A TWO-FOLD VENGEANCE
Impunity, secrecy, and success increased
Goupil’s audacity. He made Massin, who
was completely his dupe, sue the Marquis du Rouvre
for his notes, so as to force him to sell the remainder
of his property to Minoret. Thus prepared, he
opened negotiations for a practice at Sens, and then
resolved to strike a last blow to obtain Ursula.
He meant to imitate certain young men in Paris who
owed their wives and their fortunes to abduction.
He knew that the services he had rendered to Minoret,
to Massin, and to Cremiere, and the protection of Dionis
and the mayor of Nemours would enable him to hush
up the affair. He resolved to throw off the mask,
believing Ursula too feeble in the condition to which
he had reduced her to make any resistance. But
before risking this last throw in the game he thought
it best to have an explanation with Minoret, and he
chose his opportunity at Rouvre, where he went with
his patron for the first time after the deeds were
signed.
Minoret had that morning received
a confidential letter from his son asking him for
information as to what was happening in connection
with Ursula, information that he desired to obtain
before going to Nemours with the procureur du roi
to place her under shelter from these atrocities in
the convent of the Adoration. Desire exhorted
his father, in case this persecution should be the
work of any of their friends, to give to whoever it
might be warning and good advice; for even if the
law could not punish this crime it would certainly
discover the truth and hold it over the delinquent’s
head. Minoret had now attained a great object.
Owner of the chateau du Rouvre, one of the finest
estates in the Gatinais, he had also a rent-roll of
some forty odd thousand francs a year from the rich
domains which surrounded the park. He could well
afford to snap his fingers at Goupil. Besides,
he intended to live on the estate, where the sight
of Ursula would no longer trouble him.
“My boy,” he said to Goupil,
as they walked along the terrace, “let my young
cousin alone, now.”
“Pooh!” said the clerk,
unable to imagine what capricious conduct meant.
“Oh! I’m not ungrateful;
you have enabled me to get this fine brick chateau
with the stone copings (which couldn’t be built
now for two hundred thousand francs) and those farms
and preserves and the park and gardens and woods,
all for two hundred and eighty thousand francs.
No, I’m not ungrateful; I’ll give you ten
per cent, twenty thousand francs, for your services,
and you can buy a sheriff’s practice in Nemours.
I’ll guarantee you a marriage with one of Cremiere’s
daughters, the eldest.”
“The one who talks piston!” cried Goupil.
“She’ll have thirty thousand
francs,” replied Minoret. “Don’t
you see, my dear boy, that you are cut out for a sheriff,
just as I was to be a post master? People should
keep to their vocation.”
“Very well, then,” said
Goupil, falling from the pinnacle of his hopes; “here’s
a stamped cheque; write me an order for twenty thousand
francs; I want the money in hand at once.”
Minoret had eighteen thousand francs
by him at that moment of which his wife knew nothing.
He thought the best way to get rid of Goupil was to
sign the draft. The clerk, seeing the flush of
seigniorial fever on the face of the imbecile and
colossal Machiavelli, threw him an “au revoir,”
by way of farewell, accompanied with a glance which
would have made any one but an idiotic parvenu, lost
in contemplation of the magnificent chateau built
in the style in vogue under Louis XIII., tremble in
his shoes.
“Are you not going to wait for
me?” he cried, observing that Goupil was going
away on foot.
“You’ll find me on our
path, never fear, papa Minoret,” replied Goupil,
athirst for vengeance and resolved to know the meaning
of the zigzags of Minoret’s strange conduct.
Since the day when the last vile calumny
had sullied her life Ursula, a prey to one of those
inexplicable maladies the seat of which is in the
soul, seemed to be rapidly nearing death. She
was deathly pale, speaking only at rare intervals
and then in slow and feeble words; everything about
her, her glance of gentle indifference, even the expression
of her forehead, all revealed the presence of some
consuming thought. She was thinking how the ideal
wreath of chastity, with which throughout all ages
the Peoples crowned their virgins, had fallen from
her brow. She heard in the void and in the silence
the dishonoring words, the malicious comments, the
laughter of the little town. The trial was too
heavy, her innocence was too delicate to allow her
to survive the murderous blow. She complained
no more; a sorrowful smile was on her lips; her eyes
appealed to heaven, to the Sovereign of angels, against
man’s injustice.
When Goupil reached Nemours, Ursula
had just been carried down from her chamber to the
ground-floor in the arms of La Bougival and the doctor.
A great event was about to take place. When Madame
de Portenduere became really aware that the girl was
dying like an ermine, though less injured in her honor
than Clarissa Harlowe, she resolved to go to her and
comfort her. The sight of her son’s anguish,
who during the whole preceding night had seemed beside
himself, made the Breton soul of the old woman yield.
Moreover, it seemed worthy of her own dignity to revive
the courage of a girl so pure, and she saw in her
visit a counterpoise to all the evil done by the little
town. Her opinion, surely more powerful than
that of the crowd, ought to carry with it, she thought,
the influence of race. This step, which the abbe
came to announce, made so great a change in Ursula
that the doctor, who was about to ask for a consultation
of Parisian doctors, recovered hope. They placed
her on her uncle’s sofa, and such was the character
of her beauty that she lay there in her mourning garments,
pale from suffering, she was more exquisitely lovely
than in the happiest hours of her life. When
Savinien, with his mother on his arm, entered the
room she colored vividly.
“Do not rise, my child,”
said the old lady imperatively; “weak and ill
as I am myself, I wished to come and tell you my feelings
about what is happening. I respect you as the
purest, the most religious and excellent girl in the
Gatinais; and I think you worthy to make the happiness
of a gentleman.”
At first poor Ursula was unable to
answer; she took the withered hands of Savinien’s
mother and kissed them.
“Ah, madame,” she said
in a faltering voice, “I should never have had
the boldness to think of rising above my condition
if I had not been encouraged by promises; my only
claim was that of an affection without bounds; but
now they have found the means to separate me from him
I love,—they have made me unworthy of him.
Never!” she cried, with a ring in her voice
which painfully affected those about her, “never
will I consent to give to any man a degraded hand,
a stained reputation. I loved too well,—yes,
I can admit it in my present condition,—I
love a creature almost as I love God, and God—”
“Hush, my child! do not calumniate
God. Come, my daughter,” said the old lady,
making an effort, “do not exaggerate the harm
done by an infamous joke in which no one believes.
I give you my word, you will live and you shall be
happy.”
“We shall be happy!” cried
Savinien, kneeling beside Ursula and kissing her hand;
“my mother has called you her daughter.”
“Enough, enough,” said
the doctor feeling his patient’s pulse; “do
not kill her with joy.”
At that moment Goupil, who found the
street door ajar, opened that of the little salon,
and showed his hideous face blazing with thoughts of
vengeance which had crowded into his mind as he hurried
along.
“Monsieur de Portenduere,”
he said, in a voice like the hissing of a viper forced
from its hole.
“What do you want?” said
Savinien, rising from his knees.
“I have a word to say to you.”
Savinien left the room, and Goupil took him into the
little courtyard.
“Swear to me by Ursula’s
life, by your honor as a gentleman, to do by me as
if I had never told you what I am about to tell.
Do this, and I will reveal to you the cause of the
persecutions directed against Mademoiselle Mirouet.”
“Can I put a stop to them?”
“Yes.”
“Can I avenge them?”
“On their author, yes—on his tool,
no.”
“Why not?”
“Because—I am the tool.”
Savinien turned pale.
“I have just seen Ursula—”
said Goupil.
“Ursula?” said the lover, looking fixedly
at the clerk.
“Mademoiselle Mirouet,”
continued Goupil, made respectful by Savinien’s
tone; “and I would undo with my blood the wrong
that has been done; I repent of it. If you were
to kill me, in a duel or otherwise, what good would
my blood do you? can you drink it? At this moment
it would poison you.”
The cold reasoning of the man, together
with a feeling of eager curiosity, calmed Savinien’s
anger. He fixed his eyes on Goupil with a look
which made that moral deformity writhe.
“Who set you at this work?” said the young
man.
“Will you swear?”
“What,—to do you no harm?”
“I wish that you and Mademoiselle Mirouet should
not forgive me.”
“She will forgive you,—I, never!”
“But at least you will forget?”
What terrible power the reason has
when it is used to further self-interest. Here
were two men, longing to tear one another in pieces,
standing in that courtyard within two inches of each
other, compelled to talk together and united by a
single sentiment.
“I will forgive you, but I shall not forget.”
“The agreement is off,”
said Goupil coldly. Savinien lost patience.
He applied a blow upon the man’s face which
echoed through the courtyard and nearly knocked him
down, making Savinien himself stagger.
“It is only what I deserve,”
said Goupil, “for committing such a folly.
I thought you more noble than you are. You have
abused the advantage I gave you. You are in my
power now,” he added with a look of hatred.
“You are a murderer!” said Savinien.
“No more than a dagger is a murderer.”
“I beg your pardon,” said Savinien.
“Are you revenged enough?”
said Goupil, with ferocious irony; “will you
stop here?”
“Reciprocal pardon and forgetfulness,”
replied Savinien.
“Give me your hand,” said the clerk, holding
out his own.
“It is yours,” said Savinien,
swallowing the shame for Ursula’s sake.
“Now speak; who made you do this thing?”
Goupil looked into the scales as it
were; on one side was Savinien’s blow, on the
other his hatred against Minoret. For a second
he was undecided; then a voice said to him: “You
will be notary!” and he answered:—
“Pardon and forgetfulness? Yes, on both
sides, monsieur—”
“Who is persecuting Ursula?” persisted
Savinien.
“Minoret. He would have
liked to see her buried. Why? I can’t
tell you that; but we might find out the reason.
Don’t mix me up in all this; I could do nothing
to help you if the others distrusted me. Instead
of annoying Ursula I will defend her; instead of serving
Minoret I will try to defeat his schemes. I live
only to ruin him, to destroy him —I’ll
crush him under foot, I’ll dance on his carcass,
I’ll make his bones into dominoes! To-morrow,
every wall in Nemours and Fontainebleau and Rouvre
shall blaze with the letters, ’Minoret is a
thief!’ Yes, I’ll burst him like a gun—There!
we’re allies now by the imprudence of that outbreak!
If you choose I’ll beg Mademoiselle Mirouet’s
pardon and tell her I curse the madness which impelled
me to injure her. It may do her good; the abbe
and the justice are both there; but Monsieur Bongrand
must promise on his honor not to injure my career.
I have a career now.”
“Wait a minute;” said Savinien, bewildered
by the revelation.
“Ursula, my child,” he
said, returning to the salon, “the author of
all your troubles is ashamed of his work; he repents
and wishes to ask your pardon in presence of these
gentlemen, on condition that all be forgotten.”
“What! Goupil?” cried
the abbe, the justice, and the doctor, all together.
“Keep his secret,” said
Ursula, putting a finger on her lips.
Goupil heard the words, saw the gesture,
and was touched.
“Mademoiselle,” he said
in a troubled voice, “I wish that all Nemours
could hear me tell you that a fatal passion has bewildered
my brain and led me to commit a crime punishable by
the blame of honest men. What I say now I would
be willing to say everywhere, deploring the harm done
by such miserable tricks—which may have
hastened your happiness,” he added, rather maliciously,
“for I see that Madame de Portenduere is with
you.”
“That is all very well, Goupil,”
said the abbe, “Mademoiselle forgives you; but
you must not forget that you came near being her murderer.”
“Monsieur Bongrand,” said
Goupil, addressing the justice of peace. “I
shall negotiate to-night for Lecoeur’s practice;
I hope the reparation I have now made will not injure
me with you, and that you will back my petition to
the bar and the ministry.”
Bongrand made a thoughtful inclination
of his head; and Goupil left the house to negotiate
on the best terms he could for the sheriff’s
practice. The others remained with Ursula and
did their best to restore the peace and tranquillity
of her mind, already much relieved by Goupil’s
confession.
“You see, my child, that God
was not against you,” said the abbe.
Minoret came home late from Rouvre.
About nine o’clock he was sitting in the Chinese
pagoda digesting his dinner beside his wife, with whom
he was making plans for Desire’s future.
Desire had become very sedate since entering the magistracy;
he worked hard, and it was not unlikely that he would
succeed the present procureur du roi at Fontainebleau,
who, they said, was to be advanced to Melun. His
parents felt that they must find him a wife,—some
poor girl belonging to an old and noble family; he
would then make his way to the magistracy of Paris.
Perhaps they could get him elected deputy from Fontainebleau,
where Zelie was proposing to pass the winter after
living at Rouvre for the summer season. Minoret,
inwardly congratulating himself for having managed
his affairs so well, no longer thought or cared about
Ursula, at the very moment when the drama so heedlessly
begun by him was closing down upon him in a terrible
manner.
“Monsieur de Portenduere is
here and wishes to speak to you,” said Cabirolle.
“Show him in,” answered Zelie.
The twilight shadows prevented Madame
Minoret from noticing the sudden pallor of her husband,
who shuddered as he heard Savinien’s boots on
the floor of the gallery, where the doctor’s
library used to be. A vague presentiment of danger
ran through the robber’s veins. Savinien
entered and remaining standing, with his hat on his
head, his cane in his hand, and both hands crossed
in front of him, motionless before the husband and
wife.
“I have come to ascertain, Monsieur
and Madame Minoret,” he said, “your reasons
for tormenting in an infamous manner a young lady who,
as the whole town knows, is to be my wife. Why
have you endeavored to tarnish her honor? why have
you wished to kill her? why did you deliver her over
to Goupil’s insults?—Answer!”
“How absurd you are, Monsieur
Savinien,” said Zelie, “to come and ask
us the meaning of a thing we think inexplicable.
I bother myself as little about Ursula as I do about
the year one. Since Uncle Minoret died I’ve
not thought of her more than I do of my first tooth.
I’ve never said one word about her to Goupil,
who is, moreover, a queer rogue whom I wouldn’t
think of consulting about even a dog. Why don’t
you speak up, Minoret? Are you going to let monsieur
box your ears in that way and accuse you of wickedness
that’s beneath you? As if a man with forty-eight
thousand francs a year from landed property, and a
castle fit for a prince, would stoop to such things!
Get up, and don’t sit there like a wet rag!”
“I don’t know what monsieur
means,” said Minoret in his squeaking voice,
the trembling of which was all the more noticeable
because the voice was clear. “What object
could I have in persecuting the girl? I may have
said to Goupil how annoyed I was at seeing her in Nemours.
My son Desire fell in love with her, and I didn’t
want him to marry her, that’s all.”
“Goupil has confessed everything, Monsieur Minoret.”
There was a moment’s silence,
but it was terrible, when all three persons examined
one another. Zelie saw a nervous quiver on the
heavy face of her colossus.
“Though you are only insects,”
said the young nobleman, “I will make you feel
my vengeance. It is not from you, Monsieur Minoret,
a man sixty-eight years of age, but from your son
that I shall seek satisfaction for the insults offered
to Mademoiselle Mirouet. The first time he sets
his foot in Nemours we shall meet. He must fight
me; he will do so, or be dishonored and never dare
to show his face again. If he does not come to
Nemours I shall go to Fontainebleau, for I will have
satisfaction. It shall never be said that you
were tamely allowed to dishonor a defenceless young
girl—”
“But the calumnies of a Goupil—are—not—”
began Minoret.
“Do you wish me to bring him
face to face with you? Believe me, you had better
hush up this affair; it lies between you and Goupil
and me. Leave it as it is; God will decide between
us and when I meet your son.”
“But this sha’n’t
go one!” cried Zelie. “Do you suppose
I’ll stand by and let Desire fight you,—a
sailor whose business it is to handle swords and guns?
If you’ve got any cause of complaint against
Minoret, there’s Minoret; take Minoret, fight
Minoret! But do you think my boy, who, by your
own account, knew nothing of all this, is going to
bear the brunt of it? No, my little gentleman!
somebody’s teeth will pin your legs first!
Come, Minoret, don’t stand staring there like
a big canary; you are in your own house, and you allow
a man to keep his hat on before your wife! I
say he shall go. Now, monsieur, be off! a man’s
house is his castle. I don’t know what you
mean with your nonsense, but show me your heels, and
if you dare touch Desire you’ll have to answer
to me,—you and your minx Ursula.”
She rang the bell violently and called to the servants.
“Remember what I have said to
you,” repeated Savinien to Minoret, paying no
attention to Zelie’s tirade. Suspending
the sword of Damocles over their heads, he left the
room.
“Now, then, Minoret,”
said Zelie, “you will explain to me what this
all means. A young man doesn’t rush into
a house and make an uproar like that and demand the
blood of a family for nothing.”
“It’s some mischief of
that vile Goupil,” said the colossus. “I
promised to help him buy a practice if he would get
me the Rouvre property cheap. I gave him ten
per cent on the cost, twenty thousand francs in a
note, and I suppose he isn’t satisfied.”
“Yes, but why did he get up
those serenades and the scandals against Ursula?”
“He wanted to marry her.”
“A girl without a penny! the
sly thing! Now Minoret, you are telling me lies,
and you are too much of a fool, my son, to make me
believe them. There is something under all this,
and you are going to tell me what it is.”
“There’s nothing.”
“Nothing? I tell you you lie, and I shall
find it out.”
“Do let me alone!”
“I’ll turn the faucet
of that fountain of venom, Goupil—whom you’re
afraid of—and we’ll see who gets the
best of it then.”
“Just as you choose.”
“I know very well it will be
as I choose! and what I choose first and foremost
is that no harm shall come to Desire. If anything
happens to him, mark you, I’ll do something
that may send me to the scaffold—and you,
you haven’t any feeling about him—”
A quarrel thus begun between Minoret
and his wife was sure not to end without a long and
angry strife. So at the moment of his self-satisfaction
the foolish robber found his inward struggle against
himself and against Ursula revived by his own fault,
and complicated with a new and terrible adversary.
The next day, when he left the house early to find
Goupil and try to appease him with additional money,
the walls were already placarded with the words:
“Minoret is a thief.” All those whom
he met commiserated him and asked him who was the
author of the anonymous placard. Fortunately for
him, everybody made allowance for his equivocal replies
by reflecting on his utter stupidity; fools get more
advantage from their weakness than able men from their
strength. The world looks on at a great man battling
against fate, and does not help him, but it supplies
the capital of a grocer who may fail and lose all.
Why? Because men like to feel superior in protecting
an incapable, and are displeased at not feeling themselves
the equal of a man of genius. A clever man would
have been lost in public estimation had he stammered,
as Minoret did, evasive and foolish answers with a
frightened air. Zelie sent her servants to efface
the vindictive words wherever they were found; but
the effect of them on Minoret’s conscience still
remained.
The result of his interview with his
assailant was soon apparent. Though Goupil had
concluded his bargain with the sheriff the night before,
he now impudently refused to fulfil it.
“My dear Lecoeur,” he
said, “I am unexpectedly enabled to buy up Monsieur
Dionis’s practice; I am therefore in a position
to help you to sell to others. Tear up the agreement;
it’s only the loss of two stamps,—here
are seventy centimes.”
Lecoeur was too much afraid of Goupil
to complain. All Nemours knew before night that
Minoret had given Dionis security to enable Goupil
to buy his practice. The latter wrote to Savinien
denying his charges against Minoret, and telling the
young nobleman that in his new position he was forbidden
by the rules of the supreme court, and also by his
respect for law, to fight a duel. But he warned
Savinien to treat him well in future; assuring him
he was a capital boxer, and would break his leg at
the first offence.
The walls of Nemours were cleared
of the inscription; but the quarrel between Minoret
and his wife went on; and Savinien maintained a threatening
silence. Ten days after these events the marriage
of Mademoiselle Massin, the elder, to the future notary
was bruited about the town. Mademoiselle Massin
had a dowry of eighty thousand francs and her own
peculiar ugliness; Goupil had his deformities and his
practice; the union therefore seemed suitable and probable.
One evening, towards midnight, two unknown men seized
Goupil in the street as he was leaving Massin’s
house, gave him a sound beating, and disappeared.
The notary kept the matter a profound secret, and even
contradicted an old woman who saw the scene from her
window and thought that she recognized him.
These great little events were carefully
studied by Bongrand, who became convinced that Goupil
held some mysterious power over Minoret, and he determined
to find out its cause.