supported them.
The Moreaus, who were very friendly with Grindot the
architect, had
received notice from him of the early
arrival of the two
painters sent
down to finish the decorations of the
chateau, the
principalpaintings
for which were just completed by Schinner. The great
painter had
recommended for this work the artist who was accompanied by Mistigris.
For two days past Madame Moreau had been on the
tiptoe of expectation,
and had put herself under arms to receive him. An artist, who was to
be her guest and
companion for weeks, demanded some effort. Schinner
and his wife had their own
apartment at the
chateau, where, by the
count's express orders, they were treated with all the consideration
due to himself. Grindot, who stayed at the
steward's house, showed
such respect for the great artist that neither the
steward nor his
wife had attempted to put themselves on familiar terms with him.
Moreover, the noblest and richest people in the
surrounding country
had vied with each other in paying attention to Schinner and his wife.
So, very well pleased to have, as it were, a little
revenge of her
own, Madame Moreau was determined to cry up the artist she was now
expecting, and to present him to her social
circle as equal in
talentto the great Schinner.
Though for two days past Moreau's pretty wife had arrayed herself
coquettishly, the prettiest of her
toilets had been reserved for this
very Saturday, when, as she felt no doubt, the artist would arrive for
dinner. A pink gown in very narrow stripes, a pink belt with a richly
chased gold
buckle, a
velvetribbon and cross at her
throat, and
velvet bracelets on her bare arms (Madame de Serizy had handsome arms
and showed them much), together with
bronze kid shoes and thread
stockings, gave Madame Moreau all the appearance of an elegant
Parisian. She wore, also, a
superbbonnet of Leghorn straw, trimmed
with a bunch of moss roses from Nattier's, beneath the spreading sides
of which rippled the curls of her beautiful blond hair.
After ordering a very choice dinner and reviewing the condition of her
rooms, she walked about the grounds, so as to be seen
standing near a
flower-bed in the court-yard of the
chateau, like the
mistress of the
house, on the
arrival of the coach from Paris. She held above her head
a
charming rose-colored parasol lined with white silk and fringed.
Seeing that Pierrotin merely left Mistigris's queer packages with the
concierge, having,
apparently, brought no passengers, Estelle retired
disappointed and regretting the trouble of making her
uselesstoilet.
Like many persons who are dressed in their best, she felt
incapable of
any other
occupation than that of sitting idly in her salon awaiting
the coach from Beaumont, which usually passed about an hour after that
of Pierrotin, though it did not leave Paris till mid-day. She was,
therefore, in her own
apartment when the two artists walked up to the
chateau, and were sent by Moreau himself to their rooms where they
made their
regulationtoilet for dinner. The pair had asked questions
of their guide, the
gardener, who told them so much of Moreau's beauty
that they felt the necessity of "rigging themselves up" (studio
slang). They,
therefore, put on their most superlative suits and then
walked over to the
steward's lodge, piloted by Jacques Moreau, the
eldest son, a hardy youth, dressed like an English boy in a handsome
jacket with a turned-over
collar, who was spending his
vacation like a
fish in water on the
estate where his father and mother reigned as
aristocrats.
"Mamma," he said, "here are the two artists sent down by Monsieur
Schinner."
Madame Moreau, agreeably surprised, rose, told her son to place
chairs, and began to display her graces.
"Mamma, the Husson boy is with papa," added the lad; "shall I fetch
him?"
"You need not hurry; go and play with him," said his mother.
The remark "you need not hurry" proved to the two artists the
unimportance of their late travelling
companion in the eyes of their
hostess; but it also showed, what they did not know, the feeling of a
step-mother against a step-son. Madame Moreau, after seventeen years
of married life, could not be
ignorant of the
steward's
attachment to
Madame Clapart and the little Husson, and she hated both mother and
child so vehemently that it is not
surprising that Moreau had never
before risked bringing Oscar to Presles.
"We are requested, my husband and myself," she said to the two
artists, "to do you the honors of the
chateau. We both love art, and,
above all, artists," she added in a mincing tone; "and I beg you to
make yourselves at home here. In the country, you know, every one
should be at their ease; one must feel
wholly at liberty, or life is
TOO insipid. We have already had Monsieur Schinner with us."
Mistigris gave a sly glance at his
companion.
"You know him, of course?" continued Estelle, after a slight pause.
"Who does not know him, madame?" said the
painter.
"Knows him like his double," remarked Mistigris.
"Monsieur Grindot told me your name," said Madame Moreau to the
painter. "But--"
"Joseph Bridau," he replied, wondering with what sort of woman he had
to do.
Mistigris began to rebel internally against the patronizing manner of
the
steward's wife; but he waited, like Bridau, for some word which
might give him his cue; one of those words "de singe a dauphin" which
artists, cruel, born-observers of the ridiculous--the pabulum of their
pencils--seize with such avidity. Meantime Estelle's
clumsy hands and
feet struck their eyes, and
presently a word, or
phrase or two,
betrayed her past, and quite out of keeping with the
elegance of her
dress, made the two young fellows aware of their prey. A single glance
at each other was enough to arrange a
scheme that they should take
Estelle
seriously on her own ground, and thus find
amusement enough
during the time of their stay.
"You say you love art, madame; perhaps you
cultivate it successfully,"
said Joseph Bridau.
"No. Without being neglected, my education was
purelycommercial; but
I have so
profound and
delicate a sense of art that Monsieur Schinner
always asked me, when he had finished a piece of work, to give him my
opinion on it."
"Just as Moliere consulted La Foret," said Mistigris.
Not
knowing that La Foret was Moliere's servant-woman, Madame Moreau
inclined her head
graciously, showing that in her
ignorance she
accepted the speech as a compliment.
"Didn't he propose to 'croquer' you?" asked Bridau. "Painters are
eager enough after handsome women."
"What may you mean by such language?"
"In the studios we say croquer, craunch,
nibble, for sketching,"
interposed Mistigris, with an insinuating air, "and we are always
wanting to croquer beautiful heads. That's the
origin of the
expression, 'She is pretty enough to eat.'"
"I was not aware of the
origin of the term," she replied, with the
sweetest glance at Mistigris.
"My pupil here," said Bridau, "Monsieur Leon de Lora, shows a
remarkable
talent for portraiture. He would be too happy, I know, to
leave you a souvenir of our stay by
painting your
charming head,
madame."
Joseph Bridau made a sign to Mistigris which meant: "Come, sail in,
and push the matter; she is not so bad in looks, this woman."
Accepting the glance, Leon de Lora slid down upon the sofa beside
Estelle and took her hand, which she permitted.
"Oh! madame, if you would like to offer a surprise to your husband,
and will give me a few secret sittings I would endeavor to surpass
myself. You are so beautiful, so fresh, so
charming! A man without any
talent might become a
genius in
painting you. He would draw from your
eyes--"
"We must paint your dear children in the arabesques," said Bridau,