dwelling more in keeping with the
splendor of his own abode, and he
reconstructed it on the model of an
ornamental" target="_blank" title="a.装饰的 n.装饰品">
ornamentalcottage. He divided
this
cottage from his own lawn, which was bordered and set with
flower-beds and formed the
terrace of his villa, by a low wall along
which he planted a concealing hedge. Behind the
cottage (called, in
spite of all his efforts to prevent it, the Chalet) were the
orchards
and kitchen gardens of the villa. The Chalet, without cows or dairy,
is separated from the
roadway by a
wooden fence whose palings are
hidden under a
luxuriant hedge. On the other side of the road the
opposite house, subject to a legal
privilege, has a similar hedge and
paling, so as to leave an unobstructed view of Havre to the Chalet.
This little
dwelling was the
torment of the present
proprietor of the
villa, Monsieur Vilquin; and here is the why and the
wherefore. The
original
creator of the villa, whose
sumptuous details cry aloud,
"Behold our millions!"
extended his park far into the country for the
purpose, as he averred, of getting his gardeners out of his pockets;
and so, when the Chalet was finished, none but a friend could be
allowed to
inhabit it. Monsieur Mignon, the next owner of the
property, was very much attached to his
cashier, Dumay, and the
following history will prove that the
attachment was
mutual; to him
therefore he offered the little
dwelling. Dumay, a stickler for legal
methods, insisted on signing a lease for three hundred francs for
twelve years, and Monsieur Mignon
willingly agreed, remarking,--
"My dear Dumay, remember, you have now bound yourself to live with me
for twelve years."
In
consequence of certain events which will
presently be
related, the
estates of Monsieur Mignon,
formerly the richest merchant in Havre,
were sold to Vilquin, one of his business competitors. In his joy at
getting possession of the
celebrated villa Mignon, the latter forgot
to demand the cancelling of the lease. Dumay,
anxious not to hinder
the sale, would have signed anything Vilquin required, but the sale
once made, he held to his lease like a
vengeance. And there he
remained, in Vilquin's pocket as it were; at the heart of Vilquin's
family life, observing Vilquin, irritating Vilquin,--in short, the
gadfly of all the Vilquins. Every morning, when he looked out of his
window, Vilquin felt a
violent shock of
annoyance as his eye lighted
on the little gem of a building, the Chalet, which had cost sixty
thousand francs and sparkled like a ruby in the sun. That comparison
is very nearly exact. The
architect has constructed the
cottage of
brilliant red brick
pointed with white. The window-frames are painted
of a
lively green, the
woodwork is brown verging on yellow. The roof
overhangs by several feet. A pretty
gallery, with open-worked
balustrade, surmounts the lower floor and projects at the centre of
the facade into a
veranda with glass sides. The ground-floor has a
charming salon and a dining-room, separated from each other by the
landing of a
staircase built of wood, designed and decorated with
elegantsimplicity. The kitchen is behind the dining-room, and the
corresponding room back of the salon,
formerly a study, is now the
bedroom of Monsieur and Madame Dumay. On the upper floor the
architecthas managed to get two large bedrooms, each with a dressing-room, to
which the
veranda serves as a salon; and above this floor, under the
eaves, which are tipped together like a couple of cards, are two
servants' rooms with mansard roofs, each lighted by a
circular window
and tolerably spacious.
Vilquin has been petty enough to build a high wall on the side toward
the
orchard and kitchen garden; and in
consequence of this piece of
spite, the few square feet which the lease secured to the Chalet
resembled a Parisian garden. The out-buildings, painted in keeping
with the
cottage, stood with their backs to the wall of the adjoining
property.
The
interior of this
charmingdwelling harmonized with its exterior.
The salon, floored entirely with iron-wood, was painted in a style
that suggested the beauties of Chinese lacquer. On black panels edged
with gold, birds of every color,
foliage of impossible greens, and
fantastic
oriental designs glowed and shimmered. The dining-room was
entirely sheathed in Northern woods carved and cut in open-work like
the beautiful Russian chalets. The little antechamber formed by the
landing and the well of the
staircase was painted in old oak to
represent Gothic
ornament. The bedrooms, hung with
chintz, were
charming in their
costlysimplicity. The study, where the
cashier and
his wife now slept, was panelled from top to bottom, on the walls and
ceiling, like the cabin of a
steamboat. These luxuries of his
predecessor excited Vilquin's wrath. He would fain have lodged his
daughter and her husband in the
cottage. This desire, well known to
Dumay, will
presently serve to
illustrate the Breton
obstinacy of the
latter.
The entrance to the Chalet is by a little trellised iron door, the
uprights of which,
ending in lance-heads, show for a few inches above
the fence and its hedge. The little garden, about as wide as the more
pretentious lawn, was just now filled with flowers, roses, and dahlias
of the choicest kind, and many rare products of the hot-houses, for
(another Vilquinard grievance) the
elegant little hot-house, a very
whim of a hot-house, a hot-house representing
dignity and style,
belonged to the Chalet, and separated, or if you prefer, united it to
the villa Vilquin. Dumay consoled himself for the toils of business in
taking care of this hot-house, whose exotic treasures were one of
Modeste's joys. The billiard-room of the villa Vilquin, a
species of
gallery,
formerly communicated through an
immense aviary with this
hot-house. But after the building of the wall which deprived him of a
view into the
orchards, Dumay bricked up the door of communication.
"Wall for wall!" he said.
In 1827 Vilquin offered Dumay a salary of six thousand francs, and ten
thousand more as
indemnity, if he would give up the lease. The
cashierrefused; though he had but three thousand francs from Gobenheim, a
former clerk of his master. Dumay was a Breton transplanted by fate
into Normandy. Imagine
therefore the
hatred conceived for the
tenants
of the Chalet by the Norman Vilquin, a man worth three millions! What
criminal leze-million on the part of a
cashier, to hold up to the eyes
of such a man the impotence of his wealth! Vilquin, whose desperation
in the matter made him the talk of Havre, had just proposed to give
Dumay a pretty house of his own, and had again been refused. Havre
itself began to grow
uneasy at the man's
obstinacy, and a good many
persons explained it by the
phrase, "Dumay is a Breton." As for the
cashier, he thought Madame and Mademoiselle Mignon would be ill-lodged
elsewhere. His two idols now
inhabited a
templeworthy of them; the
sumptuous little
cottage gave them a home, where these dethroned
royalties could keep the
semblance of
majesty about them,--a
speciesof
dignity usually denied to those who have seen better days.
Perhaps as the story goes on, the reader will not regret having
learned in advance a few particulars as to the home and the habitual
companions of Modeste Mignon, for, at her age, people and things have
as much influence upon the future life as a person's own
character,--
indeed,
character often receives ineffaceable impressions from its
surroundings.
CHAPTER II
A PORTRAIT FROM LIFE
From the manner with which the Latournelles entered the Chalet a
stranger would
readily have guessed that they came there every
evening.
"Ah, you are here already," said the notary, perceiving the young
banker Gobenheim, a
connection of Gobenheim-Keller, the head of the
great
banking house in Paris.
This young man with a livid face--a blonde of the type with black
eyes, whose
immovable glance has an
indescribablefascination, sober
in speech as in conduct, dressed in black, lean as a consumptive, but
neverthelessvigorously framed--visited the family of his former
master and the house of his
cashier less from
affection than from
self-interest. Here they played whist at two sous a point; a dress-
coat was not required; he accepted no
refreshment except "eau sucree,"
and
consequently had no civilities to return. This
apparent devotion
to the Mignon family allowed it to be
supposed that Gobenheim had a
heart; it also released him from the necessity of going into the
society of Havre and incurring
useless expenses, thus upsetting the
orderly
economy of his
domestic life. This
disciple of the golden calf
went to bed at half-past ten o'clock and got up at five in the
morning. Moreover, being
perfectly sure of Latournelle's and Butscha's
discretion, he could talk over difficult business matters,
obtain the
advice of the notary gratis, and get an inkling of the real truth of
the
gossip of the street. This stolid gold-glutton (the epithet is
Butscha's) belonged by nature to the class of substances which
chemistry terms absorbents. Ever since the
catastrophe of the house of
Mignon, where the Kellers had placed him to learn the principles of
maritime
commerce, no one at the Chalet had ever asked him to do the
smallest thing, no matter what; his reply was too well known. The
young fellow looked at Modeste
precisely as he would have looked at a
cheap lithograph.