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"Listen, father," exclaimed Germain with a kind of gaiety, appreciating the melancholy humour of the situation, "I have not only traced you up, but shall show you the evidence. Carry in my little box while I bring the black one."
They brought the boxes in, and the small one--that with the gilt coat of arms, from which Germain had taken his pa.s.sport at Quebec--was put on the table. Germain unlocked it, and brought out the de Lincy genealogical tree.
"Here," said he to his father, while the family crowded to look over their shoulders, "you are the son of this one; I have seen and read your baptismal register which records it, in the Church of St.
Germain-des-Pres."
"True--that was my parish," the old man answered. "Are you certain that my father was not----?"
"Positive."
"Very well, then," old Lecour answered, somewhat reluctantly.
"What a romance!" the married daughter cried.
"I am about to show you some precious relics of our past," Germain continued. "See what a store of parchments. Here are grants of _n.o.blesse_ from the King, grants of t.i.tles, dispensations signed by the Popes--do you know what these are?" he cried, taking out and putting on his breast a couple of beautiful jewels, standing up as he did so.
"Tell us!"
"This," said he, "is the Commander's Cross of St. Louis; and that the Order of the Holy Ghost."
While they pushed forward in excitement to look closer at the decorations, he bent, lifted the lid of the large black box and with both hands raised before them an oil portrait of a gentleman in full wig, velvet coat and ruffles.
"That," said he, surveying it with becoming pride, "is our ancestor Hypolite LeCour de Lincy. Sir," said he, laughingly turning to his parent, "behold your father against your will."
"Bravo, Monsieur my son," cried Madame Lecour.
"Now I can make my old man dress like a gentleman. The next time I go to Montreal, Lecour--or rather my Chevalier--I shall spend some of your money on a peruke and a scarlet coat for you."
"Holy Mary, save me!"
"About that please the ladies, father," Germain put in; "but there is another matter. Who drew your marriage contract?"
"D'Aguilhe, the notary," his mother returned.
"Is he of St. Elphege?"
"Yes."
"He has, of course, omitted mention of your n.o.bility."
"He knew of none," said the merchant.
"Then we must go to him with our t.i.tles, and he must rectify it to-morrow."
"As you please, if it will suit you better," the merchant murmured.
"I must be a Prince, for I create n.o.bles," p.r.o.nounced Germain, shaking with fevered laughter, as he drew the sheets over him in the state bed that night. His merriment was a pitiful cover for his desperation. In his favour it is well to remember the dictum of Schopenhauer: that the English are the only nation who thoroughly realise the immorality of lying; and we must also keep in mind that the extent of his disorder was a measure of the power of that pa.s.sion which was its cause. Better things were yet in him.
CHAPTER x.x.xVI
AT MONTREAL
Next morning, after old Lecour had, with a heart full of content, and a pipeful of tobacco, taken his son the round of his warehouses and granaries, his piles of furs, his mountains of wheat, and the rising vaults of what was to be his newest and greatest building, they set off down the village street to the Notary's house.
D'Aguilhe was of a famous breed of notaries, who had driven the quill and handed it down from father to son from the earliest days of the colony. When Lecour discovered that he was founding St. Elphege, one of the first things he did was to jolt up to Montreal, and catch a young scion of this race of d'Aguilhes, and here he had kept him making a comfortable living at his profession ever since. It was therefore not improper that the man of the _paraphe_--and a wondrous _paraphe_ his signature had, flouris.h.i.+ng from edge to edge of a foolscap page, in woolly and laborious curves--should, when called upon next morning, treat his best client to his best office manners.
"Monsieur d'Aguilhe," commenced old Lecour, "here is my son, who thinks me a n.o.ble--and upon my honour I cannot argue against him; he is too able for me."
"Aha!" returned d'Aguilhe, p.r.i.c.king up his ears, and saying to himself, "This looks like something important."
"We desire," said Germain, taking the business into his own hands, "to see the marriage contract of my father and mother."
"Certainly, Monsieur Germain," he answered, and going to his cupboards, took his package of deeds for the year 1765, picked out the doc.u.ment and handed it to Germain, who read a few lines at the beginning.
"I see," the latter said, "that my father is improperly described here, as you will observe by these doc.u.ments I now place before you. He is ent.i.tled to be called in this contract 'Francois Xavier LeCour, Chevalier de Lincy.'"
"A--ah!" exclaimed again the Notary, solemnly, raising his eyebrows and poking over Germain's parchments.
"Are they not correct?" asked Germain.
"Without a doubt."
"Is not my father the Chevalier de Lincy?"
"It seems so."
"Then we have only to ask, as it is a family matter, that you add this name to the contract of marriage, and give us a copy."
"It cannot be done, sir."
Germain felt a check. He was silent.
"Do not say that, d'Aguilhe," the merchant said; "if the boy wants it, let him have it. What do I care?"
"No sir, it cannot be done."
"Cannot be done? for _me_? Have I done nothing for you, M. d'Aguilhe?
Have I not been a good client to you?"
"Nevertheless, sir, nothing can weigh with me against the rules of my profession," pompously replied the Notary. "A Public Person must not allow himself to be swayed by private considerations."
"In what lies your difficulty in changing this deed?" Germain asked.
"A deed once deposited in the archives of the Notary is sacred."