San-Cravate; or, The Messengers; Little Streams - BestLightNovel.com
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"Are you looking for somebody, or for some address in this quarter, madame? I have had my stand here for a long time, and I can probably tell you what you want to know."
"It isn't an address, but a certain person whom I would like to obtain some information about; in fact, to find out something that interests me very deeply. First of all, monsieur, tell me this: are you the only messenger on this street?"
"No, madame; there's Jean Ficelle--but he don't happen to be here now; in fact, he hasn't been to work for several days; I suppose he's tippling somewhere."
"What sort of looking man is this Jean Ficelle?"
"Oh! he ain't handsome--a little, short, thin man, near thirty years old."
"He's not the man I want. The one I am looking for is only twenty-three, and looks less than that; you would hardly think he was twenty; he has a graceful figure and a fine face, and his voice is as sweet as his eyes."
Sans-Cravate frowned slightly as he replied:
"Ah! you are talking about a man named Paul."
"Paul!" cried the old woman; "that's the name. Do you know him?"
"I should say so! as he used to stand here alongside of me. It ain't so very long since he went somewhere else to stand."
"He is a messenger! it is all true, then! poor boy! he did it for me, I am sure of it!"
Tears prevented the old lady from going on. Sans-Cravate was obliged to support her until her emotion had subsided. At last, having recovered herself to some extent, she grasped Sans-Cravate's hand and said:
"Thanks, monsieur, thanks. If you knew what a fine fellow you had for your comrade, if you knew what a n.o.ble heart he has, and of all he has done for me! But I must tell you, monsieur, for I want everybody to know it; such n.o.ble conduct deserves to be known, if for nothing else than to lead others to imitate it.--My name is Desroches; my husband was a tradesman, deservedly esteemed as well for his kindly nature as for his strict probity in business. One day--we were well off, then--my husband, happening to see the procession of the poor children who had been abandoned by their families, was deeply touched and interested by the face of one of them; it was young Paul, who was then ten years old at most. We had no children; our happiness was perfect but for that fact; my husband offered to take charge of that child, and his offer was readily accepted."
"I knew all this, madame," said Sans-Cravate; "Paul has told me how he was taken into Monsieur Desroches's family, and became his clerk; and then how your husband was crushed by misfortunes and bankruptcies, and died--of grief, perhaps, because he was obliged to break his engagements."
"Yes, monsieur; yes, that is all true, still it isn't all; but it's all you know, I am sure; for Paul would not have told you of his n.o.ble conduct."
"No; I have told you all I know."
"Well, monsieur, Paul, who was eighteen and a half when I lost my husband, said to me then: 'Don't be distressed, my dear mother; not only will I take care of you, but I propose that my benefactor's memory shall be respected; I propose to pay all that he owed, and by working hard I can do it.'--And, sure enough, the poor boy called my husband's creditors together, and promised to pay them if they would give him time. They were so moved by his self-sacrificing spirit, that they told him to arrange his own terms. The debts amounted to only eight thousand francs. Paul asked for five years in which to pay the whole; then he told me not to worry about myself, that he would provide for all my needs--and he left me, to seek employment. I didn't see him for several days; at last he came and told me that he was employed in a business house in Faubourg Saint-Honore, and that he was obliged to live near by, but that he would come to see me at least twice a week, and would keep his agreement with my husband's creditors. And from that time on, monsieur, every three months he paid the amount he had promised, and brought me the receipts. 'Take these, my dear mother,' he would say; 'I am as happy as can be, because through me my benefactor's name is respected;'--and I, monsieur, never had a suspicion that the poor boy hadn't found any employment, but had become a messenger in order to fulfil his engagements; and that he worked without rest, and took no pleasure at all, so that he could put aside for me, for my husband's honor, all the money he earned!"
Again Madame Desroches could not hold back her tears; she drew her handkerchief, and paused a moment to wipe her eyes.
Sans-Cravate, for his part, tried in vain to avoid being moved; despite his grimaces, despite the churlish manner which he struggled to maintain, and although he twisted his mouth and bit his lips, two great tears escaped from his eyes, while he muttered between his teeth:
"By all that's good! It was well done of him, all the same! that's what I call honor! And to think that a man will get ugly and lose a friend, just for a wink of a woman's eye, for an infernal petticoat and what's underneath it! Bah! what a fool! Well, I can't stand it, I must let the cat out of the bag!--How did you find out that Paul was a messenger?" he asked aloud, after pretending to blow his nose in order to wipe his eyes un.o.bserved.
"In this way, monsieur. Four or five months ago, I was sick, and Paul stayed with me and nursed me; he did not go to work at all. 'Don't you worry,' he'd say; 'there's another clerk, who has promised to take my place and do my work.'--I must tell you, monsieur, that I live on Vieille Rue du Temple, near Rue Barbette----"
"Near Rue Barbette!" cried Sans-Cravate; "a very high house, with a pa.s.sageway, and a grocery on the street floor?"
"Yes, monsieur; that's the house."
"Go on, madame, go on."
"Well! one morning, when I had been getting better for some days, Paul, who had gone back to his office,--at least, so he told me,--came to make sure that I was still improving. He had been with me a little while, when a tall girl came in with some fruit I had ordered of my regular fruit dealer, on Rue Barbette.--But what's the matter, monsieur? you seem agitated."
"It's nothing, madame; I'll tell you in a minute. Go on, please, and finish your story."
"This tall girl gave a cry of surprise when she saw Paul; I saw that she knew him and that she was astonished to find him dressed so well. I noticed that Paul whispered a few words to her, but I found out nothing then. But when Bastringuette--that was the girl's name--came again to bring something from the fruit woman, who is her cousin, she cried out: 'Ah! madame, that's a mighty fine fellow, that Monsieur Paul!' And--but why are you weeping, monsieur?"
"Go on--pray go on, madame."
"Well, monsieur, some little time ago, Paul ceased to come as usual; I was anxious and worried, when Bastringuette appeared and brought me the money Paul was to pay that day to one of the creditors; she told me that he had been obliged to take a short journey, and would come to see me when he returned. To cut the story short, monsieur, time pa.s.sed and Paul did not come, but Bastringuette continued to bring me money from him. I questioned her; she was embarra.s.sed and confused in her answers, and I thought that I understood that Paul no longer owned his good clothes, and that he would not come to see me in his jacket for fear I should discover his occupation. I caught the word _messenger_, and several times she mentioned the name of this street----"
"Enough, enough, madame!--Ah! Paul! my poor Paul! So it is true, after all! You never deceived me; it wasn't to see Bastringuette that you went to that house!"
"What do you mean, monsieur?"
"What do I mean: that I am a beggarly brute--a cur! that I struck Paul and wounded him, because I thought he was living with my mistress, when he was thinking of n.o.body but you and of his benefactor's good name!
d.a.m.nation! but I will make up for it all; I will make him as happy as he deserves to be."
"What do you mean, monsieur?"
"Oh! let us go and find him first; I long to embrace him--if only he'll forgive me. Come, my good woman, come along; if you can't run, I'll carry you; but let's make haste, for I can't hold in any longer!"
Sans-Cravate seized Madame Desroches's arm and dragged her away. To keep pace with the messenger, who said that it was in his power to make her adopted son happy, the old lady seemed to have recovered the strength and agility of youth.
They reached Paul's new stand, and found him seated on a stone bench, lost in thought. Sans-Cravate dropped Madame Desroches's arm, ran to Paul, threw his arms about him, and kissed him again and again, shedding tears, and saying in a broken voice:
"Do you forgive me--my poor Paul? I know all--I was in the wrong, and I struck you. If you don't forgive me, I'll jump into the water! Take care of my sister."
Paul was utterly at a loss to understand what had happened, until he saw Madame Desroches and divined that his conduct was known. The old lady likewise embraced the young man, weeping freely. Thereupon the pa.s.sers-by and idlers began to gather about them, wondering what that young messenger had done to be embraced thus effusively; and Sans-Cravate took Madame Desroches's arm and Paul's, and led them away.
"Come away," he said; "I have something important to tell you; and all these people, who probably think that we're going to show them some tricks, are beginning to make me mad."
These three persons, who were so overjoyed to be together, soon reached Sans-Cravate's humble lodging, where poor Liline, taken by surprise by that visit, strove to do the honors of her bedroom as best she could. He presented Paul to her, saying:
"This is the man I was jealous of, sister; I have found out to-day that he never deceived me. So you can imagine how happy I shall be to put him in the way of recovering his father, his name, and his fortune!"
Paul stared at Sans-Cravate with an exclamation of surprise; he feared that he had not heard aright. Madame Desroches begged the messenger to explain himself. He asked nothing better, and, in order to make his story clearer, he began by telling of the relations of Albert with his sister, his visit to Monsieur Vermoncey, his duel with Adeline's seducer, and, lastly, what he had heard Madame Baldimer say to the elder Vermoncey--the names, the cross on the forearm, and all the corroborative circ.u.mstances.
"But my heart seems to have divined the truth," said Paul, joyfully; "and Monsieur Vermoncey himself--he showed so much friends.h.i.+p and interest."
"Does he know you?" asked Sans-Cravate.
Paul gave the particulars of his visit to Monsieur Vermoncey; whereupon Sans-Cravate clapped his hands, jumped up and down, swore, wept, and shouted:
"Let us go, my friends, let us go at once to Monsieur Vermoncey; he has suffered and groaned long enough; we must hurry up and give him a son to comfort him a little for the loss of his other children. Madame Desroches must come with us; it will be better for her to be there, to confirm what I say.--You stay here, sister, and wait for me. I shall soon be back, and with good news, I am sure."
Sans-Cravate whispered to his sister, who smiled and promised to obey; then he ran out to fetch a cab, into which he put Madame Desroches and Paul, got in after them, and ordered the driver to take them to Monsieur Vermoncey's house.
"You must let me speak first," he said to them on the way; "the sight of me will be painful to him at the outset, but afterward, I trust, he won't be sorry that he's seen me again."
When they reached the house, Sans-Cravate took the servant by storm, and compelled him to usher him into his master's study.
Monsieur Vermoncey started back in surprise; his eyes a.s.sumed an expression of hopeless melancholy when he saw Sans-Cravate, but he motioned to him to come forward.