"It is enough to kill you to lead such a life!" cried old Cardot; "and
look at the broken glasses! What pillage! The antechamber actually
makes me shudder--"
At this
instant the wrathful old gentleman stopped short as if
magnetized, like a bird which a snake is
charming. He saw the outline
of a form in a black coat through the door of the boudoir.
"Ah, Mademoiselle Cabirolle!" he said at last.
"Well, what?" she asked.
The eyes of the danseuse followed those of the little old man; and
when she recognized the presence of the clerk she went off into such
fits of
laughter that not only was the old gentleman nonplussed, but
Oscar was compelled to appear; for Florentine took him by the arm,
still pealing with
laughter at the conscience-stricken faces of the
uncle and
nephew.
"You here,
nephew?"
"Nephew! so he's your
nephew?" cried Florentine, with another burst of
laughter. "You never told me about him. Why didn't Mariette carry you
off?" she said to Oscar, who stood there petrified. "What can he do
now, poor boy?"
"Whatever he pleases!" said Cardot,
sharply, marching to the door as
if to go away.
"One moment, papa Cardot. You will be so good as to get your
nephewout of a
scrape into which I led him; for he played the money of his
master and lost it, and I lend him a thousand francs to win it back,
and he lost that too."
"Miserable boy! you lost fifteen hundred francs at play at your age?"
"Oh, uncle, uncle!" cried poor Oscar, plunged by these words into all
the horrors of his position, and falling on his knees before his
uncle, with clasped hands, "It is twelve o'clock! I am lost,
dishonored! Monsieur Desroches will have no pity! He gave me the money
for an important affair, in which his pride was
concerned. I was to
get a paper at the Palais in the case of Vandernesse versus
Vandernesse! What will become of me? Oh, save me for the sake of my
father and aunt! Come with me to Monsieur Desroches, and explain it to
him; make some excuse,--anything!"
These sentences were jerked out through sobs and tears that might have
moved the sphinx of Luxor.
"Old skinflint!" said the danseuse, who was crying, "will you let your
own
nephew be dishonored,--the son of the man to whom you owe your
fortune?--for his name is Oscar Husson. Save him, or Titine will deny
you forever!"
"But how did he come here?" asked Cardot.
"Don't you see that the reason he forgot to go for those papers was
because he was drunk and overslept himself. Georges and his cousin
Frederic took all the clerks in his office to a feast at the Rocher de
Cancale."
Pere Cardot looked at Florentine and hesitated.
"Come, come," she said, "you old
monkey, shouldn't I have hid him
better if there had been anything else in it?"
"There, take your five hundred francs, you scamp!" said Cardot to his
nephew, "and remember, that's the last penny you'll ever get from me.
Go and make it up with your master if you can. I'll return the
thousand francs which you borrowed of
mademoiselle; but I'll never
hear another word about you."
Oscar disappeared, not wishing to hear more. Once in the street,
however, he knew not where to go.
Chance which destroys men and chance which saves them were both making
equal efforts for and against Oscar during that fateful morning. But
he was doomed to fall before a master who forgave no
failure in any
affair he had once undertaken. When Mariette reached home that night,
she felt alarmed at what might happen to the youth in whom her brother
took interest and she wrote a hasty note to Godeschal, telling him
what had happened to Oscar and inclosing a bank bill for five hundred
francs to
repair his loss. The kind-hearted creature went to sleep
after charging her maid to carry the little note to Desroches' office
before seven o'clock in the morning. Godeschal, on his side, getting
up at six and
finding that Oscar had not returned, guessed what had
happened. He took the five hundred francs from his own little hoard
and rushed to the Palais, where he obtained a copy of the judgment and
returned in time to lay it before Desroches by eight o'clock.
Meantime Desroches, who always rose at four, was in his office by
seven. Mariette's maid, not
finding the brother of her
mistress in his
bedroom, came down to the office and there met Desroches, to whom she
very naturally offered the note.
"Is it about business?" he said; "I am Monsieur Desroches."
"You can see,
monsieur," replied the maid.
Desroches opened the letter and read it. Finding the five-hundred-
franc note, he went into his private office
furiously angry with his
second clerk. About half-past seven he heard Godeschal dictating to
the second head-clerk a copy of the
document in question, and a few
moments later the good fellow entered his master's office with an air
of
triumph in his heart.
"Did Oscar Husson fetch the paper this morning from Simon?" inquired
Desroches.
"Yes,
monsieur."
"Who gave him the money?"
"Why, you did, Saturday," replied Godeschal.
"Then it rains five-hundred-franc notes," cried Desroches. "Look here,
Godeschal, you are a fine fellow, but that little Husson does not
deserve such
generosity. I hate idiots, but I hate still more the men
who will go wrong in spite of the fatherly care which watches over
them." He gave Godeschal Mariette's letter and the five-hundred-franc
note which she had sent. "You must excuse my having opened it," he
said, "but your sister's maid told me it was on business. Dismiss
Husson."
"Poor
unhappy boy! what grief he has caused me! " said Godeschal,
"that tall ne'er-do-well of a Georges Marest is his evil
genius; he
ought to flee him like the
plague; if not, he'll bring him to some
third disgrace."
"What do you mean by that?" asked Desroches.
Godeschal then
relatedbriefly the affair of the journey to Presles.
"Ah! yes," said the
lawyer, "I remember Joseph Bridau told me that
story about the time it happened. It is to that meeting that we owe
the favor Monsieur de Serizy has since shown in the matter of Joseph's
brother, Philippe Bridau."
At this moment Moreau, to whom the case of the Vandernesse
estate was
of much importance, entered the office. The
marquis wished to sell the
land in parcels and the count was opposed to such a sale. The land-
agent received
therefore the first fire of Desroches' wrath against
his ex-second clerk and all the threatening prophecies which he
fulminated against him. The result was that this most
sincere friend
and
protector of the
unhappy youth came to the
conclusion that his
vanity was incorrigible.
"Make him a barrister," said Desroches. "He has only his last
examination to pass. In that line, his defects might prove virtues,
for self-love and
vanity give tongues to half the attorneys."
At this time Clapart, who was ill, was being nursed by his wife,--a
painful task, a duty without
reward. The sick man tormented the poor
creature, who was now doomed to learn what
venomous and spiteful
teasing a half-imbecile man, whom
poverty had rendered craftily
savage, could be
capable of in the weary tete-a-tete of each endless
day. Delighted to turn a sharpened arrow in the
sensitive heart of the
mother, he had, in a
measure,
studied the fears that Oscar's behavior
and defects inspired in the poor woman. When a mother receives from