Not infrequently midnight sounded, and the happy trio looked at each other in surprise, deploring the rapid flight of time, as they exclaimed:
"Already!"
And they would always say to each other in parting:
"To-morrow!"
Marie would retire to her own room, but Frederick would conduct David to his chamber, and there, how many times, standing within the embrasure of the door, the preceptor and pupil forgot themselves in the charm of a long friendly chat; one listening with faith, responding with eagerness, questioning with the ardour of his age, the other speaking with the tender solicitude of the mature man, who smiles compassionately on youth, impatient to try the mysterious path of destiny.
How many times old Marguerite was obliged to ascend to the floor upon which David's chamber was situated, and say to Frederick:
"Indeed, monsieur, it is midnight, it is one o'clock in the morning, and you know very well that madame never goes to bed before you do."
And Frederick would press David's hand and descend to his mother's chamber.
There, David would still be the subject of long conversations between the young woman and her son.
"Mother," Frederick would say, "how interesting was his account of his travels in Asia Minor."
"Oh, yes, nothing could be more so," Marie would answer. "And besides, Frederick, what curious things M. David has taught us about the vibrations of sound, and all that, too, by a few chords on this broken old piano."
"Mother, what a charming account he gave us, in comparing the properties of sound and light."
"And that delightful strain from Mozart that he played. Do you remember the choir of spirits in the 'Enchanted Flute?' It was so aerial, so light. What a pleasure for poor savages like us, who have never known anything of Mozart; it is like discovering a treasure of harmony."
"And how touching his anecdote about the old age of Haydn. And what he told us of the association of the Moravian brethren in America. How much less misery, how much benefit to poor people if those ideas could be applied in our country!"
"And, mother, did you notice that his eyes filled with tears when he spoke of the happiness which might be the portion of so many people who are now in want?"
"Ah, my poor child, his is the noblest heart in the world."
"Yes, mother, and how we ought to cherish it! Oh, we must love him so much, you see; yes, so very much that it will be impossible for him to leave us. He has no family; his best friend, Doctor Dufour, is our neighbour. Where could M. David find a better home than with us?"
"Leave us!" exclaimed Marie, "leave us! why, it is he who gives us our strength, our faith, our confidence in the future. Is it possible he can abandon us now?"
Then old Marguerite was obliged to interpose again.
"For the love of God, madame, do go to bed; why, it is two o'clock in the morning," said the old servant. "You rose at six o'clock, and so did M. Frederick, and then so must work all day long! Besides, it is not good sense to sit up so late!"
"Marguerite is right to scold us, my child," said Marie, smiling, and kissing her son on the forehead, "we are foolish to go to bed so late."
And the next day, again Marguerite's recriminations cut short the conversations of the mother and son.
Two or three times Marie went to bed in a sweetly pensive mood.
One evening, while Frederick was reading, his friend, thoughtful and sedate, his elbows on the table, was leaning over with his forehead on his hand; the light of the lamp, concentrated by the shade, shone brightly upon the noble and expressive face of David.
Marie, a moment distracted from the reading, directed her gaze to the guardian of her son, and looked at him a long time. By degrees, the young woman felt her eyes grow moist, her beautiful bosom palpitate suddenly, while a delicate blush mounted her snowy brow.
Just at this moment, David accidentally raised his eyes and met Marie's glance.
The young woman immediately cast her eyes down, and blushed scarlet.
Another time David was at the piano, accompanying Frederick and Marie, who were singing a duet; the young woman turned the page, just as David had the same intuition, and their hands met.
At this electric contact, she trembled, her blood rushed toward her heart, and a cloud passed before her eyes.
Notwithstanding these suggestive indications, the young mother slept that evening, pensive and dreamy, but full of calm and chaste serenity.
As always before, she kissed her son on the forehead, without blushing.
Thus passed the last fortnight of December.
Upon the eve of the new year, David, Marie, and her son were preparing to go out, in order to carry a few last remembrances to their dependents, when Marguerite handed her mistress a letter which the express had just brought.
At the sight of the handwriting, Marie could not hide her surprise and fear.
This letter was from M. Bastien, who wrote as follows:
"MADAME, MYWIFE(with whom I am not at all satisfied):—My business in Berri has ended sooner than I anticipated. I am now at Pont Brillant, with my boon companion, Bridou, occupied in verifying accounts. We will leave soon for the farm, where Bridou will stay a few days with me, in order to assist me in estimating the indemnity due me, out of the sum allotted to the sufferers from the overflow, because we must get some good out of so much evil."We will arrive in time for dinner."Take care to have a leg of mutton with an abundance of clove of garlic in the best style, and some fine cabbage soup, as I am fond of it, with plenty of hot salted pork, and plenty of Blois sausage; attend especially to that, if you please."Nota bene.I shall arrive in a very bad humour, and very much disposed to box my son's ears, in case his fits of melancholy and coxcomb airs are not at an end."Your husband, who has no desire to laugh,"JACQUESBASTIEN."P. S. Bridou is like me; he likes cheese that can walk alone. Tell Marguerite to provide it, and do you attend to it."
"MADAME, MYWIFE(with whom I am not at all satisfied):—My business in Berri has ended sooner than I anticipated. I am now at Pont Brillant, with my boon companion, Bridou, occupied in verifying accounts. We will leave soon for the farm, where Bridou will stay a few days with me, in order to assist me in estimating the indemnity due me, out of the sum allotted to the sufferers from the overflow, because we must get some good out of so much evil.
"We will arrive in time for dinner.
"Take care to have a leg of mutton with an abundance of clove of garlic in the best style, and some fine cabbage soup, as I am fond of it, with plenty of hot salted pork, and plenty of Blois sausage; attend especially to that, if you please.
"Nota bene.I shall arrive in a very bad humour, and very much disposed to box my son's ears, in case his fits of melancholy and coxcomb airs are not at an end.
"Your husband, who has no desire to laugh,"JACQUESBASTIEN.
"P. S. Bridou is like me; he likes cheese that can walk alone. Tell Marguerite to provide it, and do you attend to it."
Madame Bastien had not recovered from the surprise and regret produced by the unexpected announcement of M. Bastien's return, when she was drawn from her unhappy reflections by a tumultuous and constantly increasing excitement that she heard outside. One would have declared that an assemblage had surrounded the house. Suddenly Marguerite entered, running, her eyes sparkling with joy, as she cried:
"Ah, madame! come,—come and see!"
Marie, more and more astonished, automatically followed the servant.
THEweather was clear, the winter sun radiant. Marie Bastien, as she went out on the rustic porch, built above the front door of the house, saw about one hundred persons, men, women, and children, almost all clothed in coarse, but new and warm garments, filing in order, and ranging themselves behind the little garden.
This procession was ended by a cart ornamented with branches of fir, on which was placed what was called by the country people, a ferry-boat—a little flat boat, resembling the one Frederick and David so bravely used during the overflow.
Behind the cart, which stopped at the garden gate, came an empty open carriage, drawn by four horses, and mounted by two postilions in the livery of Pont Brillant; two footmen were seated behind.
At the head of the procession marched Jean François, the farmer, leading two of his little children by the hand; his wife held the smallest child in her arms.
At the sight of Madame Bastien, the farmer approached.
"Good day, Jean François," said the young woman to him, affectionately. "What do these good people who accompany you want?"
"We wish to speak to M. Frederick, madame."
Marie turned to Marguerite, who, with a triumphant air, was standing behind her mistress, and said to her:
"Run and tell my son, Marguerite."
"It will not take long, madame; he is in the library with M. David."
While the servant went in quest of Frederick, Marie, who saw then for the first time the handsomely equipped carriage standing before the garden gate, wondered what could be its purpose.
Frederick hastened, not expecting the spectacle which awaited him.
"What do you want, mother?" said he, quickly.
Then, seeing the crowd which had gathered in the little garden, he stopped suddenly, with an interrogative look at his mother.
"My child—"
But the young woman, whose heart was beating with joy, could say no more; overcome by emotion, she had just discovered that the assemblage was composed entirely of those unfortunate people whom she and her son and David had helped in the time of the overflow.
Then Marie said:
"My child, it is Jean François who wishes to speak to you,—there he is!"
And the happy mother withdrew behind her son, exchanging a glance of inexpressible delight with David, who had followed his pupil, and stood half hidden under the porch.
Frederick, whose astonishment continued to increase, made a step toward Jean François, who said to the young man, in a voice full of tears:
"M. Frederick, it is we poor valley people, who have come to thank you with a free heart, as well as your mother and your friend, M. David, who have been so kind. As I owe you the most," continued the farmer, with a voice more and more broken by tears, and pointing to his wife and children with an expressive gesture, "as I owe you the most, M. Frederick, the others have told me—and—I—"
The poor man could say no more. Sobs stifled his voice.
Other sobs of tenderness from the excited crowd responded to the tears of Jean François, and broke the almost religious silence which reigned for several minutes.
Frederick's heart was melted to tears of joy. He threw himself upon his mother's neck, as if he wished to turn toward her these testimonials of gratitude by which he was so profoundly touched.
At a sign from Jean François, who had dried his eyes and tried to regain his self-possession, several men of the assemblage approached the cart, and, taking the ferry-boat, brought it in their arms and laid it before Frederick.
It was a simple and rustic little boat with two oars of unpolished wood, and on the inner railing were written in rude and uneven letters, cut into the framework, the words: "The poor people of the valley to M. Frederick Bastien."
Then followed the date of the overflow.
Jean François, having subdued his emotion, said, as he showed the boat to the son of Madame Bastien:
"M. Frederick, we united with each other in making this little boat, which almost looks like the one which served you in saving us and our effects. Excuse the liberty, M. Frederick, but it is with good intention and warm friendship that we bring this little boat to you. When you use it, you will think of the poor people of the valley, and upon those who will always love you, M. Frederick; they will teach your name to their little children, who, when they are grown, will some day teach it to theirs, because that name, you see, M. Frederick, is now the name of the good saint of the country."
Frederick allowed his tears to flow, as a silent and eloquent response. David then, leaning over his pupil's ear, whispered to him:
"My child, is not this rude procession worth all the splendour of the brilliant hunting procession of St. Hubert?"
At the moment Frederick turned toward David to press his hand, he saw a movement in the crowd, which, suddenly separating itself with a murmur of surprise and curiosity, gave passage to Raoul de Pont Brillant.
The marquis advanced a little in front of Jean François; then, with perfect ease and grace, he said to Frederick:
"I have come, monsieur, to thank you for saving my life, because this is my first day out, and it was my duty to dedicate it to you. I met these good people on the way, and after learning from one of them the purpose of their assemblage I joined them, since, like these good people, I am of the valley, and like several of them, I owe my life to you."
After these words, uttered with an accent perhaps more polished than emotional, the Marquis de Pont Brillant, with exquisite tact, again mingled with the multitude.
"Ah, well, my child," whispered David to Frederick, "is it not the Marquis de Pont Brillant now who ought to envy you?"
Frederick pressed David's hand, but was possessed by the thought: "He whom I basely desired to murder is there, ignorant of my dastardly attempt, and he has come to thank me for saving his life."
Then the son of Madame Bastien, addressing the people of the valley, said to them, in an impassioned voice, as he mingled with them, and cordially pressed their hands:
"My friends, what I have done was done at the suggestion of my mother, and with the aid of my friend, M. David. It is, then, in their name, as well as my own, that I thank you from the bottom of my heart for these evidences of affection. As to this little boat," added the young man, turning toward the boat which had been deposited in the middle of the garden, and contemplating it with as much sadness as joy, "it shall be consecrated to the pleasure of my mother, and this touching inscription will remind us of the inhabitants of the valley, whom we love as much as they love us."
Then Frederick, addressing in turn all those who surrounded him, asked one if his fields were in a tillable condition, another if he hoped to preserve a great part of his vineyard, another still if the slime deposited on his land by the Loire had not somewhat compensated for the disaster from which he had suffered. To all Frederick said some word which proved that he had their interest and their misfortunes at heart.
Marie, on her part, speaking to the women and mothers and children, found a word of affection and solicitude for all, and proved that like her son she had a perfect acquaintance with the sorrows and needs of each one.
Frederick hoped to join the Marquis de Pont Brillant; he earnestly longed to press the hand of the man whom he had so long pursued with bitter hatred; it seemed to him that this frank expression ought to efface from his mind the last memory of the dreadful deed he had contemplated; but he could not find the marquis, whose carriage had also disappeared.
After the departure of the valley people, Frederick, entering the house with his mother and David, found Marguerite, who proudly handed him a letter.
"What is this letter, Marguerite?" asked the young man.
"Read, M. Frederick."
"You permit me, mother? and you also, my friend?"
Marie and David made a sign in the affirmative.
Frederick immediately cast his eyes upon the signature and said:
"It is from the Marquis de Pont Brillant."
"The very same, M. Frederick," interposed Marguerite. "Before departing in his carriage he came through the grove and asked to write you a word."
"Come in the library, my child," said Marie to her son.
David, Frederick, and his mother being alone, the young man said, innocently:
"I am going to read it aloud, mother."
"As you please, my child."
"Ah, but now I think it is doubtless a letter of thanks," said Frederick, smiling, "and should not be read aloud."
"You are right; you would suppress three-fourths of it," said Marie, smiling in her turn. "Give the letter to M. David, he will read it better than you."
"Come," answered Frederick, gaily, "my modesty serves me ill. If it is praise, it will still seem very sweet to me."
"That will be a punishment for your humility," said David, laughing, and he read what follows:
"'As I had the honour of telling you, monsieur, I left my house in the hope of expressing my gratitude to you. I met the valley people, who were on their way to make an ovation for you,—you, monsieur, whose name has rightfully become so popular in our country since the inundation. I thought I ought to join these people and wait the opportunity to thank you personally."'I should have accomplished this duty to-day, monsieur, without this interesting circumstance."'As I heard you thank the good people of the valley in a voice so full of emotion, it seemed to me I recognised the voice of a person whom I met at night in the depth of the forest of Pont Brillant about two months ago, for, if I remember correctly, this meeting took place in the first week of November.'"
"'As I had the honour of telling you, monsieur, I left my house in the hope of expressing my gratitude to you. I met the valley people, who were on their way to make an ovation for you,—you, monsieur, whose name has rightfully become so popular in our country since the inundation. I thought I ought to join these people and wait the opportunity to thank you personally.
"'I should have accomplished this duty to-day, monsieur, without this interesting circumstance.
"'As I heard you thank the good people of the valley in a voice so full of emotion, it seemed to me I recognised the voice of a person whom I met at night in the depth of the forest of Pont Brillant about two months ago, for, if I remember correctly, this meeting took place in the first week of November.'"
"Frederick, what does that mean?" asked Madame Bastien, interrupting David.
"Presently, mother, I will tell you all. Please go on, my friend."
David continued:
"'It is possible, monsieur, and I earnestly hope it, that this passage in my letter relating to this meeting may appear incomprehensible to you; in that case please attach no importance to it, and attribute it to a mistake caused by a resemblance of voice and accent which is very unusual."'If, on the contrary, monsieur, you comprehend me; if you are, in a word, the person whom I met at night in a very dark spot where it was impossible to distinguish your features, you will condescend, no doubt, monsieur, to explain to me the contradiction (apparent, I hope) which exists between your conduct at the time of our meeting in the forest and at the time of the inundation."'I await, then, monsieur, with your permission, the elucidation of this mystery, that I may know with what sentiments I can henceforth have the honour of subscribing myself. Your very humble and obedient servant,"'R., MARQUIS DEPONTBRILLANT.'"
"'It is possible, monsieur, and I earnestly hope it, that this passage in my letter relating to this meeting may appear incomprehensible to you; in that case please attach no importance to it, and attribute it to a mistake caused by a resemblance of voice and accent which is very unusual.
"'If, on the contrary, monsieur, you comprehend me; if you are, in a word, the person whom I met at night in a very dark spot where it was impossible to distinguish your features, you will condescend, no doubt, monsieur, to explain to me the contradiction (apparent, I hope) which exists between your conduct at the time of our meeting in the forest and at the time of the inundation.
"'I await, then, monsieur, with your permission, the elucidation of this mystery, that I may know with what sentiments I can henceforth have the honour of subscribing myself. Your very humble and obedient servant,
"'R., MARQUIS DEPONTBRILLANT.'"
The reading of this letter, written with assurance and aggressive pride, was scarcely ended when the son of Madame Bastien ran to a table and wrote a few lines spontaneously, folded the paper, and returned to his mother.
"I am going, mother," said he, "to relate to you in a few words the adventure in the forest; afterward you and my friend will judge if my reply to the Marquis de Pont Brillant is proper."
And Frederick, without mentioning the conversation between the dowager and Zerbinette which he had surprised (for that would have outraged his mother), told the young woman and David all that happened on the fatal day to which the marquis alluded; how the marquis, having refused to fight in the darkness with an unknown person, and wishing to escape from the persistence of Frederick, had overthrown him with the breast of his horse; how Frederick, in a delirium of rage, had lain in ambuscade near a spot where the marquis would pass, in order to kill him.
This recital terminated, without justifying Frederick, but at least explaining to his mother and David by what sequence of sentiments and deeds he had been led to conceive the idea of a dastardly ambush unknown to the Marquis of Pont Brillant, Frederick said to his mother:
"Now, here is my answer to the letter of the Marquis de Pont Brillant."
Marie Bastien read the following:
"MONSIEUR:—I provoked you without cause; I am ashamed of it. I saved your life; I am glad of it. There is the whole mystery."Your very humble servant,"FREDERICKBASTIEN."
"MONSIEUR:—I provoked you without cause; I am ashamed of it. I saved your life; I am glad of it. There is the whole mystery.
"Your very humble servant,"FREDERICKBASTIEN."
"Well, my child," said David, earnestly, "you nobly confess a wicked intention that you have paid for at the peril of your life."
"When I think of this rehabilitation and of all that has just occurred," said Marie, with profound emotion, "when I realise that it is all your work, M. David, and that fifteen days ago my son was killing himself—his heart consumed with hatred—"
"And yet you do not know all, mother," interrupted Frederick, "no, you do not know all that I owe to this good genius who has come to change our grief to joy."
"What do you mean, my child?"
"Frederick!" added David, with a tone of reproach, suspecting the intention of Madame Bastien's son.
"My friend, to-day is the day of confessions, and, besides, I see my mother so happy that—"
Then, interrupting himself, he asked:
"You are happy, are you not, mother?"
Marie replied by embracing her son with ecstasy.
"So you see, my friend, my mother is so happy that a danger past cannot give her cause for sorrow, especially when she will have one reason more for loving you and blessing you."
"Frederick, once again I beseech you—"
"My friend, the only reason which has made me conceal this secret from my mother was the fear of distressing her."
"I beg you, dear child, explain yourself," cried Marie.
"Ah, well, mother, those farewells at night, you remember?—it was not a dream."
"Why, did you really come to me that dreadful night?"
"Yes, to bid you farewell."
"My God! and where were you going?"
"I was going to kill myself."
Marie uttered a shriek of fright, and turned pale.
"Frederick," said David, "you see what imprudence—"
"No, no, M. David," interrupted the young woman, trying to smile. "It is I who am absurdly weak. Have I not my son here in my arms, on my heart?"
As she said these words, Marie pressed her son in her arms, as they sat together on the sofa; then kissing him on the forehead, she added, in a trembling voice:
"Oh, I have you in my arms. Now I have no more fear, I can hear all."
"Well, mother, devoured by envy, and more than that, pursued by remorse, which always awakened at the sound of your voice, I wanted to kill myself. I went out with M. David, I escaped from him. He succeeded in finding my tracks. I had run to the Loire, and when he arrived—"
"Ah! unhappy child!" cried Marie, "but for him you would have drowned!"
"Yes, and when I was about to drown I called you, mother, as one calls for help. He heard my cries, and threw himself in the Loire, and—"
Frederick was interrupted by Marguerite.
The old servant this time did not present herself smiling and triumphant, but timid and alarmed, as she whispered to her mistress, as if she were announcing some fatal news:
"Madame, madame, monsieur has come!"
THESEwords of Marguerite, "Monsieur has come!" announcing the arrival of Jacques Bastien at the very moment in which Marie realised that she owed to David not only the moral restoration but the life of her son, so appalled the young woman that she sat mute and motionless, as if struck by an unexpected blow; for the incidents of the morning had banished from her mind every thought of her husband's letter. Frederick, on his part, felt a sad surprise. Thanks to his mother's reticence he was ignorant of much of his father's unkindness and injustice, but certain domestic scenes in which the natural brutality of Jacques Bastien's character had been manifested, and the unwise severity with which he exercised his paternal authority in his rare visits to the farm, united in rendering the relations of father and son very strained.
David also saw the arrival of M. Bastien with profound apprehension; although prepared to make all possible concessions to this man, even to the point of utter self-effacement, it pained him to think that the continuity of his relations with Frederick and his mother depended absolutely on the caprice of Jacques Bastien.
Marguerite was so little in advance of her master that David, Marie, and her son were still under the effects of their astonishment and painful reflections, when Jacques Bastien entered the library, accompanied by his companion, Bridou, the bailiff of Pont Brillant.
Jacques Bastien, as we have said, was an obese Hercules; his large head, covered with a forest of reddish blond curls, was joined close to his broad shoulders by the neck of a bull; his face was large, florid, and almost beardless, as is frequently the case in athletic physiques; his nose big, his lips of the kind called blubber, and his eye at the same time shrewd, wicked, and deceitful. The blue blouse, which, according to his custom, he wore over his riding-coat, distinctly delineated the prominence of his Falstaff-like stomach; he wore a little cap of fox hair, with ear-protectors, trousers of cheap velvet, and iron-tipped boots that had not been cleaned for several days; in one of his short, yet enormous hands, broader than they were long, he carried a stick of holly-wood, fastened to his wrist by a greasy leather string; and if the truth must be told, this man, a sort of mastodon, at ten paces distant, smelled like a goat.
His boon companion, Bridou, also clad in a blouse over his old black coat, and wearing a round hat, was a small man, with spectacles, lank, covered with freckles, with a cunning, sly expression, pinched mouth, and high cheek-bones: one might have taken him for a ferret wearing eyeglasses.
At the sight of Jacques Bastien, David shuddered with pain and apprehension, as he thought that Marie's life was for ever linked to the life of this man, who even lacked the generosity of remaining absent from the unhappy woman.
Jacques Bastien and Bridou entered the library without salutation; the first words that the master of the domicile, with an angry frown and rude voice, addressed to his wife, who rose to receive him, were these:
"Who gave the order to fell my fir-trees?"
"What fir-trees, monsieur?" asked Marie, without knowing what she said, so much was she upset by her husband's arrival.
"How, what fir-trees?" replied Jacques Bastien. "What but my fir-trees on the road? Do I speak enigmas? In passing along the road I have just seen that more than a thousand of the finest trees on the border of the plantation have been cut down! I ask you who has allowed them to be sold without my order?"
"They have not been sold, monsieur," replied Marie, regaining her self-possession.
"If they have not been sold, why were they cut down? Who ordered them cut down?"
"I did, monsieur."
"You?"
And Jacques Bastien, overwhelmed with astonishment, was silent a moment; then he said:
"Ah! so it was you, madame! A new performance, forsooth! You are drawing it rather strong. What do you say about it, Bridou?"
"Bless me, Jacques, you had better look into it."
"That is just what I am going to do; and what use did you have for the money, madame, that you had more than a thousand of my finest firs cut down, if you please?"
"Monsieur, it would be better, I think, to talk of business when we are alone. You must see that my son's preceptor, M. David, is present."
And Madame Bastien indicated by her glance David, who was sitting apart from the company.
Jacques Bastien turned around abruptly, and after having contemptuously measured David from head to foot, said to him, rudely:
"Monsieur, I wish to speak with my wife."
David bowed and went out, and Frederick followed him, outraged at the treatment received by his friend.
"Come, madame," continued Jacques Bastien, "you see your Latin spitter has departed; are you going to answer me at last?"
"When we are alone, monsieur."
"If it is I who restrain you," said Bridou, walking toward the door, "I am going to march out."
"Come now, Bridou, do you make a jest of everybody? Please stay where you are," cried Jacques.
Then, turning to Marie, he said:
"My companion knows my business as well as I do; now, madame, we are talking of business, for a thousand firs on the edge of my farm is a matter of business, and a big one, too; so Bridou will remain."
"As you please, monsieur; then I will tell you before M. Bridou that I thought it my duty to have your fir-trees cut down, in order to give them to the unfortunate valley people, that they might rebuild their dwellings half destroyed by the overflow."
FROMJacques Bastien's point of view, the thing was so outrageous that it was incomprehensible to him, as he artlessly said to the bailiff, "Bridou, do you understand it?"
"Why, bless me, yes," replied Bridou, with an air of assumed good nature, "madame, your wife, has made a present of your fir-trees to the sufferers from the overflow; that is true, is it not, madame?"
"Yes, monsieur."
Bastien, almost choked with anger and astonishment, at first could do nothing but stammer as he looked furiously at his wife:
"You—have—dared—what! You—"
Then stamping his foot with rage, he made a step toward his wife, shaking his great fists with such a threatening air, that the bailiff jumped before him, and cried: "Come, Jacques, what in the devil are you doing? You will not die of it, old fellow; it is only a present of about two thousand francs that your wife has given to the sufferers."
"And you think I shall let it go like that?" replied Jacques, trying to restrain himself. "You must be a fool if you thought you could hide it. This destruction of my firs was plain enough before my eyes as I passed. You forgot that, eh?"
"If you had been here, monsieur," answered Marie, softly, for fear of irritating Bastien still more, "like me, you would have been a witness of this terrible disaster and the evils it caused, and you would have done the same, I do not doubt."
"I, by thunder, when I myself have a part of my land ruined with sand."
"But, monsieur, there is enough land and wood left you, while these poor people whom we helped were without bread and shelter."
"Ah, indeed; then it is my business to give bread and shelter to those who have not got it!" cried Bastien, exasperated; "upon my word of honour, it is making a tool of me. Do you hear her, Bridou?"
"You know very well, old fellow, that ladies understand nothing about business, and they had better not meddle with it at all, ha, ha, ha! especially in cutting wood," replied the bailiff with a mellifluous giggle.
"But did I tell her to meddle with it?" replied Jacques Bastien, whose fury continued to rise; "could I suppose she would ever have the audacity to—But no, no, there is something else at the bottom of it, she must have her head turned. Ah, by thunder! I came just in time. By this sample, it appears that wonderful things have been going on here in my absence. Come, come, I shall have trouble enough; fortunately I am equal to it, and I have a solid fist."
Marie, looking up at Jacques with an expression of supplicating sweetness, said to him:
"I cannot regret what I have done, monsieur, only I do regret that an act which seems to me to merit your approval, should cause you such keen disappointment and annoyance. Besides," added the young woman, trying to smile, "I am certain that you will forget this trouble when you learn how courageously Frederick has behaved at the time of the overflow. At the risk of his life, he saved Jean François and his wife and children from certain death. Two other families of the valley were also—"
"Eh, by God's thunder! it is precisely because he paid with his own person that you did not need to make yourself so generous at my expense, and pay out of my purse," cried the booby, interrupting his wife.
"How," replied Marie, confounded by this reproach, "did you know that Frederick—"
"Had gone, like so many others, to the aid of the inundated families? Zounds! I was bored with that talk in Pont Brillant. That is a fine affair indeed. Who forced him to do it? If he did it, it was because it suited him to do it. Oh, well, so much the better for him. Besides, the newspapers are full of such tricks. And yet, if the name of my son had at least been put in the journal betimes, that would have pleased me."
"Perhaps he would have had the cross of honour," added the bailiff, with a bantering, sarcastic air.
"Besides, we must have a talk about my son, and a serious one," continued Jacques Bastien. "My companion, Bridou, will also have a say in that."
"I do not understand you," answered Marie, stammering. "What relation can M. Bridou possibly have with Frederick?"
"You will know, because we will have a talk to-morrow, and with you, and about a good deal. Do not think you understand that this affair of my thousand fir-trees will pass like a letter by the post. But it is six o'clock, let us have dinner."
And he rang.
At these words, Marie remembered the silver plate carried to the city and sold in the absence and without the knowledge of her husband. Had she been alone with Jacques, she would have endured his threats and injuries and anger, but when she thought of the transports of rage he would yield to before her son and David, she was frightened at the possible consequences of such a scene, and with reason.
Jacques Bastien went on talking:
"Have you had a good fire made in Bridou's chamber? I wrote to you that he would spend several days here."
"I thought you would share your chamber with M. Bridou," replied Madame Bastien. "Unless you do, I do not see how I can lodge the gentleman."
"What! there is a chamber up-stairs."
"But that is occupied by my son's preceptor."
"You are very fine, you are, with your preceptor. Ah, well, 'tis easy to take him by the shoulders and put him out, your Latin spitter, and there's the room."
"I should be distressed to put him out," said the bailiff. "I would prefer to go back."
"Come, come, Bridou, evidently we are going to quarrel," replied Jacques.
Then, turning to his wife, he said, angrily:
"What! I warned you this morning that Bridou would spend several days here, and nothing is prepared?"
"But, monsieur, I ask again, where do you wish me to put the preceptor of my son if M. Bridou occupies his chamber?"
"The preceptor of my son," repeated Jacques, puffing up his cheeks and shrugging his shoulders; "you have only that in your mouth, playing the duchess. Ah well! the preceptor of your son can sleep with André, it won't kill him."
"But surely, monsieur," said Marie, "you do not think that—"
"Come now, do not provoke me, or I will go and tell your Latin spitter to march out of my house this instant, and see if I follow him on the road to Pont Brillant. It will amount in the end to my not being master of my own house, by God's thunder!"
Marie trembled. She knew M. Bastien capable of driving the preceptor brutally out of the house. She was silent a moment, then remembering the untiring devotion of David, she replied, trying to restrain her tears:
"Very well, monsieur, the preceptor will share André's chamber."
"Indeed," answered Jacques, with a sarcastic air, "that is very fortunate."
"And besides, you see, madame," added the bailiff with a conciliatory air, "a preceptor is little more than a servant, not anything more, because it is a person who takes wages, or I would not have him put out by the shoulders thus, as this great buffoon Jacques says."
Marguerite entered at this moment to announce dinner. Bridou took off his blouse, passed his hand through his yellow hair, and with a coquettish air offered his arm to Madame Bastien, who trembled in every limb.
Jacques Bastien threw his holly stick in a corner, kept on his blouse, and followed his wife and the bailiff to the dining-room.
WHENMadame Bastien, her husband, and the bailiff entered the dining-room, they found there David and Frederick.
The latter exchanged a glance with his preceptor, approached Jacques Bastien, and said to him, in a respectful tone:
"Good morning, father, I thought you wished to be alone with my mother, and that is why I withdrew upon your arrival."
"It seems that your hysterics are gone," said Bastien to his son, in a tone of sarcasm, "and you no longer need to travel for pleasure. That is a pity, for I wanted to humour you with pleasure."
"I do not know what you mean, father."
Instead of replying to his son, Bastien, still standing, occupied himself in counting the plates on the table; he saw five and said to his wife, curtly:
"Why are there five plates?"
"Why, monsieur, because we are five," replied Marie.
"How five? I, Bridou, you and your son, does that make five?"
"You forget M. David," said Marie.
Jacques then addressed the preceptor.
"Monsieur, I do not know upon what conditions my wife has engaged you. As for me, I am master here, and I do not like to have strangers at my table. That is my opinion."
At this new rudeness, the calmness of David did not forsake him, the consciousness of insult brought an involuntary blush to his brow, but he bowed, without uttering a word, and started toward the door.
Frederick, his face flushed with indignation and distress at this second outrage against the character and dignity of David, was preparing to follow him, when a supplicating glance from his friend arrested him.
At this moment, Marie said to the preceptor:
"M. David, M. Bastien having disposed of your chamber for a few days, will you consent to having a bed prepared for you in the chamber with old André?—unfortunately we have no other place for you."
"Nothing easier, madame," replied David, smiling. "I have the honour of being somewhat at home; so it is for me to yield the chamber I occupy to a stranger."
David bowed again and left the dining-room.
After the departure of the preceptor, Jacques Bastien, entirely unconscious of his coarseness, sat down to the table, for he was very hungry in spite of the anger he nursed against his wife and son.
Each one took his place.
Jacques Bastien had Bridou on his right, Frederick on his left, and Marie sat opposite.
The anxiety of the young woman made her seek to change the subject of conversation constantly; she feared Jacques might discover the absence of the silver plate.
This revelation, however, hung upon a new incident.
Jacques Bastien, removing the cover from the soup tureen, dilated his wide nostrils, so as to inhale the aroma of the cabbage soup he had ordered, but, finding his expectation mistaken, he cried furiously, addressing his wife:
"What! no cabbage soup? and I wrote to you expressly that I wanted it. Perhaps there is no leg of mutton with cloves either?"
"I do not know, monsieur, I forgot to—"
"By God's thunder, what a woman,—there!" cried Jacques, furiously, throwing the tureen cover down on the table so violently that it broke in pieces.
At the brutal exclamation of his father, Frederick betrayed his indignation by an abrupt movement.
Immediately Marie, pressing her son's hand under the table, signified her disapproval, and he restrained himself, but his quick resentment did not escape the eye of Jacques, who, after looking a long time at his son in silence, said to Bridou:
"Come, my comrade, we must content ourselves with this slop."
"It is pot luck, my old fellow," said the bailiff. "Pot luck, eh, eh, we all know that."
"Come," said Jacques, "let us at least say our grace before eating."
And he poured out a bumper for Bridou, after which he emptied almost the rest of the bottle in an enormous glass, which he was accustomed to use, and which held a pint.
The obese Hercules swallowed this bumper at one draught, then, disposing himself comfortably to serve the soup, he took in his hand an iron spoon, plated over, and bright with cleanliness.
"Why in the devil did you put this pot ladle here?" said he to Marie.
"Monsieur, I do not know," replied the young woman, looking down and stammering, "I—"
"Why not put on the table my large silver ladle, as usual," asked Jacques. "Is it because my comrade Bridou has come to dine here?"
Then, addressing his son, he said, abruptly:
"Get the silver ladle from the buffet."
"It is useless, father," said Frederick, resolutely, seeing the anguish of his mother and wishing to turn his father's anger toward himself. "The large silver ladle is not in the house; neither is the rest of the silver."
"What?" asked Jacques, stupidly.
But, not believing his ears, he seized the plate at his side, looked at it, and convinced of the truth of his son's words, he remained a moment, besotted with amazement.
Frederick and his mother exchanged glances at this critical moment.
The young man, determined to bring his father's anger on himself alone, replied, resolutely:
"It was I, father; without telling my mother, I sold the silver for—"
"Monsieur," cried Marie, addressing Jacques, "do not believe Frederick; it was I, and I alone, who—ah, well, yes, it was I who sold the silver."
Notwithstanding his wife's confession, Jacques Bastien could not believe what he had heard, so preposterous, so impossible did the whole thing appear.
Bridou himself, this time, sincerely shared the bewilderment of his friend, and the bailiff broke the silence by saying to Jacques:
"Humph, humph, old fellow, this is another affair to selling your fir-trees, I think."
Marie expected an explosion of wrath from her passionate husband. There was no such thing.
Jacques remained silent, immovable, and absorbed for a long time. His broad face was more florid than usual. He drank, one after another, two great glasses of wine, leaned his elbows on the table, with his chin in the palm of his hand, drumming convulsively on his fat cheek with his contracted fingers. Fixing on his wife's face his two little gray eyes, which glittered under his frowning eyebrows with a sinister light, he said, with apparent calmness:
"You say then, madame, that all the silver—"
"Monsieur—"
"Come, speak out, you see that I am calm."
Frederick rose instinctively and stood by his mother as if to protect her, so much did his father's composure frighten him.
"My child, sit down," said Marie, in a sweet, gentle voice.
Frederick returned to his place at the table and sat down. This unexpected movement on the part of Frederick had been observed by M. Bastien, who contented himself with questioning his wife, without changing his attitude, and continuing to drum with the ends of his fat fingers upon his left cheek.
"You say, then, madame, that the silver, that my silver—"
"Ah, well, monsieur," replied Marie, in a firm voice, "your silver, I have sold it."
"You have sold it?"
"Yes, monsieur."
"And to whom?"
"To a silversmith in Pont Brillant."
"What is his name?"
"I do not know, monsieur."
"Truly?"
"It was not I who went to town to sell the silver, monsieur."
"Then who did?"
"No matter, monsieur, it is sold."
"That is true," replied Bastien, emptying his glass again; "and why did you sell it, if you please,—sell this silver which belonged to me and to me alone?"
"My friend," whispered Bridou to Jacques, "you frighten me; get angry, shriek, storm, howl, I would rather see that than to see you so calm,—your forehead is as white as a sheet and full of sweat."
Bastien did not reply to his friend and continued:
"You have, madame, sold my silver to buy what?"
"I besought you, monsieur, to send me some money to help the victims of the overflow."
"The overflow!" exclaimed Jacques, with a burst of derisive laughter. "That overflow has a famous back, it carries a good deal!"
"I will not add another word on this subject," replied Marie, in a firm and dignified tone.
A long silence followed.
Evidently Jacques was making a superhuman effort to restrain the violence of his feelings. He was obliged to rise from the table and go to the window, which he opened, in spite of the rigour of the weather, to cool his burning forehead, for wicked designs were fermenting in his brain, and he made every effort to conceal them. When he took his place at the table again, he threw on Marie a strange and sinister look, and said to her, with an accent of cruel satisfaction:
"If you knew how it is with me, since you have sold my silver, you would know that you have done me a real service."
Although the ambiguity of these words caused her some disquietude, and she was alarmed at the incomprehensible calmness of her husband, Marie felt a momentary relief, for she had feared that M. Bastien, yielding to the natural brutality of his character, might so far forget himself as to come to injury and threats in the presence of her son, who would interpose between his mother and father.
Without addressing another word to his wife, Jacques drank another glass of wine and said to his companion:
"Come, old fellow, we are going to eat cold dough, on plates of beaten iron; it is pot luck, as you say."
"Jacques," said the bailiff, more and more frightened at the calmness of Bastien, "I assure you I am not at all hungry."
"I—I am ravenous," said Jacques, with a satirical laugh; "it is very easily accounted for; joy always increases my appetite, so, at the present moment, I am as hungry as a vulture."
"Joy, joy," repeated the bailiff; "you do not look at all joyous."
And Bridou added, addressing Marie, as if to reassure her, for, notwithstanding the hardness of his heart, he was almost moved to compassion:
"It is all the same, madame, our brave Jacques now and then opens his eyes and grits his teeth, but at the bottom, he is—"
"Good man," added Bastien, pouring out another drink; "such a good man, that he is a fool for it. It is all the same, you see, my old Bridou, I would not give my evening for fifty thousand francs. I have just realised a magnificent profit."
Jacques Bastien never jested on money matters, and these words, "I would not give my evening for fifty thousand francs," he pronounced with such an accent of certainty and satisfaction that not only the bailiff believed in the mysterious words, but Madame Bastien believed in them also, and felt her secret terror increasing.
In fact, the affected calmness of her husband, who—a strange and unnatural thing—grew paler in proportion as he drank, his satirical smile, his eyes glittering with a sort of baleful joy, when from time to time he looked at Frederick and his mother, carried anguish to the soul of the young woman. So, at the end of the repast, she said to Jacques, after having made a sign to Frederick to follow her:
"Monsieur, I feel very much fatigued and quite ill; I ask your permission to retire with my son."
"As you please," replied Jacques, with a guttural laugh, already showing excess of drink, "as you please; where there is constraint there is no pleasure. Do not incommode yourself. I shall incommode myself no longer. Be calm, have patience."
At these words, as ambiguous as the first, which no doubt hid some mental reservation, Marie, having nothing to say, rose, while Frederick, obeying a glance from his mother, approached Jacques, and said to him, respectfully:
"Good night, father."
Jacques turned around to Bridou, without replying to his son, and said, as he measured Frederick with a satirical glance:
"How do you like him?"
"My faith, a very pretty boy."
"Seventeen years old, soon," added Jacques.
"That is a fine age for us," added the bailiff, exchanging an intelligent glance with Jacques, who said rudely to his son:
"Good evening."
Marie and Frederick retired, leaving Jacques Bastien and his comrade Bridou at the table.
WHENMadame Bastien and Frederick, coming out of the dining-room, passed by the library, they saw David there, standing in the door watching for them.
Marie extended her hand to him cordially, and said, making allusion to the two outrages to which the preceptor had so patiently submitted:
"Can you still have the same devotion to us?"
A loud noise of moving chairs and bursts of laughter from the dining-room informed the young woman that her husband and the bailiff were rising from the table. She hastened to her apartment with Frederick, after having said to David, with a look of despair:
"To-morrow morning, M. David. I am now in unspeakable agony."
"To-morrow, my friend," said Frederick, in his turn, to David, as he passed him.
Then Marie and her son entered their apartment, while David ascended to the garret chamber he was to share with André.
Scarcely had he entered his mother's chamber when Frederick threw himself in his mother's arms and cried with bitterness:
"Oh, mother! we were so happy before the arrival of—"
"Not a word more, my child; you are speaking of your father," interrupted Marie. "Embrace me more tenderly than ever; you have need of it, and so have I; but no recriminations of your father."
"My God! mother, you did not hear what he said to M. Bridou?"
"When your father said, 'Frederick will soon be seventeen?'"
"Yes, and that man said to my father, 'It is a good age for us.'"
"I, as well as you, my child, heard his words."
"'A good age for us,'—what does he mean by that, mother?"
"I do not know," replied the young woman, hoping to calm and reassure her son. "Perhaps we attach too much to these words,—more than they deserve."
After a short silence, Frederick said to Marie, in an altered voice:
"Listen to me, mother. Since you desire it, I shall always have that respect for my father which I owe to him, but I tell you frankly, understand me,—if my father thinks ever of separating me from you and M. David—"
"Frederick!" cried the young woman, alarmed at the desperate resolution she read in her son's countenance, "why suppose what is impossible—to separate us! to take you out of the hands of M. David, and that, too, at a time when— But no, I repeat, your father has too much reason, too much good sense, to conceive such an idea."
"May Heaven hear you, mother, but I swear to you, and you know my will is firm, that no human power shall separate me from you and M. David, and that I will boldly say to my father. Let him respect our affection, our indissoluble ties, and I will bless him; but if he dares to put his hand on our happiness—"
"My son!"
"Oh, mother! our happiness, it is your life, and your life I will defend against my father himself, you understand."
"My God! my God! Frederick, I beseech you!"
"Oh, let him take care! let him take care! two or three times this evening my blood revolted against his words."
"Stop, Frederick, do not speak so; you will make me insane. Why, then, oh, my God! will you predict such painful, or rather, such impossible things! You only terrify yourself and render yourself desperate."
"Very well, mother, we will wait; but believe me, the frightful calmness of my father when he learned of the sale of the silver hides something. We expected to see him burst forth into a passion, but he remained impassible, he became pale. I never saw him so pale, mother," said Frederick, embracing his mother with an expression of tenderness and alarm. "Mother, I am chilled to the heart, some danger threatens us."
"Frederick," replied the young woman, with a tone of agonising reproach, "you frighten me terribly, and after all, your father will act according to his own will."
"And I also, mother, I will have mine."
"But why suppose your father has intentions which he has not and cannot have? Believe me, my child, in spite of his roughness, he loves you; why should he wish to grieve you? Why separate us and ruin the most beautiful, and the most assured hopes that a mother ever had for the future of her son? Wait,—I am sure that our friend M. David will say the same thing that I say to you. Come, calm yourself, take courage, we will have perhaps to pass through some disagreeable experiences, but we have already endured so much that is cruel, we cannot have much more to suffer."
Frederick shook his head sadly, embraced his mother with more than usual tenderness, and entered his room.
Madame Bastien rang for Marguerite.
The old servant soon appeared.
"Marguerite," said the young woman to her, "is M. Bastien still at table?"
"Unfortunately he is, madame."
"Unfortunately?"
"Bless me, I have never seen monsieur with such a wicked face; he drinks—he drinks until it is frightful, and in spite of it all he is pale. He has just asked me for a bottle of brandy and—"
"That is sufficient, Marguerite," said Marie, interrupting her servant; "have you prepared a bed in André's chamber for M. David?"
"Yes, madame, M. David has just gone up there, but old André says he would rather sleep in the stable than dare stay in the same chamber with M. David. Besides, André will hardly have time to go to sleep to-night."
"Why so?"
"Monsieur has ordered André to hitch the horse at three o'clock in the morning."
"What! M. Bastien is going away in the middle of the night?"
"Monsieur said the moon rose at half past two, and he wished to be at Blémur with M. Bridou at the break of day, so as to be able to return here to-morrow evening."
"That is different. Come, good night, Marguerite."
"Madame—"
"What do you want?"
"My God, madame! I do not know if I can dare—"
"Come, Marguerite, what is the matter?"
"Madame has interrupted me every time I spoke of monsieur, and yet I had something to say—something—"
And the servant stopped, looking at her mistress so uneasily, so sadly that the young woman exclaimed:
"My God! what is the matter with you, Marguerite? You frighten me."
"Ah, well, madame, when I went into the dining-room to give to monsieur the bottle of brandy he ordered, M. Bridou said to him, with a surprised and alarmed expression, 'Jacques, you will never do that.' Monsieur seeing me enter, made a sign to M. Bridou to hush, but when I went out, I—madame will excuse me perhaps on account of my intention—"
"Go on, Marguerite."
"I went out of the dining-room, but I stopped a moment behind the door, and I heard M. Bridou say to monsieur, 'Jacques, I say again, you will not do that.' Then monsieur replied, 'You will see.' I did not dare to listen to more of the conversation, and—"
"You were right, Marguerite; you had already been guilty of an indiscretion which only your attachment to me can excuse."
"What! What monsieur said does not frighten you?"
"The words of M. Bastien which you have reported to me prove nothing, Marguerite; you are, I think, needlessly alarmed."
"God grant it, madame."
"Go and see, I pray you, if M. Bastien and M. Bridou are still at the table. If they have left it, you can go to bed, I have no further need of you."
Marguerite returned in a few moments, and said to her mistress:
"I have just given a light to monsieur and to M. Bridou, madame, they bade each other good night; but, wait, madame," said Marguerite, interrupting herself, "do you hear? that is M. Bridou now going up-stairs."
In fact the steps of Bastien's boon companion resounded over the wooden staircase which conducted to the chamber formerly occupied by David.
"Has M. Bastien entered his chamber?" asked Marie of the servant.
"I can see from the outside if there is a light in monsieur's chamber," replied Marguerite.
The servant went out again, returned in a few moments, and said to her mistress, as she shivered with the cold:
"Monsieur is in his chamber, madame; I can see the light through the blinds. My God, how bitter the cold is; it is snowing in great heaps, and I forgot to make your fire, madame. Perhaps you wish to sit up."
"No, Marguerite, thank you, I am going to bed immediately." Marie added, after a moment's reflection: "My shutters are closed, are they not?"
"Yes, madame."
"And those of my son's chamber also?"
"Yes, madame."
"Good night, Marguerite, come to me to-morrow at the break of day."
"Madame has need of nothing else?"
"No, thank you."
"Good night, madame."
Marguerite went out.
Marie locked her door, went to see if her shutters were closed, and slowly undressed, a prey to the most poignant anxiety, thinking of the various events of the evening, the mysterious words uttered by the bailiff, Bridou on the subject of Frederick, and especially of those words which passed between Jacques and his friend, which Marguerite had overheard:
"Jacques, you will not do that?"
"You will see."
The young woman, wrapped in her dressing-gown, prepared as usual to embrace her son before going to bed, when she heard heavy walking in the corridor which opened into her apartment.
No doubt it was the step of Jacques Bastien.
Marie listened.
The steps discontinued.
Soon the sound of this heavy walking was succeeded by the noise of two hands, outside the door, groping in the darkness for the lock and key.
Jacques Bastien wished to enter his wife's apartment.
She, knowing the door was locked, at first felt assured, but soon, reflecting that if she did not open the door to her husband, he might in his brutal violence make a loud noise, or perhaps break the door, and by this uproar waken her son and call David down-stairs, and thus bring about a collision, the possible consequences of which filled her with alarm, she decided to open the door. Then, remembering that her son was in the next chamber, and that but a few minutes before all her maternal authority and tenderness were required to prevent an expression of his indignation against Jacques Bastien, she recalled his bitter words, and the resolution with which he uttered them:
"To make an attempt on our happiness, would be to attempt your life, mother, and your life I will defend even against my father."
Marie felt that no human power, not even her own, could prevent Frederick's interposition this time, if Jacques Bastien, intoxicated as in all probability he was, should enter her chamber, and attack her with invective and threatening.
The alternative was terrible.
Not to open the door would be to expose herself to a deplorable scandal. To open it was to set the son and father face to face, one drunk with anger and wine, the other exasperated by the sense of his mother's wrongs.
These reflections, as rapid as thought, Marie had scarcely ended, when she heard Jacques Bastien, who had found the key, turn it in the lock and, finding an obstacle inside, shake the door violently.
Then Marie took a desperate resolution; she ran to the door, removed the bolt, and standing on the threshold as if to forbid entrance to Jacques Bastien, she said to him in a low, supplicating voice:
"My son is sleeping, monsieur; if you have something to say to me, come, I beseech you, in the library."
The unhappy woman paused a moment.
Her courage failed her, so terrible was the expression of Bastien's countenance.
The rays of the lamp placed upon the chimneypiece in Marie's bedchamber shone full upon the face of M. Bastien, which, thus brilliantly lighted, seemed to glare upon the darkness of the corridor.
This man, who had the breadth of Hercules, was now frightfully pale in consequence of the reaction of long continued drink and anger. He was about half drunk; his coarse, thick hair fell low on his forehead and almost concealed his little, wicked gray eyes. His bull-like neck was naked and his blouse open, as well as his great coat and vest, exposing a part of a powerful and hairy chest.
At the sight of this man, Marie, as we have said, felt for a moment her courage give way.
But, reflecting that the excited state in which M. Bastien was, only rendered him more passionate, and more intractable, that he would not hesitate at any violence or outburst of temper, and that then the intervention of David and Frederick would, unfortunately, become inevitable, the young woman, brave as she always was, thanked Heaven that her son had heard nothing, seized the lamp on the chimneypiece, returned to her husband, who stood immovable on the threshold, and said to him in a low voice:
"Let us go in the library, monsieur. I am afraid, as I told you, of waking my son."
M. Bastien appeared to take counsel with himself before yielding to Marie's desire.
After several minutes' hesitation, during which the young woman almost died of anguish, the Hercules replied:
"Well, to come to the point, I prefer that; come, go on before me."
Marie, preceding Jacques Bastien in the corridor, soon entered the library.