the doctor.
“Let us tame her,” said
Madame Massin. “And besides, uncle,”
added the good housewife, trying to hide her real
motive under a mask of economy, “they tell us
the dear girl has such talent for the forte that we
are very anxious to hear her. Madame Cremiere
and I are inclined to take her music-master for our
children. If there were six or eight scholars
in a class it would bring the price of his lessons
within our means.”
“Certainly,” said the
old man, “and it will be all the better for me
because I want to give Ursula a singing-master.”
“Well, to-night then, uncle.
We will bring your great-nephew Desire to see you;
he is now a lawyer.”
“Yes, to-night,” echoed
Minoret, meaning to fathom the motives of these petty
souls.
The two nieces pressed Ursula’s
hand, saying, with affected eagerness, “Au revoir.”
“Oh, godfather, you have read
my heart!” cried Ursula, giving him a grateful
look.
“You are going to have a voice,”
he said; “and I shall give you masters of drawing
and Italian also. A woman,” added the doctor,
looking at Ursula as he unfastened the gate of his
house, “ought to be educated to the height of
every position in which her marriage may place her.”
Ursula grew red as a cherry; her godfather’s
thoughts evidently turned in the same direction as
her own. Feeling that she was too near confessing
to the doctor the involuntary attraction which led
her to think about Savinien and to center all her
ideas of affection upon him, she turned aside and
sat down in front of a great cluster of climbing plants,
on the dark background of which she looked at a distance
like a blue and white flower.
“Now you see, godfather, that
your nieces were very kind to me; yes, they were very
kind,” she repeated as he approached her, to
change the thoughts that made him pensive.
“Poor little girl!” cried the old man.
He laid Ursula’s hand upon his
arm, tapping it gently, and took her to the terraces
beside the river, where no one could hear them.
“Why do you say, ’Poor little girl’?”
“Don’t you see how they fear you?”
“Fear me,—why?”
“My next of kin are very uneasy
about my conversion. They no doubt attribute
it to your influence over me; they fancy I deprive
them of their inheritance to enrich you.”
“But you won’t do that?” said Ursula
naively, looking up at him.
“Oh, divine consolation of my
old age!” said the doctor, taking his godchild
in his arms and kissing her on both cheeks. “It
was for her and not for myself, oh God! that I besought
thee just now to let me live until the day I give
her to some good being who is worthy of her!
—You will see comedies, my little angel,
comedies which the Minorets and Cremieres and Massins
will come and play here. You want to brighten
and prolong my life; they are longing for my death.”
“God forbids us to hate any
one, but if that is— Ah! I despise
them!” exclaimed Ursula.
“Dinner is ready!” called
La Bougival from the portico, which, on the garden
side, was at the end of the corridor.