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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:20:19 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:20:19 -0700 |
| commit | cfc6fff93310406ec9c9a09d22cc4fc9c4b21629 (patch) | |
| tree | c2503f4ad8bbcdd5f2d2db33d74e9ec971e3546e | |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26154-8.txt b/26154-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..388a8b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/26154-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9039 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol, by +William J. Locke + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol + +Author: William J. Locke + +Release Date: July 31, 2008 [EBook #26154] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADVENTURES OF ARISTIDE PUJOL *** + + + + +Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +Transcriber's Note: Table of Contents added. + + + * * * * * + + + + + _BY THE SAME AUTHOR_ + IDOLS + SEPTIMUS + DERELICTS + THE USURPER + WHERE LOVE IS + THE WHITE DOVE + SIMON THE JESTER + A STUDY IN SHADOWS + A CHRISTMAS MYSTERY + THE BELOVÈD VAGABOND + AT THE GATE OF SAMARIA + THE MORALS OF MARCUS ORDEYNE + THE DEMAGOGUE AND LADY PHAYRE + THE GLORY OF CLEMENTINA + + + + + [Illustration: AT THE BEGINNING OF THE FOURTH KISS OUT CAME HER FATHER + _See page 34_] + + + + + THE + JOYOUS ADVENTURES + OF ARISTIDE PUJOL + + BY + WILLIAM J. LOCKE + + + ILLUSTRATIONS BY + ALEC BALL + + + NEW YORK + JOHN LANE COMPANY + MCMXII + + + * * * * * + + + + +CONTENTS + + + I THE ADVENTURE OF THE FAIR PATRONNE + II THE ADVENTURE OF THE ARLÉSIENNE + III THE ADVENTURE OF THE KIND MR. SMITH + IV THE ADVENTURE OF THE FOUNDLING + V THE ADVENTURE OF THE PIG'S HEAD + VI THE ADVENTURE OF FLEURETTE + VII THE ADVENTURE OF THE MIRACLE + VIII THE ADVENTURE OF THE FICKLE GODDESS + IX THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN'S SUMMER + + + * * * * * + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + + FACING + PAGE + + At the Beginning of the Fourth Kiss Out Came Her + Father _Frontispiece_ + + I Had Knocked Him Down on Purpose. He Was + Crippled for Life 14 + + Anything Less Congruous as the Bride-Elect of the + Debonair Aristide Pujol it Was Impossible to + Imagine 22 + + Had Straightway Poured His Grievances into a + Feminine Ear 32 + + I Found Both Tyres Had Been Punctured in a Hundred + Places 40 + + "Madame," said Aristide, "You Are Adorable, and + I Love You to Distraction" 50 + + "The Villain Was a Traveller in Buttons--Buttons!" 60 + + He Burst into Shrieks of Laughter 64 + + "And You!" shouted Bocardon, Falling on Aristide; + "I Must Embrace You Also" 68 + + Standing on the Arrival Platform of Euston Station 78 + + "Ah! the Pictures," cried Aristide, with a Wide + Sweep of His Arms 88 + + "I'll Take Five Hundred Pounds," said He, "to + Stay in" 96 + + Between the Folds of a Blanket Peeped the Face of + a Sleeping Child 110 + + He Demonstrated the Proper Application of the Cure 120 + + It is a Fearsome Thing for a Man to be Left Alone in + the Dead of Night with a Young Baby 124 + + One of the Little Girls in Pigtails Was Holding + Him, While Miss Anne Administered the Feeding-Bottle 134 + + He Must Have Dealt Out Paralyzing Information 180 + + Fleurette Danced with Aristide, as Light as an + Autumn Leaf Tossed by the Wind 188 + + Aristide Practised His Many Queer Accomplishments 200 + + He Read It, and Blinked in Amazement 208 + + He Might as Well Have Pointed Out the Marvels + of Kubla Khan's Pleasure-Dome to a Couple of + Guinea-Pigs 216 + + "I've Caught You! At Last, After Twenty Years, + I've Caught You" 234 + + There He Saw a Sight Which for a Moment Paralyzed Him 238 + + Mr. Ducksmith Seized Him by the Lapels of His Coat 242 + + + * * * * * + + + + + THE + JOYOUS ADVENTURES + OF + ARISTIDE PUJOL + + + * * * * * + + + + +#The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol# + +I + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE FAIR PATRONNE + + +In narrating these few episodes in the undulatory, not to say +switchback, career of my friend Aristide Pujol, I can pretend to no +chronological sequence. Some occurred before he (almost literally) +crossed my path for the first time, some afterwards. They have been +related to me haphazard at odd times, together with a hundred other +incidents, just as a chance tag of association recalled them to his +swift and picturesque memory. He would, indeed, make a show of fixing +dates by reference to his temporary profession; but so Protean seem to +have been his changes of fortune in their number and rapidity that I +could never keep count of them or their order. Nor does it matter. The +man's life was as disconnected as a pack of cards. + +My first meeting with him happened in this wise. + +I had been motoring in a listless, solitary fashion about Languedoc. A +friend who had stolen a few days from anxious business in order to +accompany me from Boulogne through Touraine and Guienne had left me at +Toulouse; another friend whom I had arranged to pick up at Avignon on +his way from Monte Carlo was unexpectedly delayed. I was therefore +condemned to a period of solitude somewhat irksome to a man of a +gregarious temperament. At first, for company's sake, I sat in front +by my chauffeur, McKeogh. But McKeogh, an atheistical Scotch mechanic +with his soul in his cylinders, being as communicative as his own +differential, I soon relapsed into the equal loneliness and greater +comfort of the back. + +In this fashion I left Montpellier one morning on my leisurely eastward +journey, deciding to break off from the main road, striking due south, +and visit Aigues-Mortes on the way. + +Aigues-Mortes was once a flourishing Mediterranean town. St. Louis and +his Crusaders sailed thence twice for Palestine; Charles V. and Francis +I. met there and filled the place with glittering state. But now its +glory has departed. The sea has receded three or four miles, and left +it high and dry in the middle of bleak salt marshes, useless, dead and +desolate, swept by the howling mistral and scorched by the blazing sun. +The straight white ribbon of road which stretched for miles through the +plain, between dreary vineyards--some under water, the black shoots of +the vines appearing like symmetrical wreckage above the surface--was at +last swallowed up by the grim central gateway of the town, surmounted +by its frowning tower. On each side spread the brown machicolated +battlements that vainly defended the death-stricken place. A soft +northern atmosphere would have invested it in a certain mystery of +romance, but in the clear southern air, the towers and walls standing +sharply defined against the blue, wind-swept sky, it looked naked and +pitiful, like a poor ghost caught in the daylight. + +At some distance from the gate appeared the usual notice as to +speed-limit. McKeogh, most scrupulous of drivers, obeyed. As there was a +knot of idlers underneath and beyond the gate he slowed down to a crawl, +sounding a patient and monotonous horn. We advanced; the peasant folk +cleared the way sullenly and suspiciously. Then, deliberately, an +elderly man started to cross the road, and on the sound of the horn +stood stock still, with resentful defiance on his weather-beaten face. +McKeogh jammed on the brakes. The car halted. But the infinitesimal +fraction of a second before it came to a dead stop the wing over the +near front wheel touched the elderly person and down he went on the +ground. I leaped from the car, to be instantly surrounded by an +infuriated crowd, which seemed to gather from all the quarters of +the broad, decaying square. The elderly man, helped to his feet by +sympathetic hands, shook his knotted fists in my face. He was a dour and +ugly peasant, of splendid physique, as hard and discoloured as the walls +of Aigues-Mortes; his cunning eyes were as clear as a boy's, his lined, +clean-shaven face as rigid as a gargoyle; and the back of his neck, +above the low collar of his jersey, showed itself seamed into glazed +irregular lozenges, like the hide of a crocodile. He cursed me and my +kind healthily in very bad French and apostrophized his friends in +Provençal, who in Provençal and bad French made responsive clamour. I +had knocked him down on purpose. He was crippled for life. Who was I to +go tearing through peaceful towns with my execrated locomotive and +massacring innocent people? I tried to explain that the fault was his, +and that, after all, to judge by the strength of his lungs, no great +damage had been inflicted. But no. They would not let it go like that. +There were the gendarmes--I looked across the square and saw two +gendarmes striding portentously towards the scene--they would see +justice done. The law was there to protect poor folk. For a certainty I +would not get off easily. + + [Illustration: I HAD KNOCKED HIM DOWN ON PURPOSE. HE WAS CRIPPLED + FOR LIFE] + +I knew what would happen. The gendarmes would submit McKeogh and myself +to a _procès-verbal_. They would impound the car. I should have to go +to the Mairie and make endless depositions. I should have to wait, +Heaven knows how long, before I could appear before the _juge de paix_. +I should have to find a solicitor to represent me. In the end I should +be fined for furious driving--at the rate, when the accident happened, +of a mile an hour--and probably have to pay a heavy compensation to the +wilful and uninjured victim of McKeogh's impeccable driving. And all the +time, while waiting for injustice to take its course, I should be the +guest of a hostile population. I grew angry. The crowd grew angrier. The +gendarmes approached with an air of majesty and fate. But just before +they could be acquainted with the brutal facts of the disaster a +singularly bright-eyed man, wearing a hard felt hat and a blue serge +suit, flashed like a meteor into the midst of the throng, glanced with +an amazing swiftness at me, the car, the crowd, the gendarmes and the +victim, ran his hands up and down the person of the last mentioned, and +then, with a frenzied action of a figure in a bad cinematograph rather +than that of a human being, subjected the inhabitants to an infuriated +philippic in Provençal, of which I could not understand one word. The +crowd, with here and there a murmur of remonstrance, listened to him in +silence. When he had finished they hung their heads, the gendarmes +shrugged their majestic and fateful shoulders and lit cigarettes, and +the gargoyle-visaged ancient with the neck of crocodile hide turned +grumbling away. I have never witnessed anything so magical as the effect +produced by this electric personage. Even McKeogh, who during the +previous clamour had sat stiff behind his wheel, keeping expressionless +eyes fixed on the cap of the radiator, turned his head two degrees of a +circle and glanced at his surroundings. + +The instant peace was established our rescuer darted up to me with the +directness of a dragon-fly and shook me warmly by the hand. As he had +done me a service, I responded with a grateful smile; besides, his +aspect was peculiarly prepossessing. I guessed him to be about +five-and-thirty. He had a clear olive complexion, black moustache and +short silky vandyke beard, and the most fascinating, the most humorous, +the most mocking, the most astonishingly bright eyes I have ever seen in +my life. I murmured a few expressions of thanks, while he prolonged the +handshake with the fervour of a long-lost friend. + +"It's all right, my dear sir. Don't worry any more," he said in +excellent English, but with a French accent curiously tinged with +Cockney. "The old gentleman's as sound as a bell--not a bruise on his +body." He pushed me gently to the step of the car. "Get in and let me +guide you to the only place where you can eat in this accursed town." + +Before I could recover from my surprise, he was by my side in the car +shouting directions to McKeogh. + +"Ah! These people!" he cried, shaking his hands with outspread fingers +in front of him. "They have no manners, no decency, no self-respect. +It's a regular trade. They go and get knocked down by automobiles on +purpose, so that they can claim indemnity. They breed dogs especially +and train them to commit suicide under the wheels so that they can get +compensation. There's one now--_ah, sacrée bête!_" He leaned over the +side of the car and exchanged violent objurgation with the dog. "But +never mind. So long as I am here you can run over anything you like with +impunity." + +"I'm very much obliged to you," said I. "You've saved me from a deal of +foolish unpleasantness. From the way you handled the old gentleman I +should guess you to be a doctor." + +"That's one of the few things I've never been," he replied. "No; I'm not +a doctor. One of these days I'll tell you all about myself." He spoke +as if our sudden acquaintance would ripen into life-long friendship. +"There's the hotel--the Hôtel Saint-Louis," he pointed to the sign a +little way up the narrow, old-world, cobble-paved street we were +entering. "Leave it to me; I'll see that they treat you properly." + +The car drew up at the doorway. My electric friend leaped out and met +the emerging landlady. + +"_Bonjour, madame._ I've brought you one of my very good friends, +an English gentleman of the most high importance. He will have +_déjeuner--tout ce qu'il y a de mieux_. None of your cabbage-soup and +eels and _andouilles_, but a good omelette, some fresh fish, and a bit +of very tender meat. Will that suit you?" he asked, turning to me. + +"Excellently," said I, smiling. "And since you've ordered me so charming +a _déjeuner_, perhaps you'll do me the honour of helping me to eat it?" + +"With the very greatest pleasure," said he, without a second's +hesitation. + +We entered the small, stuffy dining-room, where a dingy waiter, with a +dingier smile, showed us to a small table by the window. At the long +table in the middle of the room sat the half-dozen frequenters of the +house, their napkins tucked under their chins, eating in gloomy silence +a dreary meal of the kind my new friend had deprecated. + +"What shall we drink?" I asked, regarding with some disfavour the thin +red and white wines in the decanters. + +"Anything," said he, "but this _piquette du pays_. It tastes like a +mixture of sea-water and vinegar. It produces the look of patient +suffering that you see on those gentlemen's faces. You, who are not +used to it, had better not venture. It would excoriate your throat. It +would dislocate your pancreas. It would play the very devil with you. +Adolphe"--he beckoned the waiter--"there's a little white wine of the +Côtes du Rhone----" He glanced at me. + +"I'm in your hands," said I. + +As far as eating and drinking went I could not have been in better. Nor +could anyone desire a more entertaining chance companion of travel. That +he had thrust himself upon me in the most brazen manner and taken +complete possession of me there could be no doubt. But it had all been +done in the most irresistibly charming manner in the world. One entirely +forgot the impudence of the fellow. I have since discovered that he did +not lay himself out to be agreeable. The flow of talk and anecdote, the +bright laughter that lit up a little joke, making it appear a very +brilliant joke indeed, were all spontaneous. He was a man, too, of some +cultivation. He knew France thoroughly, England pretty well; he had a +discriminating taste in architecture, and waxed poetical over the +beauties of Nature. + +"It strikes me as odd," said I at last, somewhat ironically, "that so +vital a person as yourself should find scope for your energies in this +dead-and-alive place." + +He threw up his hands. "I live here? I crumble and decay in +Aigues-Mortes? For whom do you take me?" + +I replied that, not having the pleasure of knowing his name and quality, +I could only take him for an enigma. + +He selected a card from his letter-case and handed it to me across the +table. It bore the legend:-- + + ARISTIDE PUJOL, + Agent. + 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris. + +"That address will always find me," he said. + +Civility bade me give him my card, which he put carefully in his +letter-case. + +"I owe my success in life," said he, "to the fact that I have never lost +an opportunity or a visiting-card." + +"Where did you learn your perfect English?" I asked. + +"First," said he, "among English tourists at Marseilles. Then in +England. I was Professor of French at an academy for young ladies." + +"I hope you were a success?" said I. + +He regarded me drolly. + +"Yes--and no," said he. + +The meal over, we left the hotel. + +"Now," said he, "you would like to visit the towers on the ramparts. I +would dearly love to accompany you, but I have business in the town. I +will take you, however, to the _gardien_ and put you in his charge." + +He raced me to the gate by which I had entered. The _gardien des +remparts_ issued from his lodge at Aristide Pujol's summons and listened +respectfully to his exhortation in Provençal. Then he went for his keys. + +"I'll not say good-bye," Aristide Pujol declared, amiably. "I'll get +through my business long before you've done your sight-seeing, and +you'll find me waiting for you near the hotel. _Au revoir, cher ami._" + +He smiled, lifted his hat, waved his hand in a friendly way, and darted +off across the square. The old _gardien_ came out with the keys and took +me off to the Tour de Constance, where Protestants were imprisoned +pell-mell after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes; thence to the +Tour des Bourguignons, where I forget how many hundred Burgundians were +massacred and pickled in salt; and, after these cheery exhibitions, +invited me to walk round the ramparts and inspect the remaining eighteen +towers of the enceinte. As the mistral, however, had sprung up and was +shuddering across the high walls, I declined, and, having paid him his +fee, descended to the comparative shelter of the earth. + +There I found Aristide Pujol awaiting me at the corner of the narrow +street in which the hotel was situated. He was wearing--like most of +the young bloods of Provence in winter-time--a short, shaggy, yet natty +goat-skin coat, ornamented with enormous bone buttons, and a little cane +valise stood near by on the kerb of the square. + +He was not alone. Walking arm in arm with him was a stout, elderly woman +of swarthy complexion and forbidding aspect. She was attired in a +peasant's or small shopkeeper's rusty Sunday black and an old-fashioned +black bonnet prodigiously adorned with black plumes and black roses. +Beneath this bonnet her hair was tightly drawn up from her forehead; +heavy eyebrows overhung a pair of small, crafty eyes, and a tuft of hair +grew on the corner of a prognathous jaw. She might have been about +seven-and-forty. + +Aristide Pujol, unlinking himself from this unattractive female, +advanced and saluted me with considerable deference. + +"Monseigneur----" said he. + +As I am neither a duke nor an archbishop, but a humble member of the +lower automobiling classes, the high-flown title startled me. + +"Monseigneur, will you permit me," said he, in French, "to present to +you Mme. Gougasse? Madame is the _patronne_ of the Café de l'Univers, at +Carcassonne, which doubtless you have frequented, and she is going to do +me the honour of marrying me to-morrow." + + [Illustration: ANYTHING LESS CONGRUOUS AS THE BRIDE-ELECT OF THE + DEBONAIR ARISTIDE PUJOL IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE TO IMAGINE] + +The unexpectedness of the announcement took my breath away. + +"Good heavens!" said I, in a whisper. + +Anyone less congruous as the bride-elect of the debonair Aristide Pujol +it was impossible to imagine. However, it was none of my business. I +raised my hat politely to the lady. + +"Madame, I offer you my sincere felicitations. As an entertaining +husband I am sure you will find M. Aristide Pujol without a rival." + +"_Je vous remercie, monseigneur_," she replied, in what was obviously +her best company manner. "And if ever you will deign to come again to +the Café de l'Univers at Carcassonne we will esteem it a great honour." + +"And so you're going to get married to-morrow?" I remarked, by way of +saying something. To congratulate Aristide Pujol on his choice lay +beyond my power of hypocrisy. + +"To-morrow," said he, "my dear Amélie will make me the happiest of men." + +"We start for Carcassonne by the three-thirty train," said Mme. +Gougasse, pulling a great silver watch from some fold of her person. + +"Then there is time," said I, pointing to a little weather-beaten café +in the square, "to drink a glass to your happiness." + +"_Bien volontiers_," said the lady. + +"_Pardon, chère amie_," Aristide interposed, quickly. "Unless +monseigneur and I start at once for Montpellier, I shall not have time +to transact my little affairs before your train arrives there." + +Parenthetically, I must remark that all trains going from Aigues-Mortes +to Carcassonne must stop at Montpellier. + +"That's true," she agreed, in a hesitating manner. "But----" + +"But, idol of my heart, though I am overcome with grief at the idea of +leaving you for two little hours, it is a question of four thousand +francs. Four thousand francs are not picked up every day in the street. +It's a lot of money." + +Mme. Gougasse's little eyes glittered. + +"_Bien sûr._ And it's quite settled?" + +"Absolutely." + +"And it will be all for me?" + +"Half," said Aristide. + +"You promised all to me for the redecoration of the ceiling of the +café." + +"Three thousand will be sufficient, dear angel. What? I know these +contractors and decorators. The more you pay them, the more abominable +will they make the ceiling. Leave it to me. I, Aristide, will guarantee +you a ceiling like that of the Sistine Chapel for two thousand francs." + +She smiled and bridled, so as to appear perfectly well-bred in my +presence. The act of smiling caused the tuft of hair on her jaw to +twitch horribly. A cold shiver ran down my back. + +"Don't you think, monseigneur," she asked, archly, "that M. Pujol should +give me the four thousand francs as a wedding-present?" + +"Most certainly," said I, in my heartiest voice, entirely mystified by +the conversation. + +"Well, I yield," said Aristide. "Ah, women, women! They hold up their +little rosy finger, and the bravest of men has to lie down with his chin +on his paws like a good old watch-dog. You agree, then, monseigneur, to +my giving the whole of the four thousand francs to Amélie?" + +"More than that," said I, convinced that the swarthy lady of the +prognathous jaw was bound to have her own way in the end where money was +concerned, and yet for the life of me not seeing how I had anything to +do with the disposal of Aristide Pujol's property--"More than that," +said I; "I command you to do it." + +"_C'est bien gentil de votre part_," said madame. + +"And now the café," I suggested, with chattering teeth. We had been +standing all the time at the corner of the square, while the mistral +whistled down the narrow street. The dust was driven stingingly into our +faces, and the women of the place who passed us by held their black +scarves over their mouths. + +"Alas, monseigneur," said Mme. Gougasse, "Aristide is right. You must +start now for Montpellier in the automobile. I will go by the train for +Carcassonne at three-thirty. It is the only train from Aigues-Mortes. +Aristide transacts his business and joins me in the train at +Montpellier. You have not much time to spare." + +I was bewildered. I turned to Aristide Pujol, who stood, hands on hips, +regarding his prospective bride and myself with humorous benevolence. + +"My good friend," said I in English, "I've not the remotest idea of what +the two of you are talking about; but I gather you have arranged that I +should motor you to Montpellier. Now, I'm not going to Montpellier. I've +just come from there, as I told you at _déjeuner_. I'm going in the +opposite direction." + +He took me familiarly by the arm, and, with a "_Pardon, chère amie_," to +the lady, led me a few paces aside. + +"I beseech you," he whispered; "it's a matter of four thousand francs, a +hundred and sixty pounds, eight hundred dollars, a new ceiling for the +Café de l'Univers, the dream of a woman's life, and the happiest omen +for my wedded felicity. The fair goddess Hymen invites you with uplifted +torch. You can't refuse." + +He hypnotized me with his bright eyes, overpowered my will by his +winning personality. He seemed to force me to desire his companionship. +I weakened. After all, I reflected, I was at a loose end, and where I +went did not matter to anybody. Aristide Pujol had also done me a +considerable service, for which I felt grateful. I yielded with good +grace. + +He darted back to Mme. Gougasse, alive with gaiety. + +"_Chère amie_, if you were to press monseigneur, I'm sure he would come +to Carcassonne and dance at our wedding." + +"Alas! That," said I, hastily, "is out of the question. But," I added, +amused by a humorous idea, "why should two lovers separate even for a +few hours? Why should not madame accompany us to Montpellier? There is +room in my auto for three, and it would give me the opportunity of +making madame's better acquaintance." + +"There, Amélie!" cried Aristide. "What do you say?" + +"Truly, it is too much honour," murmured Mme. Gougasse, evidently +tempted. + +"There's your luggage, however," said Aristide. "You would bring that +great trunk, for which there is no place in the automobile of +monseigneur." + +"That's true--my luggage." + +"Send it on by train, _chère amie_." + +"When will it arrive at Carcassonne?" + +"Not to-morrow," said Pujol, "but perhaps next week or the week after. +Perhaps it may never come at all. One is never certain with these +railway companies. But what does that matter?" + +"What do you say?" cried the lady, sharply. + +"It may arrive or it may not arrive; but you are rich enough, _chère +amie_, not to think of a few camisoles and bits of jewellery." + +"And my lace and my silk dress that I have brought to show your parents. +_Merci!_" she retorted, with a dangerous spark in her little eyes. "You +think one is made of money, eh? You will soon find yourself mistaken, my +friend. I would give you to understand----". She checked herself +suddenly. "Monseigneur"--she turned to me with a resumption of the +gracious manner of her bottle-decked counter at the Café de +l'Univers--"you are too amiable. I appreciate your offer infinitely; but +I am not going to entrust my luggage to the kind care of the railway +company. _Merci, non._ They are robbers and thieves. Even if it did +arrive, half the things would be stolen. Oh, I know them." + +She shook the head of an experienced and self-reliant woman. No doubt, +distrustful of banks as of railway companies, she kept her money hidden +in her bedroom. I pitied my poor young friend; he would need all his +gaiety to enliven the domestic side of the Café de l'Univers. + +The lady having declined my invitation, I expressed my regrets; and +Aristide, more emotional, voiced his sense of heart-rent desolation, +and in a resigned tone informed me that it was time to start. I left the +lovers and went to the hotel, where I paid the bill, summoned McKeogh, +and lit a companionable pipe. + +The car backed down the narrow street into the square and took up its +position. We entered. McKeogh took charge of Aristide's valise, tucked +us up in the rug, and settled himself in his seat. The car started and +we drove off, Aristide gallantly brandishing his hat and Mme. Gougasse +waving her lily hand, which happened to be hidden in an ill-fitting +black glove. + +"To Montpellier, as fast as you can!" he shouted at the top of his lungs +to McKeogh. Then he sighed as he threw himself luxuriously back. "Ah, +this is better than a train. Amélie doesn't know what a mistake she has +made!" + +The elderly victim of my furious entry was lounging, in spite of the +mistral, by the grim machicolated gateway. Instead of scowling at me he +raised his hat respectfully as we passed. I touched my cap, but Aristide +returned the salute with the grave politeness of royalty. + +"This is a place," said he, "which I would like never to behold again." + +In a few moments we were whirling along the straight, white road between +the interminable black vineyards, and past the dilapidated homesteads +of the vine-folk and wayside cafés that are scattered about this +unjoyous corner of France. + +"Well," said he, suddenly, "what do you think of my _fiancée_?" + +Politeness and good taste forbade expression of my real opinion. I +murmured platitudes to the effect that she seemed to be a most sensible +woman, with a head for business. + +"She's not what we in French call _jolie, jolie_; but what of that? +What's the good of marrying a pretty face for other men to make love to? +And, as you English say, there's none of your confounded sentiment about +her. But she has the most flourishing café in Carcassonne; and, when the +ceiling is newly decorated, provided she doesn't insist on too much gold +leaf and too many naked babies on clouds--it's astonishing how women +love naked babies on clouds--it will be the snuggest place in the world. +May I ask for one of your excellent cigarettes?" + +I handed him the case from the pocket of the car. + +"It was there that I made her acquaintance," he resumed, after having +lit the cigarette from my pipe. "We met, we talked, we fixed it up. She +is not the woman to go by four roads to a thing. She did me the honour +of going straight for me. Ah, but what a wonderful woman! She rules that +café like a kingdom; a Semiramis, a Queen Elizabeth, a Catherine de' +Medici. She sits enthroned behind the counter all day long and takes the +money and counts the saucers and smiles on rich clients, and if a waiter +in a far corner gives a bit of sugar to a dog she spots it, and the +waiter has a deuce of a time. That woman is worth her weight in +thousand-franc notes. She goes to bed every night at one, and gets up in +the morning at five. And virtuous! Didn't Solomon say that a virtuous +woman was more precious than rubies? That's the kind of wife the wise +man chooses when he gives up the giddy ways of youth. Ah, my dear sir, +over and over again these last two or three days my dear old parents--I +have been on a visit to them in Aigues-Mortes--have commended my wisdom. +Amélie, who is devoted to me, left her café in Carcassonne to make their +acquaintance and receive their blessing before our marriage, also to +show them the lace on her _dessous_ and her new silk dress. They are too +old to take the long journey to Carcassonne. 'My son,' they said, 'you +are making a marriage after our own hearts. We are proud of you. Now we +can die perfectly content.' I was wrong, perhaps, in saying that Amélie +has no sentiment," he continued, after a short pause. "She adores me. It +is evident. She will not allow me out of her sight. Ah, my dear friend, +you don't know what a happy man I am." + +For a brilliant young man of five-and-thirty, who was about to marry a +horrible Megæra ten or twelve years his senior, he looked unhealthily +happy. There was no doubt that his handsome roguery had caught the +woman's fancy. She was at the dangerous age, when even the most +ferro-concrete-natured of women are apt to run riot. She was +comprehensible, and pardonable. But the man baffled me. He was obviously +marrying her for her money; but how in the name of Diogenes and all the +cynics could he manage to look so confoundedly joyful about it? + +The mistral blew bitterly. I snuggled beneath the rug and hunched up my +shoulders so as to get my ears protected by my coat-collar. Aristide, +sufficiently protected by his goat's hide, talked like a shepherd on a +May morning. Why he took for granted my interest in his unromantic, not +to say sordid, courtship I knew not; but he gave me the whole history of +it from its modest beginnings to its now penultimate stage. From what I +could make out--for the mistral whirled many of his words away over +unheeding Provence--he had entered the Café de l'Univers one evening, a +human derelict battered by buffeting waves of Fortune, and, finding a +seat immediately beneath Mme. Gougasse's _comptoir_, had straightway +poured his grievances into a feminine ear and, figuratively speaking, +rested his weary heart upon a feminine bosom. And his buffetings and +grievances and wearinesses? Whence came they? I asked the question +point-blank. + + [Illustration: HAD STRAIGHTWAY POURED HIS GRIEVANCES INTO A + FEMININE EAR] + +"Ah, my dear friend," he answered, kissing his gloved finger-tips, "she +was adorable!" + +"Who?" I asked, taken aback. "Mme. Gougasse?" + +"_Mon Dieu_, no!" he replied. "Not Mme. Gougasse. Amélie is solid, she +is virtuous, she is jealous, she is capacious; but I should not call her +adorable. No; the adorable one was twenty--delicious and English; a +peach-blossom, a zephyr, a summer night's dream, and the most provoking +little witch you ever saw in your life. Her father and herself and six +of her compatriots were touring through France. They had circular +tickets. So had I. In fact, I was a miniature Thomas Cook and Son to the +party. I provided them with the discomforts of travel and supplied +erroneous information. _Que voulez-vous?_ If people ask you for the +history of a pair of Louis XV. corsets, in a museum glass case, it's +much better to stimulate their imagination by saying that they were worn +by Joan of Arc at the Battle of Agincourt than to dull their minds by +your ignorance. _Eh bien_, we go through the châteaux of the Loire, +through Poitiers and Angoulême, and we come to Carcassonne. You know +Carcassonne? The great grim _cité_, with its battlements and bastions +and barbicans and fifty towers on the hill looking over the rubbishy +modern town? We were there. The rest of the party were buying picture +postcards of the _gardien_ at the foot of the Tour de l'Inquisition. The +man who invented picture postcards ought to have his statue on the top +of the Eiffel Tower. The millions of headaches he has saved! People go +to places now not to exhaust themselves by seeing them, but to buy +picture postcards of them. The rest of the party, as I said, were deep +in picture postcards. Mademoiselle and I promenaded outside. We often +promenaded outside when the others were buying picture postcards," he +remarked, with an extra twinkle in his bright eyes. "And the result? Was +it my fault? We leaned over the parapet. The wind blew a confounded +_mèche_--what do you call it----?" + +"Strand?" + +"Yes--strand of her hair across her face. She let it blow and laughed +and did not move. Didn't I say she was a little witch? If there's a +Provençal ever born who would not have kissed a girl under such +provocation I should like to have his mummy. I kissed her. She kept on +laughing. I kissed her again. I kissed her four times. At the beginning +of the fourth kiss out came her father from the postcard shop. He waited +till the end of it and then announced himself. He announced himself in +such ungentlemanly terms that I was forced to let the whole party, +including the adorable little witch, go on to Pau by themselves, while +I betook my broken heart to the Café de l'Univers." + +"And there you found consolation?" + +"I told my sad tale. Amélie listened and called the manager to take +charge of the _comptoir_, and poured herself out a glass of Frontignan. +Amélie always drinks Frontignan when her heart is touched. I came the +next day and the next. It was pouring with rain day and night--and +Carcassonne in rain is like Hades with its furnaces put out by human +tears--and the Café de l'Univers like a little warm corner of Paradise +stuck in the midst of it." + +"And so that's how it happened?" + +"That's how it happened. _Ma foi!_ When a lady asks a _galant homme_ to +marry her, what is he to do? Besides, did I not say that the Café de +l'Univers was the most prosperous one in Carcassonne? I'm afraid you +English, my dear friend, have such sentimental ideas about marriage. +Now, we in France----_Attendez, attendez!_" He suddenly broke off his +story, lurched forward, and gripped the back of the front seat. + +"To the right, man, to the right!" he cried excitedly to McKeogh. + +We had reached the point where the straight road from Aigues-Mortes +branches into a fork, one road going to Montpellier, the other to Nîmes. +Montpellier being to the west, McKeogh had naturally taken the left +fork. + +"To the right!" shouted Aristide. + +McKeogh pulled up and turned his head with a look of protesting inquiry. +I intervened with a laugh. + +"You're wrong in your geography, M. Pujol. Besides, there is the +signpost staring you in the face. This is the way to Montpellier." + +"But, my dear, heaven-sent friend, I no more want to go to Montpellier +than you do!" he cried. "Montpellier is the last place on earth I desire +to visit. You want to go to Nîmes, and so do I. To the right, +chauffeur." + +"What shall I do, sir?" asked McKeogh. + +I was utterly bewildered. I turned to the goat-skin-clad, +pointed-bearded, bright-eyed Aristide, who, sitting bolt upright in the +car, with his hands stretched out, looked like a parody of the god Pan +in a hard felt hat. + +"You don't want to go to Montpellier?" I asked, stupidly. + +"No--ten thousand times no; not for a king's ransom." + +"But your four thousand francs--your meeting Mme. Gougasse's train--your +getting on to Carcassonne?" + +"If I could put twenty million continents between myself and Carcassonne +I'd do it," he explained, with frantic gestures. "Don't you understand? +The good Lord who is always on my side sent you especially to deliver +me out of the hands of that unspeakable Xantippe. There are no four +thousand francs. I'm not going to meet her train at Montpellier, and if +she marries anyone to-morrow at Carcassonne it will not be Aristide +Pujol." + +I shrugged my shoulders. + +"We'll go to Nîmes." + +"Very good, sir," said McKeogh. + +"And now," said I, as soon as we had started on the right-hand road, +"will you have the kindness to explain?" + +"There's nothing to explain," he cried, gleefully. "Here am I delivered. +I am free. I can breathe God's good air again. I'm not going to marry +Yum-Yum, Yum-Yum. I feel ten years younger. Oh, I've had a narrow +escape. But that's the way with me. I always fall on my feet. Didn't I +tell you I've never lost an opportunity? The moment I saw an Englishman +in difficulties, I realized my opportunity of being delivered out of the +House of Bondage. I took it, and here I am! For two days I had been +racking my brains for a means of getting out of Aigues-Mortes, when +suddenly you--a _Deus ex machina_--a veritable god out of the +machine--come to my aid. Don't say there isn't a Providence watching +over me." + +I suggested that his mode of escape seemed somewhat elaborate and +fantastic. Why couldn't he have slipped quietly round to the railway +station and taken a ticket to any haven of refuge he might have +fancied? + +"For the simple reason," said he, with a gay laugh, "that I haven't a +single penny piece in the world." + +He looked so prosperous and untroubled that I stared incredulously. + +"Not one tiny bronze sou," said he. + +"You seem to take it pretty philosophically," said I. + +"_Les gueux, les gueux, sont des gens heureux_," he quoted. + +"You're the first person who has made me believe in the happiness of +beggars." + +"In time I shall make you believe in lots of things," he retorted. "No. +I hadn't one sou to buy a ticket, and Amélie never left me. I spent my +last franc on the journey from Carcassonne to Aigues-Mortes. Amélie +insisted on accompanying me. She was taking no chances. Her eyes never +left me from the time we started. When I ran to your assistance she was +watching me from a house on the other side of the _place_. She came to +the hotel while we were lunching. I thought I would slip away unnoticed +and join you after you had made the _tour des remparts_. But no. I must +present her to my English friend. And then--_voyons_--didn't I tell you +I never lost a visiting-card? Look at this?" + +He dived into his pocket, produced the letter-case, and extracted a +card. + +"_Voilà._" + +I read: "The Duke of Wiltshire." + +"But, good heavens, man," I cried, "that's not the card I gave you." + +"I know it isn't," said he; "but it's the one I showed to Amélie." + +"How on earth," I asked, "did you come by the Duke of Wiltshire's +visiting-card?" + +He looked at me roguishly. + +"I am--what do you call it?--a--a 'snapper up of unconsidered trifles.' +You see I know my Shakespeare. I read 'The Winter's Tale' with some +French pupils to whom I was teaching English. I love Autolycus. _C'est +un peu moi, hein?_ Anyhow, I showed the Duke's card to Amélie." + +I began to understand. "That was why you called me 'monseigneur'?" + +"Naturally. And I told her that you were my English patron, and would +give me four thousand francs as a wedding present if I accompanied you +to your agent's at Montpellier, where you could draw the money. Ah! But +she was suspicious! Yesterday I borrowed a bicycle. A friend left it in +the courtyard. I thought, 'I will creep out at dead of night, when +everyone's asleep, and once on my _petite bicyclette, bonsoir la +compagnie_.' But, would you believe it? When I had dressed and crept +down, and tried to mount the bicycle, I found both tyres had been +punctured in a hundred places with the point of a pair of scissors. What +do you think of that, eh? Ah, _là, là!_ it has been a narrow escape. +When you invited her to accompany us to Montpellier my heart was in my +mouth." + +"It would have served you right," I said, "if she had accepted." + +He laughed as though, instead of not having a penny, he had not a care +in the world. Accustomed to the geometrical conduct of my well-fed +fellow-Britons, who map out their lives by rule and line, I had no +measure whereby to gauge this amazing and inconsequential person. In one +way he had acted abominably. To leave an affianced bride in the lurch in +this heartless manner was a most ungentlemanly proceeding. On the other +hand, an unscrupulous adventurer would have married the woman for her +money and chanced the consequences. In the tussle between Perseus and +the Gorgon the odds are all in favour of Perseus. Mercury and Minerva, +the most sharp-witted of the gods, are helping him all the time--to say +nothing of the fact that Perseus starts out by being a notoriously +handsome fellow. So a handsome rogue can generally wheedle an elderly, +ugly wife into opening her money-bags, and, if successful, leads the +enviable life of a fighting-cock. It was very much to his credit that +this kind of life was not to the liking of Aristide Pujol. + + [Illustration: "I FOUND BOTH TYRES HAD BEEN PUNCTURED IN A + HUNDRED PLACES"] + +Indeed, speaking from affectionate knowledge of the man, I can declare +that the position in which he, like many a better man, had placed +himself was intolerable. Other men of equal sensitiveness would have +extricated themselves in a more commonplace fashion; but the dramatic +appealed to my rascal, and he has often plumed himself on his calculated +_coup de théâtre_ at the fork of the roads. He was delighted with it. +Even now I sometimes think that Aristide Pujol will never grow up. + +"There's one thing I don't understand," said I, "and that is your +astonishing influence over the populace at Aigues-Mortes. You came upon +them like a firework--a devil-among-the-tailors--and everybody, +gendarmes and victim included, became as tame as sheep. How was it?" + +He laughed. "I said you were my very old and dear friend and patron, a +great English duke." + +"I don't quite see how that explanation satisfied the pig-headed old +gentleman whom I knocked down." + +"Oh, that," said Aristide Pujol, with a look of indescribable +drollery--"that was my old father." + + + + +II + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE ARLÉSIENNE + + +Aristide Pujol bade me a sunny farewell at the door of the Hôtel du +Luxembourg at Nîmes, and, valise in hand, darted off, in his impetuous +fashion, across the Place de l'Esplanade. I felt something like a pang +at the sight of his retreating figure, as, on his own confession, he had +not a penny in the world. I wondered what he would do for food and +lodging, to say nothing of tobacco, _apéritifs_, and other such +necessaries of life. The idea of so gay a creature starving was +abhorrent. Yet an invitation to stay as my guest at the hotel until +he saw an opportunity of improving his financial situation he had +courteously declined. + +Early next morning I found him awaiting me in the lounge and smoking an +excellent cigar. He explained that so dear a friend as myself ought to +be the first to hear the glad tidings. Last evening, by the grace of +Heaven, he had run across a bare acquaintance, a manufacturer of nougat +at Montélimar; had spent several hours in his company, with the result +that he had convinced him of two things: first, that the dry, +crumbling, shortbread-like nougat of Montélimar was unknown in England, +where the population subsisted on a sickly, glutinous mess whereto the +medical faculty had ascribed the prevalent dyspepsia of the population; +and, secondly, that the one Heaven-certified apostle who could spread +the glorious gospel of Montélimar nougat over the length and breadth of +Great Britain and Ireland was himself, Aristide Pujol. A handsome +salary had been arranged, of which he had already drawn something on +account--_hinc ille Colorado_--and he was to accompany his principal the +next day to Montélimar, _en route_ for the conquest of Britain. In the +meantime he was as free as the winds, and would devote the day to +showing me the wonders of the town. + +I congratulated him on his almost fantastic good fortune and gladly +accepted his offer. + +"There is one thing I should like to ask you," said I, "and it is this. +Yesterday afternoon you refused my cordially-offered hospitality, and +went away without a sou to bless yourself with. What did you do? I ask +out of curiosity. How does a man set about trying to subsist on nothing +at all?" + +"It's very simple," he replied. "Haven't I told you, and haven't you +seen for yourself, that I never lose an opportunity? More than that. It +has been my rule in life either to make friends with the Mammon of +Unrighteousness--he's a muddle-headed ass is Mammon, and you can steer +clear of his unrighteousness if you're sharp enough--or else to cast my +bread upon the waters in the certainty of finding it again after many +days. In the case in question I took the latter course. I cast my bread +a year or two ago upon the waters of the Roman baths, which I will have +the pleasure of showing you this morning, and I found it again last +night at the Hôtel de la Curatterie." + +In the course of the day he related to me the following artless history. + + * * * * * + +Aristide Pujol arrived at Nîmes one blazing day in July. He had money in +his pocket and laughter in his soul. He had also deposited his valise at +the Hôtel du Luxembourg, which, as all the world knows, is the most +luxurious hotel in the town. Joyousness of heart impelled him to a +course of action which the good Nîmois regard as maniacal in the +sweltering July heat--he walked about the baking streets for his own +good pleasure. + +Aristide Pujol was floating a company, a process which afforded him as +much delirious joy as the floating, for the first time, of a toy yacht +affords a child. It was a company to build an hotel in Perpignan, where +the recent demolition of the fortifications erected by the Emperor +Charles V. had set free a vast expanse of valuable building ground on +the other side of the little river on which the old town is situated. +The best hotel in Perpignan being one to get away from as soon as +possible, owing to restriction of site, Aristide conceived the idea of +building a spacious and palatial hostelry in the new part of the town, +which should allure all the motorists and tourists of the globe to that +Pyrenean Paradise. By sheer audacity he had contrived to interest an +eminent Paris architect in his project. Now the man who listened to +Aristide Pujol was lost. With the glittering eye of the Ancient Mariner +he combined the winning charm of a woman. For salvation, you either had +to refuse to see him, as all the architects to the end of the R's in the +alphabetical list had done, or put wax, Ulysses-like, in your ears, a +precaution neglected by the eminent M. Say. M. Say went to Perpignan and +returned in a state of subdued enthusiasm. + +A limited company was formed, of which Aristide Pujol, man of vast +experience in affairs, was managing director. But money came in slowly. +A financier was needed. Aristide looked through his collection of +visiting-cards, and therein discovered that of a deaf ironmaster at St. +Étienne whose life he had once saved at a railway station by dragging +him, as he was crossing the line, out of the way of an express train +that came thundering through. Aristide, man of impulse, went straight +to St. Étienne, to work upon the ironmaster's sense of gratitude. +Meanwhile, M. Say, man of more sober outlook, bethought him of a client, +an American millionaire, passing through Paris, who had speculated +considerably in hotels. The millionaire, having confidence in the +eminent M. Say, thought well of the scheme. He was just off to Japan, +but would drop down to the Pyrenees the next day and look at the +Perpignan site before boarding his steamer at Marseilles. If his +inquiries satisfied him, and he could arrange matters with the managing +director, he would not mind putting a million dollars or so into the +concern. You must kindly remember that I do not vouch for the literal +accuracy of everything told me by Aristide Pujol. + +The question of the all-important meeting between the millionaire and +the managing director then arose. As Aristide was at St. Étienne it +was arranged that they should meet at a halfway stage on the latter's +journey from Perpignan to Marseilles. The Hôtel du Luxembourg at Nîmes +was the place, and two o'clock on Thursday the time appointed. + +Meantime Aristide had found that the deaf ironmaster had died months +ago. This was a disappointment, but fortune compensated him. This part +of his adventure is somewhat vague, but I gathered that he was lured +by a newly made acquaintance into a gambling den, where he won the +prodigious sum of two thousand francs. With this wealth jingling and +crinkling in his pockets he fled the town and arrived at Nîmes on +Wednesday morning, a day before his appointment. + +That was why he walked joyously about the blazing streets. The tide had +turned at last. Of the success of his interview with the millionaire he +had not the slightest doubt. He walked about building gorgeous castles +in Perpignan--which, by the way, is not very far from Spain. Besides, as +you shall hear later, he had an account to settle with the town of +Perpignan. At last he reached the Jardin de la Fontaine, the great, +stately garden laid out in complexity of terrace and bridge and +balustraded parapet over the waters of the old Roman baths by the master +hand to which Louis XIV. had entrusted the Garden of Versailles. + +Aristide threw himself on a bench and fanned himself with his straw hat. + +"_Mon Dieu!_ it's hot!" he remarked to another occupant of the seat. + +This was a woman, and, as he saw when she turned her face towards him, +an exceedingly handsome woman. Her white lawn and black silk headdress, +coming to a tiny crown just covering the parting of her full, wavy hair, +proclaimed her of the neighboring town of Arles. She had all the +Arlésienne's Roman beauty--the finely chiselled features, the calm, +straight brows, the ripe lips, the soft oval contour, the clear olive +complexion. She had also lustrous brown eyes; but these were full of +tears. She only turned them on him for a moment; then she resumed her +apparently interrupted occupation of sobbing. Aristide was a +soft-hearted man. He drew nearer. + +"Why, you're crying, madame!" said he. + +"Evidently," murmured the lady. + +"To cry scalding tears in this weather! It's too hot! Now, if you could +only cry iced water there would be something refreshing in it." + +"You jest, monsieur," said the lady, drying her eyes. + +"By no means," said he. "The sight of so beautiful a woman in distress +is painful." + +"Ah!" she sighed. "I am very unhappy." + +Aristide drew nearer still. + +"Who," said he, "is the wretch that has dared to make you so?" + +"My husband," replied the lady, swallowing a sob. + +"The scoundrel!" said Aristide. + +The lady shrugged her shoulders and looked down at her wedding-ring, +which gleamed on a slim, brown, perfectly kept hand. Aristide prided +himself on being a connoisseur in hands. + +"There never was a husband yet," he added, "who appreciated a beautiful +wife. Husbands only deserve harridans." + +"That's true," said the Arlésienne, "for when the wife is good-looking +they are jealous." + +"Ah, that is the trouble, is it?" said Aristide. "Tell me all about it." + +The beautiful Arlésienne again contemplated her slender fingers. + +"I don't know you, monsieur." + +"But you soon will," said Aristide, in his pleasant voice and with a +laughing, challenging glance in his bright eyes. She met it swiftly and +sidelong. + +"Monsieur," she said, "I have been married to my husband for four years, +and have always been faithful to him." + +"That's praiseworthy," said Aristide. + +"And I love him very much." + +"That's unfortunate!" said Aristide. + +"Unfortunate?" + +"Evidently!" said Aristide. + +Their eyes met. They burst out laughing. The lady quickly recovered and +the tears sprang again. + +"One can't jest with a heavy heart; and mine is very heavy." She broke +down through self-pity. "Oh, I am ashamed!" she cried. + +She turned away from him, burying her face in her hands. Her dress, +cut low, showed the nape of her neck as it rose gracefully from her +shoulders. Two little curls had rebelled against being drawn up with the +rest of her hair. The back of a dainty ear, set close to the head, was +provoking in its pink loveliness. Her attitude, that of a youthful +Niobe, all tears, but at the same time all curves and delicious +contours, would have played the deuce with an anchorite. + +Aristide, I would have you remember, was a child of the South. A child +of the North, regarding a bewitching woman, thinks how nice it would be +to make love to her, and wastes his time in wondering how he can do it. +A child of the South neither thinks nor wonders; he makes love straight +away. + +"Madame," said Aristide, "you are adorable, and I love you to +distraction." + +She started up. "Monsieur, you forget yourself!" + +"If I remember anything else in the wide world but you, it would be a +poor compliment. I forget everything. You turn my head, you ravish my +heart, and you put joy into my soul." + +He meant it--intensely--for the moment. + +"I ought not to listen to you," said the lady, "especially when I am so +unhappy." + +"All the more reason to seek consolation," replied Aristide. + +"Monsieur," she said, after a short pause, "you look good and loyal. I +will tell you what is the matter. My husband accuses me wrongfully, +although I know that appearances are against me. He only allows me in +the house on sufferance, and is taking measures to procure a divorce." + + [Illustration: "MADAME," SAID ARISTIDE, "YOU ARE ADORABLE, AND I + LOVE YOU TO DISTRACTION"] + +"_A la bonne heure!_" cried Aristide, excitedly casting away his +straw hat, which an unintentional twist of the wrist caused to skim +horizontally and nearly decapitate a small and perspiring soldier who +happened to pass by. "_A la bonne heure!_ Let him divorce you. You are +then free. You can be mine without any further question." + +"But I love my husband," she smiled, sadly. + +"Bah!" said he, with the scepticism of the lover and the Provençal. +"And, by the way, who is your husband?" + +"He is M. Émile Bocardon, proprietor of the Hôtel de la Curatterie." + +"And you?" + +"I am Mme. Bocardon," she replied, with the faintest touch of roguery. + +"But your Christian name? How is it possible for me to think of you as +Mme. Bocardon?" + +They argued the question. Eventually she confessed to the name of Zette. + +Her confidence not stopping there, she told him how she came by the +name; how she was brought up by her Aunt Léonie at Raphèle, some five +miles from Arles, and many other unexciting particulars of her early +years. Her baptismal name was Louise. Her mother, who died when she was +young, called her Louisette. Aunt Léonie, a very busy woman, with no +time for superfluous syllables, called her Zette. + +"Zette!" He cast up his eyes as if she had been canonized and he was +invoking her in rapt worship. "Zette, I adore you!" + +Zette was extremely sorry. She, on her side, adored the cruel M. +Bocardon. Incidentally she learned Aristide's name and quality. He was +an _agent d'affaires_, extremely rich--had he not two thousand francs +and an American millionaire in his pocket? + +"M. Pujol," she said, "the earth holds but one thing that I desire, the +love and trust of my husband." + +"The good Bocardon is becoming tiresome," said Aristide. + +Zette's lips parted, as she pointed to a black speck at the iron +entrance gates. + +"_Mon Dieu!_ there he is!" + +"He has become tiresome," said Aristide. + +She rose, displaying to its full advantage her supple and stately +figure. She had a queenly poise of the head. Aristide contemplated her +with the frankest admiration. + +"One would say Juno was walking the earth again." + +Although Zette had never heard of Juno, and was as miserable and heavy +hearted a woman as dwelt in Nîmes, a flush of pleasure rose to her +cheeks. She too was a child of the South, and female children of the +South love to be admired, no matter how frankly. I have heard of +Daughters of the Snows not quite averse to it. She sighed. + +"I must go now, monsieur. He must not find me here with you. I am +suffering enough already from his reproaches. Ah! it is unjust--unjust!" +she cried, clenching her hands, while the tears again started into her +eyes, and the corners of her pretty lips twitched with pain. "Indeed," +she added, "I know it has been wrong of me to talk to you like this. But +_que voulez-vous?_ It was not my fault. Adieu, monsieur." + +At the sight of her standing before him in her woeful beauty, Aristide's +pulses throbbed. + +"It is not adieu--it is _au revoir_, Mme. Zette," he cried. + +She protested tearfully. It was farewell. Aristide darted to his +rejected hat and clapped it on the back of his head. He joined her and +swore that he would see her again. It was not Aristide Pujol who would +allow her to be rent in pieces by the jaws of that crocodile, M. +Bocardon. Faith, he would defend her to the last drop of his blood. He +would do all manner of gasconading things. + +"But what can you do, my poor M. Pujol?" she asked. + +"You will see," he replied. + +They parted. He watched her until she became a speck and, having joined +the other speck, her husband, passed out of sight. Then he set out +through the burning gardens towards the Hôtel du Luxembourg, at the +other end of the town. + +Aristide had fallen in love. He had fallen in love with Provençal fury. +He had done the same thing a hundred times before; but this, he told +himself, was the _coup de foudre_--the thunderbolt. The beautiful +Arlésienne filled his brain and his senses. Nothing else in the wide +world mattered. Nothing else in the wide world occupied his mind. He +sped through the hot streets like a meteor in human form. A stout man, +sipping syrup and water in the cool beneath the awning of the Café de la +Bourse, rose, looked wonderingly after him, and resumed his seat, wiping +a perspiring brow. + +A short while afterwards Aristide, valise in hand, presented himself at +the bureau of the Hôtel de la Curatterie. It was a shabby little hotel, +with a shabby little oval sign outside, and was situated in the narrow +street of the same name. Within, it was clean and well kept. On the +right of the little dark entrance-hall was the _salle à manger_, on +the left the bureau and an unenticing hole labelled _salon de +correspondance_. A very narrow passage led to the kitchen, and the rest +of the hall was blocked by the staircase. An enormous man with a simple, +woe-begone fat face and a head of hair like a circular machine-brush was +sitting by the bureau window in his shirt-sleeves. Aristide addressed +him. + +"M. Bocardon?" + +"At your service, monsieur." + +"Can I have a bedroom?" + +"Certainly." He waved a hand towards a set of black sample boxes studded +with brass nails and bound with straps that lay in the hall. "The +omnibus has brought your boxes. You are M. Lambert?" + +"M. Bocardon," said Aristide, in a lordly way, "I am M. Aristide Pujol, +and not a commercial traveller. I have come to see the beauties of +Nîmes, and have chosen this hotel because I have the honour to be a +distant relation of your wife, Mme. Zette Bocardon, whom I have not seen +for many years. How is she?" + +"Her health is very good," replied M. Bocardon, shortly. He rang a bell. + +A dilapidated man in a green baize apron emerged from the dining-room +and took Aristide's valise. + +"No. 24," said M. Bocardon. Then, swinging his massive form halfway +through the narrow bureau door, he called down the passage, "Euphémie!" + +A woman's voice responded, and in a moment the woman herself appeared, a +pallid, haggard, though more youthful, replica of Zette, with the dark +rings of sleeplessness or illness beneath her eyes which looked +furtively at the world. + +"Tell your sister," said M. Bocardon, "that a relation of yours has +come to stay in the hotel." + +He swung himself back into the bureau and took no further notice of the +guest. + +"A relation?" echoed Euphémie, staring at the smiling, lustrous-eyed +Aristide, whose busy brain was wondering how he could mystify this +unwelcome and unexpected sister. + +"Why, yes. Aristide, cousin to your good Aunt Léonie at Raphèle. Ah--but +you are too young to remember me." + +"I will tell Zette," she said, disappearing down the narrow passage. + +Aristide went to the doorway, and stood there looking out into the not +too savoury street. On the opposite side, which was in the shade, the +tenants of the modest little shops sat by their doors or on chairs on +the pavement. There was considerable whispering among them and various +glances were cast at him. Presently footsteps behind caused him to turn. +There was Zette. She had evidently been weeping since they had parted, +for her eyelids were red. She started on beholding him. + +"You?" + +He laughed and shook her hesitating hands. + +"It is I, Aristide. But you have grown! _Pécaïre!_ How you have grown!" +He swung her hands apart and laughed merrily in her bewildered eyes. +"To think that the little Zette in pigtails and short check skirt +should have grown into this beautiful woman! I compliment you on your +wife, M. Bocardon." + +M. Bocardon did not reply, but Aristide's swift glance noticed a spasm +of pain shoot across his broad face. + +"And the good Aunt Léonie? Is she well? And does she still make her +_matelotes_ of eels? Ah, they were good, those _matelotes_." + +"Aunt Léonie died two years ago," said Zette. + +"The poor woman! And I who never knew. Tell me about her." + +The _salle à manger_ door stood open. He drew her thither by his curious +fascination. They entered, and he shut the door behind them. + +"_Voilà!_" said he. "Didn't I tell you I should see you again?" + +"_Vous avez un fameux toupet, vous!_" said Zette, half angrily. + +He laughed, having been accused of confounded impudence many times +before in the course of his adventurous life. + +"If I told my husband he would kill you." + +"Precisely. So you're not going to tell him. I adore you. I have come to +protect you. _Foi de Provençal._" + +"The only way to protect me is to prove my innocence." + +"And then?" + +She drew herself up and looked him straight between the eyes. + +"I'll recognize that you have a loyal heart, and will be your very good +friend." + +"Mme. Zette," cried Aristide, "I will devote my life to your service. +Tell me the particulars of the affair." + +"Ask M. Bocardon." She left him, and sailed out of the room and past the +bureau with her proud head in the air. + +If Aristide Pujol had the rapturous idea of proving the innocence of +Mme. Zette, triumphing over the fat pig of a husband, and eventually, in +a fantastic fashion, carrying off the insulted and spotless lady to some +bower of delight (the castle in Perpignan--why not?), you must blame, +not him, but Provence, whose sons, if not devout, are frankly pagan. +Sometimes they are both. + +M. Bocardon sat in his bureau, pretending to do accounts and tracing +columns of figures with a huge, trembling forefinger. He looked the +picture of woe. Aristide decided to bide his opportunity. He went out +into the streets again, now with the object of killing time. The +afternoon had advanced, and trees and buildings cast cool shadows in +which one could walk with comfort; and Nîmes, clear, bright city of wide +avenues and broad open spaces, instinct too with the grandeur that was +Rome's, is an idler's Paradise. Aristide knew it well; but he never +tired of it. He wandered round the Maison Carrée, his responsive nature +delighting in the splendour of the Temple, with its fluted Corinthian +columns, its noble entablature, its massive pediment, its perfect +proportions; reluctantly turned down the Boulevard Victor Hugo, past the +Lycée and the Bourse, made the circuit of the mighty, double-arched oval +of the Arena, and then retraced his steps. As he expected, M. Bocardon +had left the bureau. It was the hour of absinthe. The porter named M. +Bocardon's habitual café. There, in a morose corner of the terrace, +Aristide found the huge man gloomily contemplating an absurdly small +glass of the bitters known as Dubonnet. Aristide raised his hat, asked +permission to join him, and sat down. + +"M. Bocardon," said he, carefully mixing the absinthe which he had +ordered, "I learn from my fair cousin that there is between you a +regrettable misunderstanding, for which I am sincerely sorry." + +"She calls it a misunderstanding?" He laughed mirthlessly. "Women have +their own vocabulary. Listen, my good sir. There is infamy between us. +When a wife betrays a man like me--kind, indulgent, trustful, who +has worshipped the ground she treads on--it is not a question of +misunderstanding. It is infamy. If she had anywhere to lay her head, I +would turn her out of doors to-night. But she has not. You, who are her +relative, know I married her without a dowry. You alone of her family +survive." + +It was on the tip of Aristide's impulsive tongue to say that he would be +only too willing to shelter her, but prudently he refrained. + +"She has broken my heart," continued Bocardon. + +Aristide asked for details of the unhappy affair. The large man +hesitated for a moment and glanced suspiciously at his companion; but, +fascinated by the clear, luminous eyes, he launched with Southern +violence into a whirling story. The villain was a traveller in +buttons--_buttons!_ To be wronged by a traveller in diamonds might have +its compensations--but buttons! Linen buttons, bone buttons, brass +buttons, _trouser buttons!_ To be a traveller in the inanity of +buttonholes was the only lower degradation. His name was Bondon--he +uttered it scathingly, as if to decline from a Bocardon to a Bondon was +unthinkable. This Bondon was a regular client of the hotel, and such a +client!--who never ordered a bottle of _vin cacheté_ or coffee or +cognac. A contemptible creature. For a long time he had his suspicions. +Now he was certain. He tossed off his glass of Dubonnet, ordered +another, and spoke incoherently of the opening and shutting of doors, +whisperings, of a dreadful incident, the central fact of which was a +glimpse of Zette gliding wraith-like down a corridor. Lastly, there was +the culminating proof, a letter found that morning in Zette's room. +He drew a crumpled sheet from his pocket and handed it to Aristide. + + [Illustration: "THE VILLAIN WAS A TRAVELLER IN BUTTONS--BUTTONS!"] + +It was a crude, flaming, reprehensible, and entirely damning epistle. +Aristide turned cold, shivering at the idea of the superb and dainty +Zette coming in contact with such abomination. He hated Bondon with a +murderous hate. He drank a great gulp of absinthe and wished it were +Bondon's blood. Great tears rolled down Bocardon's face, and gathering +at the ends of his scrubby moustache dripped in splashes on the marble +table. + +"I loved her so tenderly, monsieur," said he. + +The cry, so human, went straight to Aristide's heart. A sympathetic tear +glistened in his bright eyes. He was suddenly filled with an immense +pity for this grief-stricken, helpless giant. An odd feminine streak ran +through his nature and showed itself in queer places. Impulsively he +stretched out his hand. + +"You're going?" asked Bocardon. + +"No. A sign of good friendship." + +They gripped hands across the table. A new emotion thrilled through the +facile Aristide. + +"Bocardon, I devote myself to you," he cried, with a flamboyant gesture. +"What can I do?" + +"Alas, nothing," replied the other, miserably. + +"And Zette? What does she say to it all?" + +The mountainous shoulders heaved with a shrug. "She denies everything. +She had never seen the letter until I showed it to her. She did not +know how it came into her room. As if that were possible!" + +"It's improbable," said Aristide, gloomily. + +They talked. Bocardon, in a choking voice, told the simple tale of their +married happiness. It had been a love-match, different from the ordinary +marriages of reason and arrangement. Not a cloud since their +wedding-day. They were called the turtle-doves of the Rue de la +Curatterie. He had not even manifested the jealousy justifiable in the +possessor of so beautiful a wife. He had trusted her implicitly. He was +certain of her love. That was enough. They had had one child, who died. +Grief had brought them even nearer each other. And now this stroke had +been dealt. It was a knife being turned round in his heart. It was +agony. + +They walked back to the hotel together. Zette, who was sitting by the +desk in the bureau, rose and, without a word or look, vanished down +the passage. Bocardon, with a great sigh, took her place. It was +dinner-time. The half-dozen guests and frequenters filled for a moment +the little hall, some waiting to wash their hands at the primitive +_lavabo_ by the foot of the stairs. Aristide accompanied them into the +_salle à manger_, where he dined in solemn silence. The dinner over he +went out again, passing by the bureau where Bocardon, in its dim +recesses, was eating a sad meal brought to him by the melancholy +Euphémie. Zette, he conjectured, was dining in the kitchen. An +atmosphere of desolation impregnated the place, as though a corpse were +somewhere in the house. + +Aristide drank his coffee at the nearest café in a complicated state of +mind. He had fallen furiously in love with the lady, believing her to be +the victim of a jealous husband. In an outburst of generous emotion he +had taken the husband to his heart, seeing that he was a good man +stricken to death. Now he loved the lady, loved the husband, and hated +the villain Bondon. What Aristide felt, he felt fiercely. He would +reconcile these two people he loved, and then go and, if not assassinate +Bondon, at least do him some bodily injury. With this idea in his head, +he paid for his coffee and went back to the hotel. + +He found Zette taking her turn at the bureau, for clients have to be +attended to, even in the most distressing circumstances. She was talking +to a new arrival, trying to smile a welcome. Aristide, loitering near, +watched her beautiful face, to which the perfect classic features gave +an air of noble purity. His soul revolted at the idea of her mixing +herself up with a sordid wretch like Bondon. It was unbelievable. + +"_Eh bien_?" she said as soon as they were alone. + +"Mme. Zette, to-day I called your husband a scoundrel and a crocodile. I +was wrong. I find him a man with a beautiful nature." + +"You needn't tell me that, M. Aristide." + +"You are breaking his heart, Mme. Zette." + +"And is he not breaking mine? He has told you, I suppose. Am I +responsible for what I know nothing more about than a babe unborn? You +don't believe I am speaking the truth? Bah! And your professions this +afternoon? Wind and gas, like the words of all men." + +"Mme. Zette," cried Aristide, "I said I would devote my life to your +service, and so I will. I'll go and find Bondon and kill him." + +He watched her narrowly, but she did not grow pale like a woman whose +lover is threatened with mortal peril. She said dryly:-- + +"You had better have some conversation with him first." + +"Where is he to be found?" + +She shrugged her shoulders. "How do I know? He left by the early train +this morning that goes in the direction of Tarascon." + +"Then to-morrow," said Aristide, who knew the ways of commercial +travellers, "he will be at Tarascon, or at Avignon, or at Arles." + +"I heard him say that he had just done Arles." + +"_Tant mieux._ I shall find him either at Tarascon or Avignon. And by +the Tarasque of Sainte-Marthe, I'll bring you his head and you can +put it up outside as a sign and call the place the 'Hôtel de la Tête +Bondon.'" + + [Illustration: HE BURST INTO SHRIEKS OF LAUGHTER] + +Early the next morning Aristide started on his quest, without informing +the good Bocardon of his intentions. He would go straight to Avignon, as +the more likely place. Inquiries at the various hotels would soon enable +him to hunt down his quarry; and then--he did not quite know what would +happen then--but it would be something picturesque, something entirely +unforeseen by Bondon, something to be thrillingly determined by the +inspiration of the moment. In any case he would wipe the stain from the +family escutcheon. By this time he had convinced himself that he +belonged to the Bocardon family. + +The only other occupant of the first-class compartment was an elderly +Englishwoman of sour aspect. Aristide, his head full of Zette and +Bondon, scarcely noticed her. The train started and sped through the +sunny land of vine and olive. + +They had almost reached Tarascon when a sudden thought hit him between +the eyes, like the blow of a fist. He gasped for a moment, then he burst +into shrieks of laughter, kicking his legs up and down and waving his +arms in maniacal mirth. After that he rose and danced. The sour-faced +Englishwoman, in mortal terror, fled into the corridor. She must have +reported Aristide's behaviour to the guard, for in a minute or two that +official appeared at the doorway. + +"_Qu'est-ce qu'il y a?_" + +Aristide paused in his demonstrations of merriment. "Monsieur," said he, +"I have just discovered what I am going to do to M. Bondon." + +Delight bubbled out of him as he walked from the Avignon Railway Station +up the Cours de la République. The wretch Bondon lay at his mercy. He +had not proceeded far, however, when his quick eye caught sight of an +object in the ramshackle display of a curiosity dealer's. He paused in +front of the window, fascinated. He rubbed his eyes. + +"No," said he; "it is not a dream. The _bon Dieu_ is on my side." + +He went into the shop and bought the object. It was a pair of handcuffs. + +At a little after three o'clock the small and dilapidated hotel omnibus +drove up before the Hôtel de la Curatterie, and from it descended +Aristide Pujol, radiant-eyed, and a scrubby little man with a goatee +beard, pince-nez, and a dome-like forehead, who, pale and trembling, +seemed stricken with a great fear. It was Bondon. Together they entered +the little hall. As soon as Bocardon saw his enemy his eyes blazed with +fury, and, uttering an inarticulate roar, he rushed out of the bureau +with clenched fists murderously uplifted. The terrified Bondon shrank +into a corner, protected by Aristide, who, smiling like an angel of +peace, intercepted the onslaught of the huge man. + +"Be calm, my good Bocardon, be calm." + +But Bocardon would not be calm. He found his voice. + +"Ah, scoundrel! Miscreant! Wretch! Traitor!" When his vocabulary of +vituperation and his breath failed him, he paused and mopped his +forehead. + +Bondon came a step or two forward. + +"I know, monsieur, I have all the wrong on my side. Your anger is +justifiable. But I never dreamt of the disastrous effect of my acts. Let +me see her, my good M. Bocardon, I beseech you." + +"Let you see her?" said Bocardon, growing purple in the face. + +At this moment Zette came running up the passage. + +"What is all this noise about?" + +"Ah, madame!" cried Bondon, eagerly, "I am heart-broken. You who are so +kind--let me see her." + +"_Hein_?" exclaimed Bocardon, in stupefaction. + +"See whom?" asked Zette. + +"My dear dead one. My dear Euphémie, who has committed suicide." + +"But he's mad!" shouted Bocardon, in his great voice. "Euphémie! +Euphémie! Come here!" + +At the sight of Euphémie, pale and shivering with apprehension, Bondon +sank upon a bench by the wall. He stared at her as if she were a ghost. + +"I don't understand," he murmured, faintly, looking like a trapped hare +at Aristide Pujol, who, debonair, hands on hips, stood a little way +apart. + +"Nor I, either," cried Bocardon. + +A great light dawned on Zette's beautiful face. "I do understand." She +exchanged glances with Aristide. He came forward. + +"It's very simple," said he, taking the stage with childlike exultation. +"I go to find Bondon this morning to kill him. In the train I have a +sudden inspiration, a revelation from Heaven. It is not Zette but +Euphémie that is the _bonne amie_ of Bondon. I laugh, and frighten a +long-toothed English old maid out of her wits. Shall I get out at +Tarascon and return to Nîmes and tell you, or shall I go on? I decide to +go on. I make my plan. Ah, but when I make a plan, it's all in a second, +a flash, _pfuit!_ At Avignon I see a pair of handcuffs. I buy them. I +spend hours tracking that animal there. At last I find him at the +station about to start for Lyon. I tell him I am a police agent. I let +him see the handcuffs, which convince him. I tell him Euphémie, in +consequence of the discovery of his letter, has committed suicide. There +is a _procès-verbal_ at which he is wanted. I summon him to accompany me +in the name of the law--and there he is." + + [Illustration: "AND YOU!" SHOUTED BOCARDON, FALLING ON ARISTIDE; "I MUST + EMBRACE YOU ALSO"] + +"Then that letter was not for my wife?" said Bocardon, who was not +quick-witted. + +"But, no, imbecile!" cried Aristide. + +Bocardon hugged his wife in his vast embrace. The tears ran down his +cheeks. + +"Ah, my little Zette, my little Zette, will you ever pardon me?" + +"_Oui, je te pardonne, gros jaloux_," said Zette. + +"And you!" shouted Bocardon, falling on Aristide; "I must embrace you +also." He kissed him on both cheeks, in his expansive way, and thrust +him towards Zette. + +"You can also kiss my wife. It is I, Bocardon, who command it." + +The fire of a not ignoble pride raced through Aristide's veins. He was a +hero. He knew it. It was a moment worth living. + +The embraces and other expressions of joy and gratitude being +temporarily suspended, attention was turned to the unheroic couple who +up to then had said not one word to each other. The explanation of their +conduct, too, was simple, apparently. They were in love. She had no +dowry. He could not marry her, as his parents would not give their +consent. She, for her part, was frightened to death by the discovery of +the letter, lest Bocardon should turn her out of the house. + +"What dowry will satisfy your parents?" + +"Nothing less than twelve thousand francs." + +"I give it," said Bocardon, reckless in his newly-found happiness. +"Marry her." + +The clock in the bureau struck four. Aristide pulled out his watch. + +"_Saperlipopette!_" he cried, and disappeared like a flash into the +street. + +"But what's the matter with him?" shouted Bocardon, in amazement. + +Zette went to the door. "He's running as if he had the devil at his +heels." + +"Was he always like that?" asked her husband. + +"How always?" + +"_Parbleu!_ When you used to see him at your Aunt Léonie's." + +Zette flushed red. To repudiate the saviour of her entire family were an +act of treachery too black for her ingenuous heart. + +"Ah, yes," she replied, calmly, coming back into the hall. "We used to +call him Cousin Quicksilver." + +In the big avenue Aristide hailed a passing cab. + +"To the Hôtel du Luxembourg--at a gallop!" + +In the joyous excitement of the past few hours this child of impulse +and sunshine, this dragon-fly of a man, had entirely forgotten the +appointment at two o'clock with the American millionaire and the fortune +that depended on it. He would be angry at being kept waiting. Aristide +had met Americans before. His swift brain invented an elaborate excuse. + +He leaped from the cab and entered the vestibule of the hotel. + +"Can I see M. Congleton?" he asked at the bureau. + +"An American gentleman? He has gone, monsieur. He left by the +three-thirty train. Are you M. Pujol? There is a letter for you." + +With a sinking heart he opened it and read:-- + + DEAR SIR,--I was in this hotel at two o'clock, according to + arrangement. As my last train to Japan leaves at three-thirty, I + regret I cannot await your convenience. The site of the hotel is + satisfactory. Your business methods are not. I am sorry, therefore, + not to be able to entertain the matter further.--Faithfully, + + WILLIAM B. CONGLETON. + +He stared at the words for a few paralyzed moments. Then he stuffed the +letter into his pocket and broke into a laugh. + +"_Zut!_" said he, using the inelegant expletive whereby a Frenchman most +adequately expresses his scorn of circumstance. "_Zut!_ If I have lost a +fortune, I have gained two devoted friends, so I am the winner on the +day's work." + +Whereupon he returned gaily to the bosom of the Bocardon family and +remained there, its Cousin Quicksilver and its entirely happy and +idolized hero, until the indignation of the eminent M. Say summoned him +to Paris. + +And that is how Aristide Pujol could live thenceforward on nothing at +all at Nîmes, whenever it suited him to visit that historic town. + + + + +III + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE KIND MR. SMITH + + +Aristide Pujol started life on his own account as a _chasseur_ in a Nice +café--one of those luckless children tightly encased in bottle-green +cloth by means of brass buttons, who earn a sketchy livelihood by +enduring with cherubic smiles the continuous maledictions of the +establishment. There he soothed his hours of servitude by dreams of +vast ambitions. He would become the manager of a great hotel--not a +contemptible hostelry where commercial travellers and seedy Germans were +indifferently bedded, but one of those white palaces where milords +(English) and millionaires (American) paid a thousand francs a night +for a bedroom and five louis for a glass of beer. Now, in order to +derive such profit from the Anglo-Saxon a knowledge of English was +indispensable. He resolved to learn the language. How he did so, except +by sheer effrontery, taking linguistic toll of frequenters of the café, +would be a mystery to anyone unacquainted with Aristide. But to his +friends his mastery of the English tongue in such circumstances is +comprehensible. To Aristide the impossible was ever the one thing easy +of attainment; the possible the one thing he never could achieve. +That was the paradoxical nature of the man. Before his days of +hunted-little-devildom were over he had acquired sufficient knowledge of +English to carry him, a few years later, through various vicissitudes in +England, until, fired by new social ambitions and self-educated in a +haphazard way, he found himself appointed Professor of French in an +academy for young ladies. + +One of these days, when I can pin my dragon-fly friend down to a plain, +unvarnished autobiography, I may be able to trace some chronological +sequence in the kaleidoscopic changes in his career. But hitherto, in +his talks with me, he flits about from any one date to any other during +a couple of decades, in a manner so confusing that for the present I +abandon such an attempt. All I know of the date of the episode I am +about to chronicle is that it occurred immediately after the termination +of his engagement at the academy just mentioned. Somehow, Aristide's +history is a category of terminations. + +If the head mistress of the academy had herself played dragon at his +classes, all would have gone well. He would have made his pupils +conjugate irregular verbs, rendered them adepts in the mysteries of the +past participle and the subjunctive mood, and turned them out quite +innocent of the idiomatic quaintnesses of the French tongue. But _dis +aliter visum_. The gods always saw wrong-headedly otherwise in the case +of Aristide. A weak-minded governess--and in a governess a sense of +humour and of novelty is always a sign of a weak mind--played dragon +during Aristide's lessons. She appreciated his method, which was +colloquial. The colloquial Aristide was jocular. His lessons therefore +were a giggling joy from beginning to end. He imparted to his pupils +delicious knowledge. _En avez-vous des-z-homards? Oh, les sales bêtes, +elles ont du poil aux pattes_, which, being translated, is: "Have you +any lobsters? Oh, the dirty animals, they have hair on their feet"--a +catch phrase which, some years ago, added greatly to the gaiety of +Paris, but in which I must confess to seeing no gleam of wit--became the +historic property of the school. He recited to them, till they were +word-perfect, a music-hall ditty of the early 'eighties--_Sur le bi, +sur le banc, sur le bi du bout du banc_, and delighted them with +dissertations on Mme. Yvette Guilbert's earlier repertoire. But for him +they would have gone to their lives' end without knowing that _pognon_ +meant money; _rouspétance_, assaulting the police; _thune_, a five-franc +piece; and _bouffer_, to take nourishment. He made (according to his own +statement) French a living language. There was never a school in Great +Britain, the Colonies, or America on which the Parisian accent was so +electrically impressed. The retort, _Eh! ta soeur_, was the purest +Montmartre; also _Fich'-moi la paix, mon petit_, and _Tu as un toupet, +toi_; and the delectable locution, _Allons étrangler un perroquet_ (let +us strangle a parrot), employed by Apaches when inviting each other to +drink a glass of absinthe, soon became current French in the school for +invitations to surreptitious cocoa-parties. + +The progress that academy made in a real grip of the French language was +miraculous; but the knowledge it gained in French grammar and syntax was +deplorable. A certain mid-term examination--the paper being set by a +neighbouring vicar--produced awful results. The phrase, "How do you do, +dear?" which ought, by all the rules of Stratford-atte-Bowe, to be +translated by _Comment vous portez-vous, ma chère?_ was rendered by most +of the senior scholars _Eh, ma vieille, ca boulotte?_ One innocent and +anachronistic damsel, writing on the execution of Charles I., declared +that he _cracha dans le panier_ in 1649, thereby mystifying the good +vicar, who was unaware that "to spit into the basket" is to be +guillotined. This wealth of vocabulary was discounted by abject poverty +in other branches of the language. No one could give a list of the words +in "_al_" that took "_s_" in the plural, no one knew anything at all +about the defective verb _échoir_, and the orthography of the school +would have disgraced a kindergarten. The head mistress suspected a lack +of method in the teaching of M. Pujol, and one day paid his class a +surprise visit. + +The sight that met her eyes petrified her. The class, including the +governess, bubbled and gurgled and shrieked with laughter. M. Pujol, his +bright eyes agleam with merriment and his arms moving in frantic +gestures, danced about the platform. He was telling them a story--and +when Aristide told a story, he told it with the eloquence of his entire +frame. He bent himself double and threw out his hands. + +"_Il était saoûl comme un porc_," he shouted. + +And then came the hush of death. The rest of the artless tale about the +man as drunk as a pig was never told. The head mistress, indignant +majesty, strode up the room. + +"M. Pujol, you have a strange way of giving French lessons." + +"I believe, madame," said he, with a polite bow, "in interesting my +pupils in their studies." + +"Pupils have to be taught, not interested," said the head mistress. +"Will you kindly put the class through some irregular verbs." + +So for the remainder of the lesson Aristide, under the freezing eyes of +the head mistress, put his sorrowful class through irregular verbs, of +which his own knowledge was singularly inexact, and at the end received +his dismissal. In vain he argued. Outraged Minerva was implacable. Go he +must. + + * * * * * + +We find him, then, one miserable December evening, standing on the +arrival platform of Euston Station (the academy was near Manchester), an +unwonted statue of dubiety. At his feet lay his meagre valise; in his +hand was an enormous bouquet, a useful tribute of esteem from his +disconsolate pupils; around him luggage-laden porters and passengers +hurried; in front were drawn up the long line of cabs, their drivers' +waterproofs glistening with wet; and in his pocket rattled the few +paltry coins that, for Heaven knew how long, were to keep him from +starvation. Should he commit the extravagance of taking a cab or should +he go forth, valise in hand, into the pouring rain? He hesitated. + +"_Sacré mille cochons! Quel chien de climat!_" he muttered. + +A smart footman standing by turned quickly and touched his hat. + +"Beg pardon, sir; I'm from Mr. Smith." + +"I'm glad to hear it, my friend," said Aristide. + +"You're the French gentleman from Manchester?" + +"Decidedly," said Aristide. + + [Illustration: STANDING ON THE ARRIVAL PLATFORM OF EUSTON STATION] + +"Then, sir, Mr. Smith has sent the carriage for you." + +"That's very kind of him," said Aristide. + +The footman picked up the valise and darted down the platform. Aristide +followed. The footman held invitingly open the door of a cosy brougham. +Aristide paused for the fraction of a second. Who was this hospitable +Mr. Smith? + +"Bah!" said he to himself, "the best way of finding out is to go and +see." + +He entered the carriage, sank back luxuriously on the soft cushions, and +inhaled the warm smell of leather. They started, and soon the pelting +rain beat harmlessly against the windows. Aristide looked out at the +streaming streets, and, hugging himself comfortably, thanked Providence +and Mr. Smith. But who was Mr. Smith? _Tiens_, thought he, there were +two little Miss Smiths at the academy; he had pitied them because they +had chilblains, freckles, and perpetual colds in their heads; possibly +this was their kind papa. But, after all, what did it matter whose papa +he was? He was expecting him. He had sent the carriage for him. +Evidently a well-bred and attentive person. And _tiens!_ there was even +a hot-water can on the floor of the brougham. "He thinks of everything, +that man," said Aristide. "I feel I am going to like him." + +The carriage stopped at a house in Hampstead, standing, as far as he +could see in the darkness, in its own grounds. The footman opened the +door for him to alight and escorted him up the front steps. A neat +parlour-maid received him in a comfortably-furnished hall and took his +hat and greatcoat and magnificent bouquet. + +"Mr. Smith hasn't come back yet from the City, sir; but Miss Christabel +is in the drawing-room." + +"Ah!" said Aristide. "Please give me back my bouquet." + +The maid showed him into the drawing-room. A pretty girl of +three-and-twenty rose from a fender-stool and advanced smilingly to meet +him. + +"Good afternoon, M. le Baron. I was wondering whether Thomas would spot +you. I'm so glad he did. You see, neither father nor I could give him +any description, for we had never seen you." + +This fitted in with his theory. But why Baron? After all, why not? The +English loved titles. + +"He seems to be an intelligent fellow, mademoiselle." + +There was a span of silence. The girl looked at the bouquet, then at +Aristide, who looked at the girl, then at the bouquet, then at the girl +again. + +"Mademoiselle," said he, "will you deign to accept these flowers as a +token of my respectful homage?" + +Miss Christabel took the flowers and blushed prettily. She had dark hair +and eyes and a fascinating, upturned little nose, and the kindest +little mouth in the world. + +"An Englishman would not have thought of that," she said. + +Aristide smiled in his roguish way and raised a deprecating hand. + +"Oh, yes, he would. But he would not have had--what you call the cheek +to do it." + +Miss Christabel laughed merrily, invited him to a seat by the fire, +and comforted him with tea and hot muffins. The frank charm of his +girl-hostess captivated Aristide and drove from his mind the riddle of +his adventure. Besides, think of the Arabian Nights' enchantment of the +change from his lonely and shabby bed-sitting-room in the Rusholme Road +to this fragrant palace with princess and all to keep him company! He +watched the firelight dancing through her hair, the dainty play of +laughter over her face, and decided that the brougham had transported +him to Bagdad instead of Hampstead. + +"You have the air of a veritable princess," said he. + +"I once met a princess--at a charity bazaar--and she was a most +matter-of-fact, businesslike person." + +"Bah!" said Aristide. "A princess of a charity bazaar! I was talking of +the princess in a fairytale. They are the only real ones." + +"Do you know," said Miss Christabel, "that when men pay such compliments +to English girls they are apt to get laughed at?" + +"Englishmen, yes," replied Aristide, "because they think over a +compliment for a week, so that by the time they pay it, it is addled, +like a bad egg. But we of Provence pay tribute to beauty straight out of +our hearts. It is true. It is sincere. And what comes out of the heart +is not ridiculous." + +Again the girl coloured and laughed. "I've always heard that a Frenchman +makes love to every woman he meets." + +"Naturally," said Aristide. "If they are pretty. What else are pretty +women for? Otherwise they might as well be hideous." + +"Oh!" said the girl, to whom this Provençal point of view had not +occurred. + +"So, if I make love to you, it is but your due." + +"I wonder what my fiancé would say if he heard you?" + +"Your----?" + +"My fiancé! There's his photograph on the table beside you. He is six +foot one, and so jealous!" she laughed again. + +"The Turk!" cried Aristide, his swiftly-conceived romance crumbling into +dust. Then he brightened up. "But when this six feet of muscle and +egotism is absent, surely other poor mortals can glean a smile?" + +"You will observe that I'm not frowning," said Miss Christabel. "But you +must not call my fiancé a Turk, for he's a very charming fellow whom I +hope you'll like very much." + +Aristide sighed. "And the name of this thrice-blessed mortal?" + +Miss Christabel told his name--one Harry Ralston--and not only his name, +but, such was the peculiar, childlike charm of Aristide Pujol, also many +other things about him. He was the Honourable Harry Ralston, the heir +to a great brewery peerage, and very wealthy. He was a member of +Parliament, and but for Parliamentary duties would have dined there that +evening; but he was to come in later, as soon as he could leave the +House. He also had a house in Hampshire, full of the most beautiful +works of art. It was through their common hobby that her father and +Harry had first made acquaintance. + +"We're supposed to have a very fine collection here," she said, with a +motion of her hand. + +Aristide looked round the walls and saw them hung with pictures in gold +frames. In those days he had not acquired an extensive culture. Besides, +who having before him the firelight gleaming through Miss Christabel's +hair could waste his time over painted canvas? She noted his cursory +glance. + +"I thought you were a connoisseur?" + +"I am," said Aristide, his bright eyes fixed on her in frank admiration. + +She blushed again; but this time she rose. + +"I must go and dress for dinner. Perhaps you would like to be shown your +room?" + +He hung his head on one side. + +"Have I been too bold, mademoiselle?" + +"I don't know," she said. "You see, I've never met a Frenchman before." + +"Then a world of undreamed-of homage is at your feet," said he. + +A servant ushered him up broad, carpeted staircases into a bedroom such +as he had never seen in his life before. It was all curtains and +hangings and rugs and soft couches and satin quilts and dainty +writing-tables and subdued lights, and a great fire glowed red and +cheerful, and before it hung a clean shirt. His poor little toilet +apparatus was laid on the dressing-table, and (with a tact which he did +not appreciate, for he had, sad to tell, no dress-suit) the servant had +spread his precious frock-coat and spare pair of trousers on the bed. On +the pillow lay his night-shirt, neatly folded. + +"Evidently," said Aristide, impressed by these preparations, "it is +expected that I wash myself now and change my clothes, and that I sleep +here for the night. And for all that the ravishing Miss Christabel is +engaged to her honourable Harry, this is none the less a corner of +Paradise." + +So Aristide attired himself in his best, which included a white tie and +a pair of nearly new brown boots--a long task, as he found that his +valise had been spirited away and its contents, including the white +tie of ceremony (he had but one), hidden in unexpected drawers and +wardrobes--and eventually went downstairs into the drawing-room. There +he found Miss Christabel and, warming himself on the hearthrug, a +bald-headed, beefy-faced Briton, with little pig's eyes and a hearty +manner, attired in a dinner-suit. + +"My dear fellow," said this personage, with outstretched hand, "I'm +delighted to have you here. I've heard so much about you; and my little +girl has been singing your praises." + +"Mademoiselle is too kind," said Aristide. + +"You must take us as you find us," said Mr. Smith. "We're just ordinary +folk, but I can give you a good bottle of wine and a good cigar--it's +only in England, you know, that you can get champagne fit to drink and +cigars fit to smoke--and I can give you a glimpse of a modest English +home. I believe you haven't a word for it in French." + +"_Ma foi_, no," said Aristide, who had once or twice before heard this +lunatic charge brought against his country. "In France the men all live +in cafés, the children are all put out to nurse, and the women, saving +the respect of mademoiselle--well, the less said about them the better." + +"England is the only place, isn't it?" Mr. Smith declared, heartily. "I +don't say that Paris hasn't its points. But after all--the Moulin Rouge +and the Folies Bergères and that sort of thing soon pall, you know--soon +pall." + +"Yet Paris has its serious side," argued Aristide. "There is always the +tomb of Napoleon." + +"Papa will never take me to Paris," sighed the girl. + +"You shall go there on your honeymoon," said Mr. Smith. + +Dinner was announced. Aristide gave his arm to Miss Christabel, and +proud not only of his partner, but also of his frock-coat, white tie, +and shiny brown boots, strutted into the dining-room. The host sat at +the end of the beautifully set table, his daughter on his right, +Aristide on his left. The meal began gaily. The kind Mr. Smith was in +the best of humours. + +"And how is our dear old friend, Jules Dancourt?" he asked. + +"_Tiens!_" said Aristide, to himself, "we have a dear friend Jules +Dancourt. Wonderfully well," he replied at a venture, "but he suffers +terribly at times from the gout." + +"So do I, confound it!" said Mr. Smith, drinking sherry. + +"You and the good Jules were always sympathetic," said Aristide. "Ah! he +has spoken to me so often about you, the tears in his eyes." + +"Men cry, my dear, in France," Mr. Smith explained. "They also kiss each +other." + +"_Ah, mais c'est un beau pays, mademoiselle!_" cried Aristide, and he +began to talk of France and to draw pictures of his country which set +the girl's eyes dancing. After that he told some of the funny little +stories which had brought him disaster at the academy. Mr. Smith, with +jovial magnanimity, declared that he was the first Frenchman he had ever +met with a sense of humour. + +"But I thought, Baron," said he, "that you lived all your life shut up +in that old château of yours?" + +"_Tiens!_" thought Aristide. "I am still a Baron, and I have an old +château." + +"Tell us about the château. Has it a fosse and a drawbridge and a Gothic +chapel?" asked Miss Christabel. + +"Which one do you mean?" inquired Aristide, airily. "For I have two." + +When relating to me this Arabian Nights' adventure, he drew my special +attention to his astuteness. + +His host's eye quivered in a wink. "The one in Languedoc," said he. + +Languedoc! Almost Pujol's own country! With entire lack of morality, but +with picturesque imagination, Aristide plunged into a description of +that non-existent baronial hall. Fosse, drawbridge, Gothic chapel were +but insignificant features. It had tourelles, emblazoned gateways, +bastions, donjons, barbicans; it had innumerable rooms; in the _salle +des chevaliers_ two hundred men-at-arms had his ancestors fed at a +sitting. There was the room in which François Premier had slept, and one +in which Joan of Arc had almost been assassinated. What the name of +himself or of his ancestors was supposed to be Aristide had no ghost of +an idea. But as he proceeded with the erection of his airy palace he +gradually began to believe in it. He invested the place with a living +atmosphere; conjured up a staff of family retainers, notably one +Marie-Joseph Loufoque, the wizened old major-domo, with his long white +whiskers and blue and silver livery. There were also Madeline Mioulles, +the cook, and Bernadet the groom, and La Petite Fripette the goose girl. +Ah! they should see La Petite Fripette! And he kept dogs and horses and +cows and ducks and hens--and there was a great pond whence frogs were +drawn to be fed for the consumption of the household. + +Miss Christabel shivered. "I should not like to eat frogs." + +"They also eat snails," said her father. + +"I have a snail farm," said Aristide. "You never saw such interesting +little animals. They are so intelligent. If you're kind to them they +come and eat out of your hand." + + [Illustration: "AH! THE PICTURES," CRIED ARISTIDE, WITH A WIDE SWEEP + OF HIS ARMS] + +"You've forgotten the pictures," said Mr. Smith. + +"Ah! the pictures," cried Aristide, with a wide sweep of his arms. +"Galleries full of them. Raphael, Michael Angelo, Wiertz, Reynolds----" + +He paused, not in order to produce the effect of a dramatic aposiopesis, +but because he could not for the moment remember other names of +painters. + +"It is a truly historical château," said he. + +"I should love to see it," said the girl. + +Aristide threw out his arms across the table. "It is yours, +mademoiselle, for your honeymoon," said he. + +Dinner came to an end. Miss Christabel left the gentlemen to their wine, +an excellent port whose English qualities were vaunted by the host. +Aristide, full of food and drink and the mellow glories of the castle in +Languedoc, and smoking an enormous cigar, felt at ease with all the +world. He knew he should like the kind Mr. Smith, hospitable though +somewhat insular man. He could stay with him for a week--or a month--why +not a year? + +After coffee and liqueurs had been served Mr. Smith rose and switched on +a powerful electric light at the end of the large room, showing a +picture on an easel covered by a curtain. He beckoned to Aristide to +join him and, drawing the curtain, disclosed the picture. + +"There!" said he. "Isn't it a stunner?" + +It was a picture all grey skies and grey water and grey feathery trees, +and a little man in the foreground wore a red cap. + +"It is beautiful, but indeed it is magnificent!" cried Aristide, always +impressionable to things of beauty. + +"Genuine Corot, isn't it?" + +"Without doubt," said Aristide. + +His host poked him in the ribs. "I thought I'd astonish you. You +wouldn't believe Gottschalk could have done it. There it is--as large as +life and twice as natural. If you or anyone else can tell it from a +genuine Corot I'll eat my hat. And all for eight pounds." + +Aristide looked at the beefy face and caught a look of cunning in the +little pig's eyes. + +"Now are you satisfied?" asked Mr. Smith. + +"More than satisfied," said Aristide, though what he was to be satisfied +about passed, for the moment, his comprehension. + +"If it was a copy of an existing picture, you know--one might have +understood it--that, of course, would be dangerous--but for a man to go +and get bits out of various Corots and stick them together like this is +miraculous. If it hadn't been for a matter of business principle I'd +have given the fellow eight guineas instead of pounds--hanged if I +wouldn't! He deserves it." + +"He does indeed," said Aristide Pujol. + +"And now that you've seen it with your own eyes, what do you think you +might ask me for it? I suggested something between two and three +thousand--shall we say three? You're the owner, you know." Again the +process of rib-digging. "Came out of that historic château of yours. My +eye! you're a holy terror when you begin to talk. You almost persuaded +me it was real." + +"_Tiens!_" said Aristide to himself. "I don't seem to have a château +after all." + +"Certainly three thousand," said he, with a grave face. + +"That young man thinks he knows a lot, but he doesn't," said Mr. Smith. + +"Ah!" said Aristide, with singular laconicism. + +"Not a blooming thing," continued his host. "But he'll pay three +thousand, which is the principal, isn't it? He's partner in the show, +you know, Ralston, Wiggins, and Wix's Brewery"--Aristide pricked up his +ears--"and when his doddering old father dies he'll be Lord Ranelagh and +come into a million of money." + +"Has he seen the picture?" asked Aristide. + +"Oh, yes. Regards it as a masterpiece. Didn't Brauneberger tell you of +the Lancret we planted on the American?" Mr. Smith rubbed hearty hands +at the memory of the iniquity. "Same old game. Always easy. I have +nothing to do with the bargaining or the sale. Just an old friend of +the ruined French nobleman with the historic château and family +treasures. He comes along and fixes the price. I told our friend +Harry----" + +"Good," thought Aristide. "This is the same Honourable Harry, M.P., who +is engaged to the ravishing Miss Christabel." + +"I told him," said Mr. Smith, "that it might come to three or four +thousand. He jibbed a bit--so when I wrote to you I said two or three. +But you might try him with three to begin with." + +Aristide went back to the table and poured himself out a fresh glass of +his kind host's 1865 brandy and drank it off. + +"Exquisite, my dear fellow," said he. "I've none finer in my historic +château." + +"Don't suppose you have," grinned the host, joining him. He slapped him +on the back. "Well," said he, with a shifty look in his little pig's +eyes, "let us talk business. What do you think would be your fair +commission? You see, all the trouble and invention have been mine. What +do you say to four hundred pounds?" + +"Five," said Aristide, promptly. + +A sudden gleam came into the little pig's eyes. + +"Done!" said Mr. Smith, who had imagined that the other would demand a +thousand and was prepared to pay eight hundred. "Done!" said he again. + +They shook hands to seal the bargain and drank another glass of old +brandy. At that moment, a servant, entering, took the host aside. + +"Please excuse me a moment," said he, and went with the servant out of +the room. + +Aristide, left alone, lighted another of his kind host's fat cigars +and threw himself into a great leathern arm-chair by the fire, and +surrendered himself deliciously to the soothing charm of the moment. Now +and then he laughed, finding a certain comicality in his position. And +what a charming father-in-law, this kind Mr. Smith! + +His cheerful reflections were soon disturbed by the sudden irruption of +his host and a grizzled, elderly, foxy-faced gentleman with a white +moustache, wearing the ribbon of the Legion of Honour in the buttonhole +of his overcoat. + +"Here, you!" cried the kind Mr. Smith, striding up to Aristide, with a +very red face. "Will you have the kindness to tell me who the devil you +are?" + +Aristide rose, and, putting his hands behind the tails of his +frock-coat, stood smiling radiantly on the hearthrug. A wit much less +alert than my irresponsible friend's would have instantly appreciated +the fact that the real Simon Pure had arrived on the scene. + +"I, my dear friend," said he, "am the Baron de Je ne Sais Plus." + +"You're a confounded impostor," spluttered Mr. Smith. + +"And this gentleman here to whom I have not had the pleasure of being +introduced?" asked Aristide, blandly. + +"I am M. Poiron, monsieur, the agent of Messrs. Brauneberger and +Compagnie, art dealers, of the Rue Notre Dame des Petits Champs of +Paris," said the new-comer, with an air of defiance. + +"Ah, I thought you were the Baron," said Aristide. + +"There's no blooming Baron at all about it!" screamed Mr. Smith. "Are +you Poiron, or is he?" + +"I would not have a name like Poiron for anything in the world," said +Aristide. "My name is Aristide Pujol, soldier of fortune, at your +service." + +"How the blazes did you get here?" + +"Your servant asked me if I was a French gentleman from Manchester. I +was. He said that Mr. Smith had sent his carriage for me. I thought it +hospitable of the kind Mr. Smith. I entered the carriage--_et voilà!_" + +"Then clear out of here this very minute," said Mr. Smith, reaching +forward his hand to the bell-push. + +Aristide checked his impulsive action. + +"Pardon me, dear host," said he. "It is raining dogs and cats outside. I +am very comfortable in your luxurious home. I am here, and here I +stay." + +"I'm shot if you do," said the kind Mr. Smith, his face growing redder +and uglier. "Now, will you go out, or will you be thrown out?" + +Aristide, who had no desire whatever to be ejected from this snug nest +into the welter of the wet and friendless world, puffed at his cigar, +and looked at his host with the irresistible drollery of his eyes. + +"You forget, _mon cher ami_," said he, "that neither the beautiful Miss +Christabel nor her affianced, the Honourable Harry, M.P., would care to +know that the talented Gottschalk got only eight pounds, not even +guineas, for painting that three-thousand-pound picture." + +"So it's blackmail, eh?" + +"Precisely," said Aristide, "and I don't blush at it." + +"You infernal little blackguard!" + +"I seem to be in congenial company," said Aristide. "I don't think our +friend M. Poiron has more scruples than he has right to the ribbon of +the Legion of Honour which he is wearing." + +"How much will you take to go out? I have a cheque-book handy." + +Mr. Smith moved a few steps from the hearthrug. Aristide sat down in the +arm-chair. An engaging, fantastic impudence was one of the charms of +Aristide Pujol. + +"I'll take five hundred pounds," said he, "to stay in." + +"Stay in?" Mr. Smith grew apoplectic. + +"Yes," said Aristide. "You can't do without me. Your daughter and your +servants know me as M. le Baron--by the way, what is my name? And where +is my historic château in Languedoc?" + +"Mireilles," said M. Poiron, who was sitting grim and taciturn on one of +the dining-room chairs. "And the place is the same, near Montpellier." + +"I like to meet an intelligent man," said Aristide. + +"I should like to wring your infernal neck," said the kind Mr. Smith. +"But, by George, if we do let you in you'll have to sign me a receipt +implicating yourself up to the hilt. I'm not going to be put into the +cart by you, you can bet your life." + +"Anything you like," said Aristide, "so long as we all swing together." + + * * * * * + +Now, when Aristide Pujol arrived at this point in his narrative I, his +chronicler, who am nothing if not an eminently respectable, law-abiding +Briton, took him warmly to task for his sheer absence of moral sense. +His eyes, as they sometimes did, assumed a luminous pathos. + + [Illustration: "I'LL TAKE FIVE HUNDRED POUNDS," SAID HE, "TO STAY IN"] + +"My dear friend," said he, "have you ever faced the world in a foreign +country in December with no character and fifteen pounds five and +three-pence in your pocket? Five hundred pounds was a fortune. It is +one now. And to be gained just by lending oneself to a good farce, which +didn't hurt anybody. You and your British morals! Bah!" said he, with a +fine flourish. + + * * * * * + +Aristide, after much parleying, was finally admitted into the nefarious +brotherhood. He was to retain his rank as the Baron de Mireilles, and +play the part of the pecuniarily inconvenienced nobleman forced to sell +some of his rare collection. Mr. Smith had heard of the Corot through +their dear old common friend, Jules Dancourt of Rheims, had mentioned it +alluringly to the Honourable Harry, had arranged for the Baron, who was +visiting England, to bring it over and dispatch it to Mr. Smith's house, +and on his return from Manchester to pay a visit to Mr. Smith, so that +he could meet the Honourable Harry in person. In whatever transaction +ensued Mr. Smith, so far as his prospective son-in-law was concerned, +was to be the purely disinterested friend. It was Aristide's wit which +invented a part for the supplanted M. Poiron. He should be the eminent +Parisian expert who, chancing to be in London, had been telephoned for +by the kind Mr. Smith. + +"It would not be wise for M. Poiron," said Aristide, chuckling inwardly +with puckish glee, "to stay here for the night--or for two or three +days--or a week--like myself. He must go back to his hotel when the +business is concluded." + +"_Mais, pardon!_" cried M. Poiron, who had been formally invited, and +had arrived late solely because he had missed his train at Manchester, +and come on by the next one. "I cannot go out into the wet, and I have +no hotel to go to." + +Aristide appealed to his host. "But he is unreasonable, _cher ami_. He +must play his _rôle_. M. Poiron has been telephoned for. He can't +possibly stay here. Surely five hundred pounds is worth one little night +of discomfort? And there are a legion of hotels in London." + +"Five hundred pounds!" exclaimed M. Poiron. "_Qu'est-ce que vous chantez +là?_ I want more than five hundred pounds." + +"Then you're jolly well not going to get it," cried Mr. Smith, in a +rage. "And as for you"--he turned on Aristide--"I'll wring your infernal +neck yet." + +"Calm yourself, calm yourself!" smiled Aristide, who was enjoying +himself hugely. + +At this moment the door opened and Miss Christabel appeared. On seeing +the decorated stranger she started with a little "Oh!" of surprise. + +"I beg your pardon." + +Mr. Smith's angry face wreathed itself in smiles. + +"This, my darling, is M. Poiron, the eminent Paris expert, who has been +good enough to come and give us his opinion on the picture." + +M. Poiron bowed. Aristide advanced. + +"Mademoiselle, your appearance is like a mirage in a desert." + +She smiled indulgently and turned to her father. "I've been wondering +what had become of you. Harry has been here for the last half-hour." + +"Bring him in, dear child, bring him in!" said Mr. Smith, with all the +heartiness of the fine old English gentleman. "Our good friends are +dying to meet him." + +The girl flickered out of the room like a sunbeam (the phrase is +Aristide's), and the three precious rascals put their heads together in +a hurried and earnest colloquy. Presently Miss Christabel returned, and +with her came the Honourable Harry Ralston, a tall, soldierly fellow, +with close-cropped fair curly hair and a fair moustache, and frank blue +eyes that, even in Parliament, had seen no harm in his fellow-creatures. +Aristide's magical vision caught him wincing ever so little at Mr. +Smith's effusive greeting and overdone introductions. He shook Aristide +warmly by the hand. + +"You have a beauty there, Baron, a perfect beauty," said he, with the +insane ingenuousness of youth. "I wonder how you can manage to part with +it." + +"_Ma foi_," said Aristide, with his back against the end of the +dining-table and gazing at the masterpiece. "I have so many at the +Château de Mireilles. When one begins to collect, you know--and when +one's grandfather and father have had also the divine mania----" + +"You were saying, M. le Baron," said M. Poiron of Paris, "that your +respected grandfather bought this direct from Corot himself." + +"A commission," said Aristide. "My grandfather was a patron of Corot." + +"Do you like it, dear?" asked the Honourable Harry. + +"Oh, yes!" replied the girl, fervently. "It is beautiful. I feel like +Harry about it." She turned to Aristide. "How can you part with it? Were +you really in earnest when you said you would like me to come and see +your collection?" + +"For me," said Aristide, "it would be a visit of enchantment." + +"You must take me, then," she whispered to Harry. "The Baron has been +telling us about his lovely old château." + +"Will you come, monsieur?" asked Aristide. + +"Since I'm going to rob you of your picture," said the young man, with +smiling courtesy, "the least I can do is to pay you a visit of apology. +Lovely!" said he, going up to the Corot. + +Aristide took Miss Christabel, now more bewitching than ever with the +glow of young love in her eyes and a flush on her cheek, a step or two +aside and whispered:-- + +"But he is charming, your fiancé! He almost deserves his good fortune." + +"Why almost?" she laughed, shyly. + +"It is not a man, but a demi-god, that would deserve you, mademoiselle." + +M. Poiron's harsh voice broke out. + +"You see, it is painted in the beginning of Corot's later manner--it is +1864. There is the mystery which, when he was quite an old man, became a +trick. If you were to put it up to auction at Christie's it would fetch, +I am sure, five thousand pounds." + +"That's more than I can afford to give," said the young man, with a +laugh. "Mr. Smith mentioned something between three and four thousand +pounds. I don't think I can go above three." + +"I have nothing to do with it, my dear boy, nothing whatever," said Mr. +Smith, rubbing his hands. "You wanted a Corot. I said I thought I could +put you on to one. It's for the Baron here to mention his price. I +retire now and for ever." + +"Well, Baron?" said the young man, cheerfully. "What's your idea?" + +Aristide came forward and resumed his place at the end of the table. The +picture was in front of him beneath the strong electric light; on his +left stood Mr. Smith and Poiron, on his right Miss Christabel and the +Honourable Harry. + +"I'll not take three thousand pounds for it," said Aristide. "A picture +like that! Never!" + +"I assure you it would be a fair price," said Poiron. + +"You mentioned that figure yourself only just now," said Mr. Smith, with +an ugly glitter in his little pig's eyes. + +"I presume, gentlemen," said Aristide, "that this picture is my own +property." He turned engagingly to his host. "Is it not, _cher ami_?" + +"Of course it is. Who said it wasn't?" + +"And you, M. Poiron, acknowledge formally that it is mine," he asked, in +French. + +"_Sans aucun doute._" + +"_Eh bien_," said Aristide, throwing open his arms and gazing round +sweetly. "I have changed my mind. I do not sell the picture at all." + +"Not sell it? What the--what do you mean?" asked Mr. Smith, striving to +mellow the gathering thunder on his brow. + +"I do not sell," said Aristide. "Listen, my dear friends!" He was in the +seventh heaven of happiness--the principal man, the star, taking the +centre of the stage. "I have an announcement to make to you. I have +fallen desperately in love with mademoiselle." + +There was a general gasp. Mr. Smith looked at him, red-faced and +open-mouthed. Miss Christabel blushed furiously and emitted a sound half +between a laugh and a scream. Harry Ralston's eyes flashed. + +"My dear sir----" he began. + +"Pardon," said Aristide, disarming him with the merry splendour of his +glance. "I do not wish to take mademoiselle from you. My love is +hopeless! I know it. But it will feed me to my dying day. In return for +the joy of this hopeless passion I will not sell you the picture--I give +it to you as a wedding present." + +He stood, with the air of a hero, both arms extended towards the amazed +pair of lovers. + +"I give it to you," said he. "It is mine. I have no wish but for your +happiness. In my Château de Mireilles there are a hundred others." + +"This is madness!" said Mr. Smith, bursting with suppressed indignation, +so that his bald head grew scarlet. + +"My dear fellow!" said Mr. Harry Ralston. "It is unheard-of generosity +on your part. But we can't accept it." + +"Then," said Aristide, advancing dramatically to the picture, "I take it +under my arm, I put it in a hansom cab, and I go with it back to +Languedoc." + +Mr. Smith caught him by the wrist and dragged him out of the room. + +"You little brute! Do you want your neck broken?" + +"Do you want the marriage of your daughter with the rich and Honourable +Harry broken?" asked Aristide. + +"Oh, damn! Oh, damn! Oh, damn!" cried Mr. Smith, stamping about +helplessly and half weeping. + +Aristide entered the dining-room and beamed on the company. + +"The kind Mr. Smith has consented. Mr. Honourable Harry and Miss +Christabel, there is your Corot. And now, may I be permitted?" He rang +the bell. A servant appeared. + +"Some champagne to drink to the health of the fiancés," he cried. "Lots +of champagne." + +Mr. Smith looked at him almost admiringly. + +"By Jove!" he muttered. "You _have_ got a nerve." + + * * * * * + +"_Voilà!_" said Aristide, when he had finished the story. + +"And did they accept the Corot?" I asked. + +"Of course. It is hanging now in the big house in Hampshire. I stayed +with the kind Mr. Smith for six weeks," he added, doubling himself up in +his chair and hugging himself with mirth, "and we became very good +friends. And I was at the wedding." + +"And what about their honeymoon visit to Languedoc?" + +"Alas!" said Aristide. "The morning before the wedding I had a +telegram--it was from my old father at Aigues-Mortes--to tell me that +the historic Château de Mireilles, with my priceless collection of +pictures, had been burned to the ground." + + + + +IV + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE FOUNDLING + + +There was a time when Aristide Pujol, in sole charge of an automobile, +went gaily scuttering over the roads of France. I use the word +advisedly. If you had heard the awful thing as it passed by you would +agree that it is the only word adequate to express its hideous mode of +progression. It was a two-seated, scratched, battered, ramshackle tin +concern of hoary antiquity, belonging to the childhood of the race. Not +only horses, but other automobiles shied at it. It was a vehicle of +derision. Yet Aristide regarded it with glowing pride and drove it with +such daredevilry that the parts must have held together only through +sheer breathless wonder. Had it not been for the car, he told me, he +would not have undertaken the undignified employment in which he was +then engaged--the mountebank selling of a corn-cure in the public places +of small towns and villages. It was not a fitting pursuit for a late +managing director of a public company and an ex-Professor of French in +an English Academy for Young Ladies. He wanted to rise, _ma foi_, not +descend in the social scale. But when hunger drives--_que voulez-vous_? +Besides, there was the automobile. It is true he had bound himself by +his contract to exhibit a board at the back bearing a flaming picture of +the success of the cure and a legend: "_Guérissez vos cors_," and to +display a banner with the same device, when weather permitted. But, +still, there was the automobile. + +It had been lying for many motor-ages in the shed of the proprietors of +the cure, the Maison Hiéropath of Marseilles, neglected, forlorn, eaten +by rust and worm, when suddenly an idea occurred to their business +imagination. Why should they not use the automobile to advertise and +sell the cure about the country? The apostle in charge would pay for his +own petrol, take a large percentage on sales, and the usual traveller's +commission on orders that he might place. But where to find an apostle? +Brave and desperate men came in high hopes, looked at the car, and, +shaking their heads sorrowfully, went away. At last, at the loosest of +ends, came Aristide. The splendour of the idea--a poet, in his way, was +Aristide, and the Idea was the thing that always held him captive--the +splendour of the idea of dashing up to hotels in his own automobile +dazed him. He beheld himself doing his hundred kilometres an hour and +trailing clouds of glory whithersoever he went. To a child a moth-eaten +rocking-horse is a fiery Arab of the plains; to Aristide Pujol this +cheat of the scrap-heap was a sixty-horse-power thunderer and devourer +of space. + +How they managed to botch up her interior so that she moved unpushed +is a mystery which Aristide, not divining, could not reveal; and when +and where he himself learned to drive a motor-car is also vague. I +believe the knowledge came by nature. He was a fellow of many weird +accomplishments. He could conjure; he could model birds and beasts out +of breadcrumb; he could play the drum--so well that he had a kettle-drum +hanging round his neck during most of his military service; he could +make omelettes and rabbit-hutches; he could imitate any animal that ever +emitted sound--a gift that endeared him to children; he could do almost +anything you please--save stay in one place and acquire material +possessions. The fact that he had never done a thing before was to him +no proof of his inability to do it. In his superb self-confidence he +would have undertaken to conduct the orchestra at Covent Garden or +navigate a liner across the Atlantic. Knowing this, I cease to bother my +head about so small a matter as the way in which he learned to drive a +motor-car. + +Behold him, then, one raw March morning, scuttering along the road that +leads from Arles to Salon, in Provence. He wore a goat-skin coat and a +goat-skin cap drawn down well over his ears. His handsome bearded face, +with its lustrous, laughing eyes, peeped out curiously human amid the +circumambient shagginess. There was not a turn visible in the long, +straight road that lost itself in the far distant mist; not a speck on +it signifying cart or creature. Aristide Pujol gave himself up to the +delirium of speed and urged the half-bursting engine to twenty miles an +hour. In spite of the racing-track surface, the crazy car bumped and +jolted; the sides of the rickety bonnet clashed like cymbals; every +valve wheezed and squealed; every nut seemed to have got loose and +terrifically clattered; rattling noises, grunting noises, screeching +noises escaped from every part; it creaked and clanked like an +over-insured tramp-steamer in a typhoon; it lurched as though afflicted +with loco-motor ataxy; and noisome vapours belched forth from the open +exhaust-pipe as though the car were a Tophet on wheels. But all was +music in the ears of Aristide. The car was going (it did not always go), +the road scudded under him, and the morning air dashed stingingly into +his face. For the moment he desired nothing more of life. + +This road between Arles and Salon runs through one of the most desolate +parts of France: a long, endless plain, about five miles broad, lying +between two long low ranges of hills. It is strewn like a monstrous +Golgotha, not with skulls, but with huge smooth pebbles, as massed +together as the shingle on a beach. Rank grass shoots up in what +interstices it finds; but beyond this nothing grows. Nothing can grow. +On a sunless day under a lowering sky it is a land accursed. Mile after +mile for nearly twenty miles stretches this stony and barren waste. No +human habitation cheers the sight, for from such a soil no human hand +could wrest a sustenance. Only the rare traffic going from Arles to +Salon and from Salon to Arles passes along the road. The cheery passing +show of the live highway is wanting; there are no children, no dogs, +no ducks and hens, no men and women lounging to their work; no +red-trousered soldiers on bicycles, no blue-bloused, weather-beaten +farmers jogging along in their little carts. As far as the eye can reach +nothing suggestive of man meets the view. Nothing but the infinite +barrenness of the plain, the ridges on either side, the long, straight, +endless road cleaving through this abomination of desolation. + +To walk through it would be a task as depressing as mortal could +execute. But to the speed-drunken motorist it is a realization of dim +and tremulous visions of Paradise. What need to look to right or left +when you are swallowing up free mile after mile of dizzying road? +Aristide looked neither to right nor left, and knew this was heaven at +last. + + [Illustration: BETWEEN THE FOLDS OF THE BLANKET PEEPED THE FACE OF A + SLEEPING CHILD] + +Suddenly, however, he became aware of a small black spot far ahead in +the very middle of the unencumbered track. As he drew near it looked +like a great stone. He swerved as he passed it, and, looking, saw that +it was a bundle wrapped in a striped blanket. It seemed so odd that it +should be lying there that, his curiosity being aroused, he pulled up +and walked back a few yards to examine it. The nearer he approached the +less did it resemble an ordinary bundle. He bent down, and lo! between +the folds of the blanket peeped the face of a sleeping child. + +"_Nom de Dieu!_" cried Aristide. "_Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" + +He ought not to have said it, but his astonishment was great. He stared +at the baby, then up and down the road, then swept the horizon. Not a +soul was visible. How did the baby get there? The heavens, according to +history, have rained many things in their time: bread, quails, blood, +frogs, and what not; but there is no mention of them ever having rained +babies. It could not, therefore, have come from the clouds. It could not +even have fallen from the tail of a cart, for then it would have been +killed, or at least have broken its bones and generally been rendered a +different baby from the sound, chubby mite sleeping as peacefully as +though the Golgotha of Provence had been its cradle from birth. It could +not have come there accidentally. Deliberate hands had laid it down; in +the centre of the road, too. Why not by the side, where it would have +been out of the track of thundering automobiles? When the murderous +intent became obvious Aristide shivered and felt sick. He breathed +fierce and honest anathema on the heads of the bowelless fiends who had +abandoned the babe to its doom. Then he stooped and picked up the bundle +tenderly in his arms. + +The wee face puckered for a moment and the wee limbs shot out +vigorously; then the dark eyes opened and stared Aristide solemnly and +wonderingly in the face. So must the infant Remus have first regarded +his she-wolf mother. Having ascertained, however, that it was not going +to be devoured, it began to cry lustily, showing two little white specks +of teeth in the lower gum. + +"_Mon pauvre petit_, you are hungry," said Aristide, carrying it to the +car racked by the clattering engine. "I wonder when you last tasted +food? If I only had a little biscuit and wine to give you; but, alas! +there's nothing but petrol and corn-cure, neither of which, I believe, +is good for babies. Wait, wait, _mon chèri_, until we get to Salon. +There I promise you proper nourishment." + +He danced the baby up and down in his arms and made half-remembered and +insane noises, which eventually had the effect of reducing it to its +original calm stare of wonderment. + +"_Voilà_," said Aristide, delighted. "Now we can advance." + +He deposited it on the vacant seat, clambered up behind the wheel, and +started. But not at the break-neck speed of twenty miles an hour. He +went slowly and carefully, his heart in his mouth at every lurch of the +afflicted automobile, fearful lest the child should be precipitated from +its slippery resting-place. But, alas! he did not proceed far. At the +end of a kilometre the engine stopped dead. He leaped out to see what +had happened, and, after a few perplexed and exhausting moments, +remembered. He had not even petrol to offer to the baby, having +omitted--most feather-headed of mortals--to fill up his tank before +starting, and forgotten to bring a spare tin. There was nothing to be +done save wait patiently until another motorist should pass by from whom +he might purchase the necessary amount of essence to carry him on to +Salon. Meanwhile the baby would go breakfastless. Aristide clambered +back to his seat, took the child on his knees, and commiserated it +profoundly. Sitting there on his apparently home-made vehicle, in the +midst of the unearthly silence of the sullen and barren wilderness, +attired in his shaggy goat-skin cap and coat, he resembled an up-to-date +Robinson Crusoe dandling an infant Friday. + +The disposal of the child at Salon would be simple. After having it fed +and tended at an hotel, he would make his deposition to the police, who +would take it to the Enfants Trouvés, the department of State which +provides fathers and mothers and happy homes for foundlings at a cost to +the country of twenty-five francs a month per foundling. It is true that +the parents so provided think more of the twenty-five francs than they +do of the foundling. But that was the affair of the State, not of +Aristide Pujol. In the meanwhile he examined the brat curiously. It was +dressed in a coarse calico jumper, very unclean. The striped blanket was +full of holes and smelled abominably. Some sort of toilet appeared +essential. He got down and from his valise took what seemed necessary to +the purpose. The jumper and blanket he threw far on the pebbly waste. +The baby, stark naked for a few moments, crowed and laughed and +stretched like a young animal, revealing itself to be a sturdy boy about +nine months old. When he seemed fit to be clad Aristide tied him up in +the lower part of a suit of pyjamas, cutting little holes in the sides +for his tiny arms; and, further, with a view to cheating his hunger, +provided him with a shoe-horn. The defenceless little head he managed to +squeeze into the split mouth of a woollen sock. Aristide regarded him in +triumph. The boy chuckled gleefully. Then Aristide folded him warm in +his travelling-rug and entered into an animated conversation. + +Now it happened that, at the most interesting point of the talk, the +baby clutched Aristide's finger in his little brown hand. The tiny +fingers clung strong. + +A queer thrill ran through the impressionable man. The tiny fingers +seemed to close round his heart.... It was a bonny, good-natured, +gurgling scrap--and the pure eyes looked truthfully into his soul. + +"Poor little wretch!" said Aristide, who, peasant's son that he was, +knew what he was talking about. "Poor little wretch! If you go into the +Enfants Trouvés you'll have a devil of a time of it." + +The tiny clasp tightened. As if the babe understood, the chuckle died +from his face. + +"You'll be cuffed and kicked and half starved, while your adopted mother +pockets her twenty-five francs a month, and you'll belong to nobody, and +wonder why the deuce you're alive, and wish you were dead; and, if you +remember to-day, you'll curse me for not having had the decency to run +over you." + +The clasp relaxed, puckers appeared at the corners of the dribbling +mouth, and a myriad tiny horizontal lines of care marked the sock-capped +brow. + +"Poor little devil!" said Aristide. "My heart bleeds for you, especially +now that you're dressed in my sock and pyjama, and are sucking the only +shoe-horn I ever possessed." + +A welcome sound caused Aristide to leap into the middle of the road. He +looked ahead, and there, in a cloud of dust, a thing like a torpedo came +swooping down. He held up both his arms, the signal of a motorist in +distress. The torpedo approached with slackened speed, and stopped. It +was an evil-looking, drab, high-powered racer, and two bears with +goggles sat in the midst thereof. The bear at the wheel raised his cap +and asked courteously:-- + +"What can we do for you, monsieur?" + +At that moment the baby broke into heart-rending cries. Aristide took +off his goat-skin cap and, remaining uncovered, looked at the bear, then +at the baby, then at the bear again. + +"Monsieur," said he, "I suppose it's useless to ask you whether you have +any milk and a feeding-bottle?" + +"_Mais dites donc!_" shouted the bear, furiously, his hand on the brake. +"Stop an automobile like this on such a pretext----?" + +Aristide held up a protesting hand, and fixed the bear with the +irresistible roguery of his eyes. + +"Pardon, monsieur, I am also out of petrol. Forgive a father's feelings. +The baby wants milk and I want petrol, and I don't know whose need is +the more imperative. But if you could sell me enough petrol to carry me +to Salon I should be most grateful." + +The request for petrol is not to be refused. To supply it, if possible, +is the written law of motordom. The second bear slid from his seat and +extracted a tin from the recesses of the torpedo, and stood by while +Aristide filled his tank, a process that necessitated laying the baby on +the ground. He smiled. + +"You seem amused," said Aristide. + +"_Parbleu!_" said the motorist. "You have at the back of your auto a +placard telling people to cure their corns, and in front you carry a +baby." + +"That," replied Aristide, "is easily understood. I am the agent of the +Maison Hiéropath of Marseilles, and the baby, whom I, its father, am +carrying from a dead mother to an invalid aunt, I am using as an +advertisement. As he luckily has no corns, I can exhibit his feet as a +proof of the efficacy of the corn-cure." + +The bear laughed and joined his companion, and the torpedo thundered +away. Aristide replaced the baby, and with a complicated arrangement of +string fastened it securely to the seat. The baby, having ceased crying, +clutched his beard as he bent over, and "goo'd" pleasantly. The tug was +at his heart-strings. How could he give so fascinating, so valiant a +mite over to the Enfants Trouvés? Besides, it belonged to him. Had he +not in jest claimed paternity? It had given him a new importance. He +could say "_mon fils_," just as he could say (with equal veracity) "_mon +automobile_." A generous thrill ran through him. He burst into a loud +laugh, clapped his hands, and danced before the delighted babe. + +"_Mon petit Jean_," said he, with humorous tenderness, "for I suppose +your name is Jean; I will rend myself in pieces before I let the +Administration board you out among the wolves. You shall not go to the +Enfants Trouvés. I myself will adopt you, _mon petit Jean_." + +As Aristide had no fixed abode whatever, the address on his +visiting-card, "213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris," being that of an old +greengrocer woman of his acquaintance, with whom he lodged when he +visited the metropolis, there was a certain amount of rashness in the +undertaking. But when was Aristide otherwise than rash? Had prudence +been his guiding principle through life he would not have been selling +corn-cure for the Maison Hiéropath, and consequently would not have +discovered the child at all. + +In great delight at this satisfactory settlement of little Jean's +destiny, he started the ramshackle engine and drove triumphantly on his +way. Jean, fatigued by the emotions of the last half-hour, slumbered +peacefully. + +"The little angel!" said Aristide. + +The sun was shining when they arrived at Salon, the gayest, the most +coquettish, the most laughing little town in Provence. It is a place all +trees and open spaces, and fountains and cafés, and sauntering people. +The only thing grim about it is the solitary machicolated tower in the +main street, the last vestige of ancient ramparts; and even that, close +cuddled on each side by prosperous houses with shops beneath, looks +like an old, old, wrinkled grandmother smiling amid her daintier +grandchildren. Everyone seemed to be in the open air. Those who kept +shops stood at the doorways. The prospect augured well for the Maison +Hiéropath. + +Aristide stopped before an hotel, disentangled Jean, to the mild +interest of the passers-by, and, carrying him in, delivered him into the +arms of the landlady. + +"Madame," he said, "this is my son. I am taking him from his mother, who +is dead, to an aunt who is an invalid. So he is alone on my hands. He is +very hungry, and I beseech you to feed him at once." + +The motherly woman received the babe instinctively and cast aside the +travelling-rug in which he was enveloped. Then she nearly dropped him. + +"_Mon Dieu! Qu'est-ce que c'est que ça?_" + +She stared in stupefaction at the stocking-cap and at the long flannel +pyjama legs that depended from the body of the infant, around whose +neck the waist was tightly drawn. Never since the world began had babe +masqueraded in such attire. Aristide smiled his most engaging smile. + +"My son's luggage has unfortunately been lost. His portmanteau, _pauvre +petit_, was so small. A poor widower, I did what I could. I am but a +mere man, madame." + +"Evidently," said the woman, with some asperity. + +Aristide took a louis from his purse. "If you will purchase him some +necessary articles of costume while I fulfil my duties towards the +Maison Hiéropath of Marseilles, which I represent, you will be doing me +a kindness." + +The landlady took the louis in a bewildered fashion. Allowing for the +baby's portmanteau to have gone astray, what, she asked, had become +of the clothes he must have been wearing? Aristide entered upon a +picturesque and realistic explanation. The landlady was stout, she was +stupid, she could not grasp the fantastic. + +"_Mon Dieu!_" she said. "To think that there are Christians who dress +their children like this!" She sighed exhaustively, and, holding the +grotesque infant close to her breast, disappeared indignantly to +administer the very greatly needed motherment. + + [Illustration: HE DEMONSTRATED THE PROPER APPLICATION OF THE CURE] + +Aristide breathed a sigh of relief, and after a well-earned _déjeuner_ +went forth with the car into the Place des Arbres and prepared to ply +his trade. First he unfurled the Hiéropath banner, which floated +proudly in the breeze. Then on a folding table he displayed his +collection of ointment-boxes (together with pills and a toothache-killer +which he sold on his own account) and a wax model of a human foot on +which were grafted putty corns in every stage of callosity. As soon as +half-a-dozen idlers collected he commenced his harangue. When their +numbers increased he performed prodigies of chiropody on the putty +corns, and demonstrated the proper application of the cure. He talked +incessantly all the while. He has told me, in the grand manner, that +this phase of his career was distasteful to him. But I scarcely believe +it. If ever a man loved to talk, it was Aristide Pujol; and what +profession, save that of an advocate, offers more occasion for wheedling +loquacity than that of a public vendor of quack medicaments? As a matter +of fact, he revelled in it. When he offered a free box of the cure to +the first lady who confessed the need thereof, and a blushing wench came +forward, the rascal revelled in the opportunity for badinage which set +the good-humoured crowd in a roar. He loved to exert his half-mesmeric +power. He had not the soul of a mountebank, for Aristide's soul had its +high and generous dwelling-place; but he had the puckish swiftness and +mischief of which the successful mountebank is made. And he was a +success because he treated it as an art, thinking nothing during its +practice of the material gain, laughing whole-heartedly, like his great +predecessor Tabarin of imperishable memory, and satisfying to the full +his instinct for the dramatic. On the other hand, ever since he started +life in the brass-buttoned shell-jacket of a _chasseur_ in a Marseilles +café, and dreamed dreams of the fairytale lives of the clients who +came in accompanied by beautifully dressed ladies, he had social +ambitions--and the social status of the mountebank is, to say the least +of it, ambiguous. Ah me! What would man be without the unattainable? + +Aristide pocketed his takings, struck his flag, dismantled his table, +and visited the shops of Salon in the interests of the Maison Hiéropath. +The day's work over, he returned to inquire for his supposititious +offspring. The landlady, all smiles, presented him with a transmogrified +Jean, cleansed and powdered, arrayed in the smug panoply of bourgeois +babyhood. Shoes with a pompon adorned his feet, and a rakish cap +decorated with white satin ribbons crowned his head. He also wore an +embroidered frock and a pelisse trimmed with rabbit-fur. Jean grinned +and dribbled self-consciously, and showed his two little teeth to the +proudest father in the world. The landlady invited the happy parent into +her little dark parlour beyond the office, and there exhibited a parcel +containing garments and implements whose use was a mystery to Aristide. +She also demanded the greater part of another louis. Aristide began to +learn that fatherhood is expensive. But what did it matter? + +After all, here was a babe equipped to face the exigencies of a +censorious world; in looks and apparel a credit to any father. As the +afternoon was fine, and as it seemed a pity to waste satin and +rabbit-fur on the murky interior of the hotel, Aristide borrowed a +perambulator from the landlady, and, joyous as a schoolboy, wheeled the +splendid infant through the sunny avenues of Salon. + +That evening a bed was made up for the child in Aristide's room, which, +until its master retired for the night, was haunted by the landlady, the +chambermaids and all the kitchen wenches in the hotel. Aristide had to +turn them out and lock his door. + +"This is excellent," said he, apostrophizing the thoroughly fed, washed, +and now sleeping child. "This is superb. As in every hotel there are +women, and as every woman thinks she can be a much better mother than I, +so in every hotel we visit we shall find a staff of trained and +enthusiastic nurses. Jean, you will live like a little _coq en pâté_." + +The night passed amid various excursions on the part of Aristide and +alarms on the part of Jean. Sometimes the child lay so still that +Aristide arose to see whether he was alive. Sometimes he gave such +proofs of vitality that Aristide, in terror lest he should awaken the +whole hotel, walked him about the room chanting lullabies. This was in +accordance with Jean's views on luxury. He "goo'd" with joy. When +Aristide put him back to bed he howled. Aristide snatched him up and +he "goo'd" again. At last Aristide fed him desperately, dandled him +eventually to sleep, and returned to an excited pillow. It is a fearsome +thing for a man to be left alone in the dead of night with a young baby. + +"I'll get used to it," said Aristide. + +The next morning he purchased a basket, which he lashed ingeniously on +the left-hand seat of the car, and a cushion, which he fitted into the +basket. The berth prepared, he deposited the sumptuously-apparelled Jean +therein and drove away, amid the perplexed benisons of the landlady and +her satellites. + +Thus began the oddest Odyssey on which ever mortals embarked. The man +with the automobile, the corn-cure, and the baby grew to be legendary in +the villages of Provence. When the days were fine, Jean in his basket +assisted at the dramatic performance in the market-place. Becoming a +magnet for the women, and being of a good-humoured and rollicking +nature, he helped on the sale of the cure prodigiously. He earned his +keep, as Aristide declared in exultation. Soon Aristide formed a +collection of his tricks and doings wherewith he would entertain the +chance acquaintances of his vagabondage. To a permanent companion he +would have grown insufferable. He invented him a career from the day of +his birth, chronicled the coming of the first tooth, wept over the +demise of the fictitious mother, and, in his imaginative way, convinced +himself of his fatherhood. And every day the child crept deeper into the +man's sunny heart. + + [Illustration: IT IS A FEARSOME THING FOR A MAN TO BE LEFT ALONE IN THE + DEAD OF NIGHT WITH A YOUNG BABY] + +Together they had many wanderings and many adventures. The wheezy, crazy +mechanism of the car went to bits in unexpected places. They tobogganed +down hills without a brake at the imminent peril of their lives. They +suffered the indignity of being towed by wine-wagons. They spent hours +by the wayside while Aristide took her to pieces and, sometimes with the +help of a passing motorist, put her together again. Sometimes, too, an +inn boasted no landlady, only a dishevelled and over-driven chambermaid, +who refused to wash Jean. Aristide washed and powdered Jean himself, the +landlord lounging by, pipe in mouth, administering suggestions. Once +Jean grew ill, and Aristide in terror summoned the doctor, who told him +that he had filled the child up with milk to bursting-point. Yet, in +spite of heterogeneous nursing and exposure to sun and rain and piercing +mistral, Jean throve exceedingly, and, to Aristide's delight, began to +cut another tooth. The vain man began to regard himself as an expert in +denticulture. + +At the end of a fairly-wide circuit, Aristide, with empty store-boxes +and pleasantly-full pockets, arrived at the little town of +Aix-en-Provence. He had arrived there not without difficulty. On the +outskirts the car, which had been coaxed reluctantly along for many +weary kilometres, had groaned, rattled, whirred, given a couple of +convulsive leaps, and stood stock-still. This was one of her pretty +ways. He was used to them, and hitherto he had been able to wheedle +her into resumed motion. But this time, with all his cunning and +perspiration, he could not induce another throb in the tired engines. +A friendly motorist towed them to the Hôtel de Paris in the Cours +Mirabeau. Having arranged for his room and given Jean in charge of the +landlady, he procured some helping hands, and pushed the car to the +nearest garage. There he gave orders for the car to be put into running +condition for the following morning, and returned to the hotel. + +He found Jean in the vestibule, sprawling sultanesquely on the +landlady's lap, the centre of an admiring circle which consisted of two +little girls in pigtails, an ancient peasant-woman, and two English +ladies of obvious but graceful spinsterhood. + +"Here is the father," said the landlady. + +He had already explained Jean to the startled woman--landladies were +always startled at Jean's unconventional advent. "Madame," he had said, +according to rigid formula, "this is my son. I am taking him from his +mother, who is dead, to an aunt who is an invalid, so he is alone on my +hands. I beseech you to let some kind woman attend to his necessities." + +There was no need for further explanation. Aristide, thus introduced, +bowed politely, removed his Crusoe cap, and smiled luminously at the +assembled women. They resumed their antiphonal chorus of worship. The +brown, merry, friendly brat had something of Aristide's personal charm. +He had a bubble and a "goo" for everyone. Aristide looked on in great +delight. Jean was a son to be proud of. + +"_Ah! qu'il est fort--fort comme un Turc._" + +"_Regardez ses dents._" + +"The darling thing!" + +"_Il est_--oh, dear!--_il est ravissante!_"--with a disastrous plunge +into gender. + +"_Tiens! il rit. C'est moi qui le fais rire._" + +"To think," said the younger Englishwoman to her sister, "of this wee +mite travelling about in an open motor!" + +"He's having the time of his life. He enjoys it as much as I do," said +Aristide, in his excellent English. + +The lady started. She was a well-bred, good-humoured woman in the early +thirties, stout, with reddish hair, and irregular though comely +features. Her sister was thin, faded, sandy, and kind-looking. + +"I thought you were French," she said, apologetically. + +"So I am," replied Aristide. "Provençal of Provence, Méridional of the +Midi, Marseillais of Marseilles." + +"But you talk English perfectly." + +"I've lived in your beautiful country," said Aristide. + +"You have the bonniest boy," said the elder lady. "How old is he?" + +"Nine months, three weeks and a day," said Aristide, promptly. + +The younger lady bent over the miraculous infant. + +"Can I take him? _Est-ce que je puis_--oh, dear!" She turned a whimsical +face to Aristide. + +He translated. The landlady surrendered the babe. The lady danced him +with the spinster's charming awkwardness, yet with instinctive feminine +security, about the hall, while the little girls in pigtails, daughters +of the house, followed like adoratory angels in an altar-piece, and the +old peasant-woman looked benignly on, a myriad-wrinkled St. Elizabeth. +Aristide had seen Jean dandled by dozens of women during their brief +comradeship; he had thought little of it, as it was the natural thing +for women to do; but when this sweet English lady mothered Jean it +seemed to matter a great deal. She lifted Jean and himself to a higher +plane. Her touch was a consecration. + +It was the hour of the day when infants of nine months should be washed +and put to bed. The landlady, announcing the fact, held out her arms. +Jean clung to his English nurse, who played the fascinating game of +pretending to eat his hand. The landlady had not that accomplishment. +She was dull and practical. + +"Come and be washed," she said. + +"Oh, do let me come, too," cried the English lady. + +"_Bien volontiers, mademoiselle_," said the other. "_C'est par ici._" + +The English lady held Jean out for the paternal good-night. Aristide +kissed the child in her arms. The action brought about, for the moment, +a curious and sweet intimacy. + +"My sister is passionately fond of children," said the elder lady, in +smiling apology. + +"And you?" + +"I, too. But Anne--my sister--will not let me have a chance when she is +by." + +After dinner Aristide went up, as usual, to his room to see that Jean +was alive, painless, and asleep. Finding him awake, he sat by his side +and, with the earnestness of a nursery-maid, patted him off to slumber. +Then he crept out on tiptoe and went downstairs. Outside the hotel he +came upon the two sisters sitting on a bench and drinking coffee. The +night was fine, the terraces of the neighbouring cafés were filled with +people, and all the life of Aix not at the cafés promenaded up and down +the wide and pleasant avenue. The ladies smiled. How was the boy? He +gave the latest news. Permission to join them at their coffee was +graciously given. A waiter brought a chair and he sat down. Conversation +drifted from the baby to general topics. The ladies told the simple +story of their tour. They had been to Nice and Marseilles, and they were +going on the next day to Avignon. They also told their name--Honeywood. +He gathered that the elder was Janet, the younger Anne. They lived at +Chislehurst when they were in England, and often came up to London to +attend the Queen's Hall concerts and the dramatic performances at His +Majesty's Theatre. As guileless, though as self-reliant, gentlewomen +as sequestered England could produce. Aristide, impressionable and +responsive, fell at once into the key of their talk. He has told me that +their society produced on him the effect of the cool hands of saints +against his cheek. + +At last the conversation inevitably returned to Jean. The landlady had +related the tragic history of the dead mother and the invalid aunt. They +deplored the orphaned state of the precious babe. For he was precious, +they declared. Miss Anne had taken him to her heart. + +"If only you had seen him in his bath, Janet!" + +She turned to Aristide. "I'm afraid," she said, very softly, hesitating +a little--"I'm afraid this must be a sad journey for you." + +He made a wry mouth. The sympathy was so sincere, so womanly. That which +was generous in him revolted against acceptance. + +"Mademoiselle," said he, "I can play a farce with landladies--it happens +to be convenient--in fact, necessary. But with you--no. You are +different. Jean is not my child, and who his parents are I've not the +remotest idea." + +"Not your child?" They looked at him incredulously. + +"I will tell you--in confidence," said he. + +Jean's history was related in all its picturesque details; the horrors +of the life of an _enfant trouvé_ luridly depicted. The sisters listened +with tears in their foolish eyes. Behind the tears Anne's grew bright. +When he had finished she stretched out her hand impulsively. + +"Oh, I call it splendid of you!" + +He took the hand and, in his graceful French fashion, touched it with +his lips. She flushed, having expected, in her English way, that he +would grasp it. + +"Your commendation, mademoiselle, is sweet to hear," said he. + +"I hope he will grow up to be a true comfort to you, M. Pujol," said +Miss Janet. + +"I can understand a woman doing what you've done, but scarcely a man," +said Miss Anne. + +"But, dear mademoiselle," cried Aristide, with a large gesture, "cannot +a man have his heart touched, his--his--_ses entrailles, enfin_--stirred +by baby fingers? Why should love of the helpless and the innocent be +denied him?" + +"Why, indeed?" said Miss Janet. + +Miss Anne said, humbly: "I only meant that your devotion to Jean was all +the more beautiful, M. Pujol." + +Soon after this they parted, the night air having grown chill. Both +ladies shook hands with him warmly. + +Anne's hand lingered the fraction of a second longer in his than +Janet's. She had seen Jean in his bath. + +Aristide wandered down the gay avenue into the open road and looked at +the stars, reading in their splendour a brilliant destiny for Jean. He +felt, in his sensitive way, that the two sweet-souled Englishwomen had +deepened and sanctified his love for Jean. When he returned to the hotel +he kissed his incongruous room-mate with the gentleness of a woman. + +In the morning he went round to the garage. The foreman mechanician +advanced to meet him. + +"Well?" + +"There is nothing to be done, monsieur." + +"What do you mean by 'nothing to be done'?" asked Aristide. + +The other shrugged his sturdy shoulders. + +"She is worn out. She needs new carburation, new cylinders, new +water-circulation, new lubrication, new valves, new brakes, new +ignition, new gears, new bolts, new nuts, new everything. In short, she +is not repairable." + +Aristide listened in incredulous amazement. His automobile, his +wonderful, beautiful, clashing, dashing automobile unrepairable! It was +impossible. But a quarter of an hour's demonstration by the foreman +convinced him. The car was dead. The engine would never whir again. All +the petrol in the world would not stimulate her into life. Never again +would he sit behind that wheel rejoicing in the insolence of speed. The +car, which, in spite of her manifold infirmities, he had fondly imagined +to be immortal, had run her last course. Aristide felt faint. + +"And there is nothing to be done?" + +"Nothing, monsieur. Fifty francs is all that she is worth." + +"At any rate," said Aristide, "send the basket to the Hôtel de Paris." + +He went out of the garage like a man in a dream. At the door he turned +to take a last look at the Pride of his Life. Her stern was towards him, +and all he saw of her was the ironical legend, "Cure your Corns." + +At the hotel he found the bench outside occupied chiefly by Jean. One +of the little girls in pigtails was holding him, while Miss Anne +administered the feeding-bottle. Provincial France is the happiest +country in the world--in that you can live your intimate, domestic life +in public, and nobody heeds. + +"I hope you've not come to tell Jean to boot and saddle," said Miss +Anne, a smile on her roughly-hewn, comely face. + +"Alas!" said Aristide, cheered by the charming spectacle before him. "I +don't know when we can get away. My auto has broken down hopelessly. I +ought to go at once to my firm in Marseilles"--he spoke as if he were a +partner in the Maison Hiéropath--"but I don't quite know what to do with +Jean." + +"Oh, I'll look after Jean." + +"But you said you were leaving for Avignon to-day." + + [Illustration: ONE OF THE LITTLE GIRLS IN PIGTAILS WAS HOLDING HIM, + WHILE MISS ANNE ADMINISTERED THE FEEDING-BOTTLE] + +She laughed, holding the feeding-bottle. "The Palace of the Popes has +been standing for six centuries, and it will be still standing +to-morrow; whereas Jean----" Here Jean, for some reason known to +himself, grinned wet and wide. "Isn't he the most fascinating thing of +the twentieth century?" she cried, logically inconsequential, like most +of her sex. "You go to Marseilles, M. Pujol." + +So Aristide took the train to Marseilles--a half-hour's journey--and in +a quarter of the city resembling a fusion of Jarrow, an unfashionable +part of St. Louis, and a brimstone-manufacturing suburb of Gehenna, he +interviewed the high authorities of the Maison Hiéropath. His cajolery +could lead men into diverse lunacies, but it could not induce the +hard-bitten manufacturer of quack remedies to provide a brand-new +automobile for his personal convenience. The old auto had broken down. +The manufacturer shrugged his shoulders. The mystery was that it had +lasted as long as it did. He had expected it to explode the first +day. The idea had originally been that of the junior partner, a +scatter-brained youth whom at times they humoured. Meanwhile, there +being no beplacarded and beflagged automobile, there could be no +advertisement; therefore they had no further use for M. Pujol's +services. + +"Good," said Aristide, when he reached the evil thoroughfare. "It was a +degraded occupation, and I am glad I am out of it. Meanwhile, here is +Marseilles before me, and it will be astonishing if I do not find some +fresh road to fortune before the day is out." + +Aristide tramped and tramped all day through the streets of Marseilles, +but the road he sought he did not find. He returned to Aix in dire +perplexity. He was used to finding himself suddenly cut off from the +means of livelihood. It was his chronic state of being. His gay +resourcefulness had always carried him through. But then there had been +only himself to think of. Now there was Jean. For the first time for +many years the dragon-fly's wings grew limp. Jean--what could he do with +Jean? + +Jean had already gone to sleep when he arrived. All day he had been as +good as gold, so Miss Anne declared. For herself, she had spent the +happiest day of her life. + +"I don't wonder at your being devoted to him, M. Pujol," she said. "He +has the most loving ways of any baby I ever met." + +"Yes, mademoiselle," replied Aristide, with an unaccustomed huskiness in +his voice, "I am devoted to him. It may seem odd for a man to be wrapped +up in a baby of nine months old--but--it's like that. It's true. _Je +l'adore de tout mon coeur, de tout mon être_," he cried, in a sudden +gust of passion. + +Miss Anne smiled kindly, not dreaming of his perplexity, amused by his +Southern warmth. Miss Janet joined them in the hall. They went in to +dinner, Aristide sitting at the central _table d'hôte_, the ladies at a +little table by themselves. After dinner they met again outside the +hotel, and drank coffee and talked the evening away. He was not as +bright a companion as on the night before. His gaiety was forced. He +talked about everything else in the world but Jean. The temptation to +pour his financial troubles into the sympathetic ears of these two dear +women he resisted. They regarded him as on a social equality, as a man +of means engaged in some sort of business at Marseilles; they had +invited him to bring Jean to see them at Chislehurst when he should +happen to be in England again. Pride forbade him to confess himself a +homeless, penniless vagabond. The exquisite charm of their frank +intimacy would be broken. Besides, what could they do? + +They retired early. Aristide again sought the message of the stars; but +the sky was clouded over, and soon a fine rain began to fall. A bock at +a café brought him neither comfort nor inspiration. He returned to the +hotel, and, eluding a gossip-seeking landlady, went up to his room. + +What could be done? Neither the sleeping babe nor himself could offer +any suggestion. One thing was grimly inevitable. He and Jean must part. +To carry him about like an infant prince in an automobile had, after +all, been a simple matter; to drag him through Heaven knew what +hardships in his makeshift existence was impossible. In his childlike, +impulsive fashion he had not thought of the future when he adopted Jean. +Aristide always regarded the fortune of the moment as if it would last +forever. Past deceptions never affected his incurable optimism. Now Jean +and he must part. Aristide felt that the end of the world had come. His +pacing to and fro awoke the child, who demanded, in his own way, the +soothing rocking of his father's arms. There he bubbled and "goo'd" till +Aristide's heart nearly broke. + +"What can I do with you, _mon petit Jean_?" + +The Enfants Trouvés, after all? He thought of it with a shudder. + +The child asleep again, he laid it on its bed, and then sat far into the +night thinking barrenly. At last one of his sudden gleams of inspiration +illuminated his mind. It was the only way. He took out his watch. It was +four o'clock. What had to be done must be done swiftly. + +In the travelling-basket, which had been sent from the garage, he placed +a pillow, and on to the pillow he transferred with breathless care the +sleeping Jean, and wrapped him up snug and warm in bedclothes. Then he +folded the tiny day-garments that lay on a chair, collected the little +odds and ends belonging to the child, took from his valise the rest of +Jean's little wardrobe, and laid them at the foot of the basket. The +most miserable man in France then counted up his money, divided it into +two parts, and wrote a hasty letter, which, with the bundle of notes, he +enclosed in an envelope. + +"My little Jean," said he, laying the envelope on the child's breast. +"Here is a little more than half my fortune. Half is for yourself and +the little more to pay your wretched father's hotel bill. Good-bye, my +little Jean. _Je t'aime bien, tu sais_--and don't reproach me." + + * * * * * + +About an hour afterwards Miss Anne awoke and listened, and in a moment +or two Miss Janet awoke also. + +"Janet, do you hear that?" + +"It's a child crying. It's just outside the door." + +"It sounds like Jean." + +"Nonsense, my dear!" + +But Anne switched on the light and went to see for herself; and there, +in the tiny anteroom that separated the bedroom from the corridor, she +found the basket--a new Pharoah's daughter before a new little Moses in +the bulrushes. In bewilderment she brought the ark into the room, and +read the letter addressed to Janet and herself. She burst into tears. +All she said was:-- + +"Oh, Janet, why couldn't he have told us?" + +And then she fell to hugging the child to her bosom. + +Meanwhile Aristide Pujol, clad in his goat-skin cap and coat, valise in +hand, was plodding through the rain in search of the elusive phantom, +Fortune; gloriously certain that he had assured Jean's future, yet with +such a heartache as he had never had in his life before. + + + + +V + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE PIG'S HEAD + + +Once upon a time Aristide Pujol found himself standing outside his Paris +residence, No. 213 _bis_, Rue Saint Honoré, without a penny in the +world. His last sou had gone to Madame Bidoux, who kept a small green +grocer's shop at No. 213 _bis_ and rented a ridiculously small back room +for a ridiculously small weekly sum to Aristide whenever he honoured the +French capital with his presence. During his absence she forwarded him +such letters as might arrive for him; and as this was his only permanent +address, and as he let Madame Bidoux know his whereabouts only at vague +intervals of time, the transaction of business with Aristide Pujol, +"Agent, No. 213 _bis_, Rue Saint Honoré, Paris," by correspondence was +peculiarly difficult. + +He had made Madame Bidoux's acquaintance in the dim past; and he had +made it in his usual direct and electric manner. Happening to walk down +the Rue Saint Honoré, he had come upon tragedy. Madame Bidoux, fat, red +of face, tearful of eye and strident of voice, held in her arms a +little mongrel dog--her own precious possession--which had just been run +over in the street, and the two of them filled the air with wailings and +vociferation. Aristide uncovered his head, as though he were about to +address a duchess, and smiled at her engagingly. + +"Madame," said he, "I perceive that your little dog has a broken leg. As +I know all about dogs, I will, with your permission, set the limb, put +it into splints and guarantee a perfect cure. Needless to say, I make no +charge for my services." + +Snatching the dog from the arms of the fascinated woman, he darted in +his dragon-fly fashion into the shop, gave a hundred orders to a +stupefied assistant, and--to cut short a story which Aristide told me +with great wealth of detail--mended the precious dog and gained Madame +Bidoux's eternal gratitude. For Madame Bidoux the world held no more +remarkable man than Aristide Pujol; and for Aristide the world held no +more devoted friend than Madame Bidoux. Many a succulent meal, at the +widow's expense--never more enjoyable than in summer time when she set a +little iron table and a couple of iron chairs on the pavement outside +the shop--had saved him from starvation; and many a gewgaw sent from +London or Marseilles or other such remote latitudes filled her heart +with pride. Since my acquaintance with Aristide I myself have called on +this excellent woman, and I hope I have won her esteem, though I have +never had the honour of eating pig's trotters and chou-croûte with her +on the pavement of the Rue Saint Honoré. It is an honour from which, +being an unassuming man, I shrink. + +Unfortunately Madame Bidoux has nothing further to do with the story I +am about to relate, save in one respect:-- + +There came a day--it was a bleak day in November, when Madame Bidoux's +temporary financial difficulties happened to coincide with Aristide's. +To him, unsuspicious of coincidence, she confided her troubles. He +emptied the meagre contents of his purse into her hand. + +"Madame Bidoux," said he with a flourish, and the air of a prince, "why +didn't you tell me before?" and without waiting for her blessing he went +out penniless into the street. + +Aristide was never happier than when he had not a penny piece in the +world. He believed, I fancy, in a dim sort of way, in God and the Virgin +and Holy Water and the Pope; but the faith that thrilled him to +exaltation was his faith in the inevitable happening of the unexpected. +He marched to meet it with the throbbing pulses of a soldier rushing to +victory or a saint to martyrdom. He walked up the Rue Saint Honoré, the +Rue de la Paix, along the Grands Boulevards, smiling on a world which +teemed with unexpectednesses, until he reached a café on the Boulevard +des Bonnes Filles de Calvaire. Here he was arrested by Fate, in the form +of a battered man in black, who, springing from the solitary frostiness +of the terrace, threw his arms about him and kissed him on both cheeks. + +"_Mais, c'est toi, Pujol!_" + +"_C'est toi, Roulard!_" + +Roulard dragged Aristide to his frosty table and ordered drinks. Roulard +had played the trumpet in the regimental band in which Aristide had +played the kettle drum. During their military service they had been +inseparables. Since those happy and ear-splitting days they had not met. +They looked at each other and laughed and thumped each other's +shoulders. + +"_Ce vieux Roulard!_" + +"_Ce sacré Pujol._" + +"And what are you doing?" asked Aristide, after the first explosions of +astonishment and reminiscence. + +A cloud overspread the battered man's features. He had a wife and five +children and played in theatre orchestras. At the present time he was +trombone in the "Tournée Gulland," a touring opera company. It was not +gay for a sensitive artist like him, and the trombone gave one a thirst +which it took half a week's salary to satisfy. _Mais enfin, que +veux-tu?_ It was life, a dog's life, but life was like that. Aristide, +he supposed, was making a fortune. Aristide threw back his head, and +laughed at the exquisite humour of the hypothesis, and gaily disclosed +his Micawberish situation. Roulard sat for a while thoughtful and +silent. Presently a ray of inspiration dispelled the cloud from the +features of the battered man. + +"_Tiens, mon vieux_," said he, "I have an idea." + +It was an idea worthy of Aristide's consideration. The drum of the +Tournée Gulland had been dismissed for drunkenness. The vacancy had not +been filled. Various executants who had drummed on approval--this being +an out-week of the tour--had driven the chef d'orchestre to the verge of +homicidal mania. Why should not Aristide, past master in drumming, find +an honourable position in the orchestra of the Tournée Gulland? + +Aristide's eyes sparkled, his fingers itched for the drumsticks, he +started to his feet. + +"_Mon vieux Roulard!_" he cried, "you have saved my life. More than +that, you have resuscitated an artist. Yes, an artist. _Sacré nom de +Dieu!_ Take me to this chef d'orchestre." + +So Roulard, when the hour of rehearsal drew nigh, conducted Aristide to +the murky recesses of a dirty little theatre in the Batignolles, where +Aristide performed such prodigies of repercussion that he was forthwith +engaged to play the drum, the kettle-drum, the triangle, the cymbals, +the castagnettes and the tambourine, in the orchestra of the Tournée +Gulland at the dazzling salary of thirty francs a week. + +To tell how Aristide drummed and cymballed the progress of Les +Huguenots, Carmen, La Juive, La Fille de Madame Angot and L'Arlésienne +through France would mean the rewriting of a "Capitaine Fracasse." To +hear the creature talk about it makes my mouth as a brick kiln and my +flesh as that of a goose. He was the Adonis, the Apollo, the Don Juan, +the Irresistible of the Tournée. Fled truculent bass and haughty tenor +before him; from diva to moustachioed contralto in the chorus, all the +ladies breathlessly watched for the fall of his handkerchief; he was +recognized, in fact, as a devil of a fellow. But in spite of these +triumphs, the manipulation of the drum, kettle-drum, triangle, cymbals, +castagnettes and tambourine, which at first had given him intense and +childish delight, at last became invested with a mechanical monotony +that almost drove him mad. All day long the thought of the ill-lit +corner, on the extreme right of the orchestra, garnished with the +accursed instruments of noise to which duty would compel him at eight +o'clock in the evening hung over him like a hideous doom. Sweet singers +of the female sex were powerless to console. He passed them by, and +haughty tenor and swaggering basso again took heart of grace. + +"_Mais, mon Dieu, c'est le métier!_" expostulated Roulard. + +"_Sale métier!_" cried Aristide, who was as much fitted for the +merciless routine of a theatre orchestra as a quagga for the shafts of +an omnibus. "A beast of a trade! One is no longer a man. One is just an +automatic system of fog-signals!" + +In this depraved state of mind he arrived at Perpignan, where that +befell him which I am about to relate. + +Now, Perpignan is the last town of France on the Gulf of Lions, a few +miles from the Spanish border. From it you can see the great white +monster of Le Canigou, the pride of the Eastern Pyrenees, far, far away, +blocking up the valley of the Tet, which flows sluggishly past the +little town. The Quai Sadi-Carnot (is there a provincial town in France +which has not a _something_ Sadi-Carnot in it?) is on the left bank +of the Tet; at one end is the modern Place Arago, at the other Le +Castillet, a round, castellated red-brick fortress with curiously long +and deep machicolations of the 14th century with some modern additions +of Louis XI, who also built the adjoining Porte Notre Dame which gives +access to the city. Between the Castillet and the Place Arago, the Quai +Sadi-Carnot is the site of the Prefecture, the Grand Hôtel, various +villas and other resorts of the aristocracy. Any little street off it +will lead you into the seething centre of Perpignan life--the Place de +la Loge, which is a great block of old buildings surrounded on its four +sides by narrow streets of shops, cafés, private houses, all with +balconies and jalousies, all cramped, crumbling, Spanish, picturesque. +The oldest of this conglomerate block is a corner building, the Loge de +Mer, a thirteenth century palace, the cloth exchange in the glorious +days when Perpignan was a seaport and its merchant princes traded with +Sultans and Doges and such-like magnificoes of the Mediterranean. But +nowadays its glory has departed. Below the great gothic windows spreads +the awning of a café, which takes up all the ground floor. Hugging it +tight is the Mairie, and hugging that, the Hôtel de Ville. Hither does +every soul in the place, at some hour or other of the day, inevitably +gravitate. Lawyers and clients, doctors and patients, merchants, lovers, +soldiers, market-women, loafers, horses, dogs, wagons, all crowd in a +noisy medley the narrow cobble-paved streets around the Loge. Of course +there are other streets, tortuous, odorous and cool, intersecting the +old town, and there are various open spaces, one of which is the broad +market square on one side flanked by the Théâtre Municipal. + +From the theatre Aristide Pujol issued one morning after rehearsal, +and, leaving his colleagues, including the ever-thirsty Roulard, to +refresh themselves at a humble café hard by, went forth in search of +distraction. He idled about the Place de la Loge, passed the time of day +with a café waiter until the latter, with a disconcerting "_Voilà! +Voilà!_" darted off to attend to a customer, and then strolled through +the Porte Notre Dame onto the Quai Sadi-Carnot. There a familiar sound +met his ears--the roll of a drum followed by an incantation in a +quavering, high-pitched voice. It was the Town Crier, with whom, as with +a brother artist, he had picked acquaintance the day before. + +They met by the parapet of the Quai, just as Père Bracasse had come to +the end of his incantation. The old man, grizzled, tanned and seamed, +leant weakly against the parapet. + +"How goes it, Père Bracasse?" + +"Alas, mon bon Monsieur, it goes from bad to worse," sighed the old man. +"I am at the end of my strength. My voice has gone and the accursed +rheumatism in my shoulder gives me atrocious pain whenever I beat the +drum." + +"How much more of your round have you to go?" asked Aristide. + +"I have only just begun," said Père Bracasse. + +The Southern sun shone from a cloudless sky; a light, keen wind blowing +from the distant snow-clad Canigou set the blood tingling. A lunatic +idea flashed through Aristide's mind. He whipped the drum strap over the +old man's head. + +"Père Bracasse," said he, "you are suffering from rheumatism, +bronchitis, fever and corns, and you must go home to bed. I will finish +your round for you. Listen," and he beat such a tattoo as Père Bracasse +had never accomplished in his life. "Where are your words?" + +The old man, too weary to resist and fascinated by Aristide's laughing +eyes, handed him a dirty piece of paper. Aristide read, played a +magnificent roll and proclaimed in a clarion voice that a gold bracelet +having been lost on Sunday afternoon in the Avenue des Platanes, whoever +would deposit it at the Mairie would receive a reward. + +"That's all?" he enquired. + +"That's all," said Père Bracasse. "I live in the Rue Petite-de-la-Réal, +No. 4, and you will bring me back the drum when you have finished." + +Aristide darted off like a dragon-fly in the sunshine, as happy as a +child with a new toy. Here he could play the drum to his heart's content +with no score or conductor's bâton to worry him. He was also the one and +only personage in the drama, concentrating on himself the attention of +the audience. He pitied poor Roulard, who could never have such an +opportunity with his trombone.... + +The effect of his drumming before the Café de la Loge was electric. +Shopkeepers ran out of their shops, housewives craned over their +balconies to listen to him. By the time he had threaded the busy strip +of the town and emerged on to the Place Arago he had collected an +admiring train of urchins. On the Place Arago he halted on the fringe of +a crowd surrounding a cheap-jack whose vociferations he drowned in a +roll of thunder. He drummed and drummed till he became the centre of the +throng. Then he proclaimed the bracelet. He had not enjoyed himself so +much since he left Paris. + +He was striding away, merry-eyed and happy, followed by his satellites +when a prosperous-looking gentleman with a very red face, a prosperous +roll of fat above the back of his collar, and the ribbon of the Legion +of Honour in his buttonhole, descending the steps of the great +glass-covered café commanding the Place, hurried up and laid his finger +on his arm. + +"Pardon, my friend," said he, "what are you doing there?" + +"You shall hear, monsieur," replied Aristide, clutching the drumsticks. + +"For the love of Heaven!" cried the other hastily interrupting. "Tell me +what are you doing?" + +"I am crying the loss of a bracelet, monsieur!" + +"But who are you?" + +"I am Aristide Pujol, and I play the drum, kettle-drum, triangle, +cymbals, castagnettes and tambourine in the orchestra of the Tournée +Gulland. And now, in my turn, may I ask to whom I have the honour of +speaking?" + +"I am the Mayor of Perpignan." + +Aristide raised his hat politely. "I hope to have the pleasure," said +he, "of Monsieur le Maire's better acquaintance." + +The Mayor, attracted by the rascal's guileless mockery, laughed. + +"You will, my friend, if you go on playing that drum. You are not the +Town Crier." + +Aristide explained. Père Bracasse was ill, suffering from rheumatism, +bronchitis, fever and corns. He was replacing him. The Mayor retorted +that Père Bracasse being a municipal functionary could not transmit his +functions except through the Administration. Monsieur Pujol must desist +from drumming and crying. Aristide bowed to authority and unstrung his +drum. + +"But I was enjoying myself so much, Monsieur le Maire. You have spoiled +my day," said he. + +The Mayor laughed again. There was an irresistible charm and roguishness +about the fellow, with his intelligent oval face, black Vandyke beard +and magically luminous eyes. + +"I should have thought you had enough of drums in your orchestra." + +"Ah! there I am cramped!" cried Aristide. "I have it in horror, in +detestation. Here I am free. I can give vent to all the aspirations of +my soul!" + +The Mayor mechanically moved from the spot where they had been standing. +Aristide, embroidering his theme, mechanically accompanied him; and, +such is democratic France, and also such was the magnetic, Ancient +Mariner-like power of Aristide--did not I, myself, on my first meeting +with him at Aigues-Mortes fall helplessly under the spell--that, in a +few moments, the amateur Town Crier and the Mayor were walking together, +side by side, along the Quai Sadi-Carnot, engaged in amiable converse. +Aristide told the Mayor the story of his life--or such incidents of it +as were meet for Mayoral ears--and when they parted--the Mayor to lunch, +Aristide to yield up the interdicted drum to Père Bracasse--they shook +hands warmly and mutually expressed the wish that they would soon meet +again. + +They met again; Aristide saw to that. They met again that very afternoon +in the café on the Place Arago. When Aristide entered he saw the Mayor +seated at a table in the company of another prosperous, red-ribboned +gentleman. Aristide saluted politely and addressed the Mayor. The Mayor +saluted and presented him to Monsieur Quérin, the President of the +Syndicat d'Initiative of the town of Perpignan. Monsieur Quérin saluted +and declared himself enchanted at the encounter. Aristide stood +gossiping until the Mayor invited him to take a place at the table and +consume liquid refreshment. Aristide glowingly accepted the invitation +and cast a look of triumph around the café. Not to all mortals is it +given to be the boon companion of a Mayor and a President of the +Syndicat d'Initiative! + +Then ensued a conversation momentous in its consequences. + +The Syndicat d'Initiative is a semi-official body existing in most +provincial towns in France for the purpose of organising public +festivals for the citizens and developing the resources and +possibilities of the town for the general amenity of visitors. Now +Perpignan is as picturesque, as sun-smitten and, in spite of the icy +tramontana, even as joyous a place as tourist could desire; and the +Carnival of Perpignan, as a spontaneous outburst of gaiety and +pageantry, is unique in France. But Perpignan being at the end of +everywhere and leading nowhere attracts very few visitors. Biarritz is +on the Atlantic coast at the other end of the Pyrenees; Hyères, Cannes +and Monte Carlo on the other side of the Gulf of Lions. No English or +Americans--the only visitors of any account in the philosophy of +provincial France--flock to Perpignan. This was a melancholy fact +bewailed by Monsieur Quérin. The town was perishing from lack of +Anglo-Saxon support. Monsieur Coquereau, the Mayor, agreed. If the +English and Americans came in their hordes to this paradise of mimosa, +fourteenth century architecture, sunshine and unique Carnival, the +fortunes of all the citizens would be assured. Perpignan would out-rival +Nice. But what could be done? + +"Advertise it," said Aristide. "Flood the English-speaking world with +poetical descriptions of the place. Build a row of palatial hotels in +the new part of the town. It is not known to the Anglo-Saxons." + +"How can you be certain of that?" asked Monsieur Quérin. + +"_Parbleu!_" he cried, with a wide gesture. "I have known the English +all my life. I speak their language as I speak French or my native +Provençal. I have taught in schools in England. I know the country and +the people like my pocket. They have never heard of Perpignan." + +His companions acquiesced sadly. Aristide, aglow with a sudden impudent +inspiration, leant across the marble table. + +"Monsieur le Maire and Monsieur le Président du Syndicat d'Initiative, I +am sick to death of playing the drum, the kettle-drum, the triangle, the +cymbals, the castagnettes and the tambourine in the Tournée Gulland. I +was born to higher things. Entrust to me"--he converged the finger-tips +of both hands to his bosom--"to me, Aristide Pujol, the organisation of +Perpignan-Ville de Plaisir, and you will not regret it." + +The Mayor and the President laughed. + + * * * * * + +But my astonishing friend prevailed--not indeed to the extent of being +appointed a Petronius, _arbiter élegantiarum_, of the town of Perpignan; +but to the extent of being employed, I fear in a subordinate capacity, +by the Mayor and the Syndicat in the work of propagandism. The Tournée +Gulland found another drum and went its tuneful but weary way; and +Aristide remained gloriously behind and rubbed his hands with glee. At +last he had found permanence in a life where heretofore had been naught +but transience. At last he had found a sphere worthy of his genius. He +began to nourish insensate ambitions. He would be the Great Benefactor +of Perpignan. All Roussillon should bless his name. Already he saw his +statue on the Quai Sadi-Carnot. + +His rise in the social scale of the town was meteoric, chiefly owing to +the goodwill of Madame Coquereau, the widowed mother of the Mayor. She +was a hard-featured old lady, with a face that might have been made of +corrugated iron painted yellow and with the eyes of an old hawk. She +dressed always in black, was very devout and rich and narrow and +iron-willed. Aristide was presented to her one Sunday afternoon at the +Café on the Place Arago--where on Sunday afternoons all the fashion of +Perpignan assembles--and--need I say it?--she fell at once a helpless +victim to his fascination. Accompanying her grandmother was Mademoiselle +Stéphanie Coquereau, the Mayor's niece (a wealthy orphan, as Aristide +soon learned), nineteen, pretty, demure, perfectly brought up, who said +"_Oui, Monsieur_" and "_Non, Monsieur_" with that quintessence of modest +grace which only a provincial French Convent can cultivate. + +Aristide's heart left his body and rolled at the feet of Mademoiselle +Stéphanie. It was a way with Aristide's heart. It was always doing that. +He was of Provence and not of Peckham Rye or Hoboken, and he could not +help it. + +Aristide called on Madame Coquereau, who entertained him with sweet +Frontignan wine, dry sponge cakes and conversation. After a while he was +invited to dinner. In a short space of time he became the intimate +friend of the house, and played piquet with Madame Coquereau, and grew +familiar with the family secrets. First he learned that Mademoiselle +Stéphanie would go to a husband with two hundred and fifty thousand +francs. Aristide's heart panted at the feet of Mademoiselle Stéphanie. +Further he gathered that, though Monsieur Coquereau was a personage of +great dignity and importance in civic affairs, he was as but a little +child in his own house. Madame Coquereau held the money-bags. Her son +had but little personal fortune. He had reached the age of forty-five +without being able to marry. Marriage unauthorized by Madame Coquereau +meant immediate poverty and the testamentary assignment of Madame +Coquereau's fortune to various religious establishments. None of the +objects of Monsieur Coquereau's matrimonial desire had pleased Madame +Coquereau, and none of Madame Coquereau's blushing candidates had caused +a pulse in Monsieur Coquereau's being to beat the faster. The Mayor held +his mother in professed adoration and holy terror. She held him in +abject subjection. Aristide became the confidant, in turn, of Madame's +sour philosophy of life and of Monsieur's impotence and despair. As for +Mademoiselle Stéphanie, she kept on saying "_Oui, Monsieur_" and "_Non, +Monsieur_," in a crescendo of maddening demureness. + +So passed the halcyon hours. During the day time Aristide in a corner of +the Mayor's office, drew up flamboyant circulars in English which would +have put a pushing Land and Estate Agent in the New Jerusalem to the +blush, and in the evening played piquet with Madame Coquereau, while +Mademoiselle Stéphanie, model of modest piety, worked pure but nameless +birds and flowers on her embroidery frame. Monsieur le Maire, of course, +played his game of manilla at the café, after dinner, and generally +came home just before Aristide took his leave. If it had not been for +the presence of Mademoiselle Stéphanie, it would not have been gay for +Aristide. But love gilded the moments. + +On the first evening of the Carnival, which lasts nearly a fortnight in +Perpignan, Aristide, in spite of a sweeter "_Oui, Monsieur_" than ever +from Mademoiselle Stéphanie, made an excuse to slip away rather earlier +than usual, and, front door having closed behind him, crossed the strip +of gravel with a quick step and flung out of the iron gates. Now the +house had an isolated position in the new quarter of the town. It was +perky and modern and defaced by all sorts of oriel windows and tourelles +and pinnacles which gave it a top-heavy appearance, and it was +surrounded by a low brick wall. Aristide, on emerging through the iron +gates, heard the sound of scurrying footsteps on the side of the wall +nearest to the town, and reached the corner, just in time to see a +masquer, attired in a Pierrot costume and wearing what seemed to be a +pig's head, disappear round the further angle. Paying no heed to this +phenomenon, Aristide lit a cigarette and walked, in anticipation of +enjoyment, to the great Avenue des Plantanes where the revelry of the +Carnival was being held. Aristide was young, he loved flirtation, and +flirtation flourished in the Avenue des Plantanes. + +The next morning the Mayor entered his office with a very grave face. + +"Do you know what has happened? My house was broken into last night. The +safe in my study was forced open, and three thousand francs and some +valuable jewelry were stolen. _Quel malheur!_" he cried, throwing +himself into a chair, and wiping his forehead. "It is not I who can +afford to lose three thousand francs at once. If they had robbed _maman_ +it would have been a different matter." + +Aristide expressed his sympathy. + +"Whom do you suspect?" he asked. + +"A robber, _parbleu!_" said the Mayor. "The police are even now making +their investigations." + +The door opened and a plain clothes detective entered the office. + +"Monsieur le Maire," said he, with an air of triumph, "I know a +burglar." + +Both men leapt to their feet. + +"Ah!" said Aristide. + +"_A la bonne heure!_" cried the Mayor. + +"Arrest him at once," said Aristide. + +"Alas, Monsieur," said the detective, "that I cannot do. I have called +on him this morning and his wife tells me that he left for the North +yesterday afternoon. But it is José Puégas that did it. I know his +ways." + +"_Tiens!_" said the Mayor, reflectively. "I know him also, an evil +fellow." + +"But why are you not looking for him?" exclaimed Aristide. + +"Arrangements have been made," replied the detective coldly. + +Aristide suddenly bethought him of the furtive masquer of the night +before. + +"I can put you on his track," said he, and related what he knew. + +The Mayor looked dubious. "It wasn't he," he remarked. + +"José Puégas, Monsieur, would not commit a burglary in a pig's head," +said the policeman, with the cutting contempt of the expert. + +"It was a vow, I suppose," said Aristide, stung to irony. "I've always +heard he was a religious man." + +The detective did not condescend to reply. + +"Monsieur le Maire," said he, "I should like to examine the premises, +and beg that you will have the kindness to accompany me." + +"With the permission of Monsieur le Maire," said Aristide. "I too will +come." + +"Certainly," said the Mayor. "The more intelligences concentrated on the +affair the better." + +"I am not of that opinion," said the detective. + +"It is the opinion of Monsieur le Maire," said Aristide rebukingly, "and +that is enough." + +When they reached the house--distances are short in Perpignan--they +found policemen busily engaged with tape measures around the premises. +Old Madame Coquereau in a clean white linen dressing jacket, +bare-headed, defying the keen air, stood grim and eager in the midst of +them. + +"Good morning, Monsieur Pujol, what do you think of this?" + +"A veritable catastrophe," said Aristide. + +She shrugged her iron shoulders. "I tell him it serves him right," she +said, cuttingly. "A sensible person keeps his money under his mattress +and not in a tin machine by a window which anyone can get at. I wonder +we've not been murdered in our beds before." + +"_Ah, Maman!_" expostulated the Mayor of Perpignan. + +But she turned her back on him and worried the policemen. They, having +probed, and measured, and consulted with the detective, came to an exact +conclusion. The thief had climbed over the back wall--there were his +footsteps. He had entered by the kitchen door--there were the marks of +infraction. He had broken open the safe--there was the helpless +condition of the lock. No one in Perpignan, but José Puégas, with his +bad, socialistic, Barcelona blood, could have done it. These brilliant +results were arrived at after much clamour and argument and imposing +_procès verbal_. Aristide felt strangely depressed. He had narrated his +story of the pig-headed masquer to unresponsive ears. Here was a +melodramatic scene in which he not only was not playing a leading part, +but did not even carry a banner. To be less than a super in life's +pageant was abhorrent to the nature of Aristide Pujol. + +Moodily he wandered away from the little crowd. He hated the police and +their airs of gods for whom exists no mystery. He did not believe in the +kitchen-door theory. Why should not the thief have simply entered by the +window of the study, which like the kitchen, was on the ground floor? He +went round the house and examined the window by himself. No; there were +no traces of burglary. The fastenings of the outside shutters and the +high window were intact. The police were right. + +Suddenly his quick eye lit on something in the gravel path and his heart +gave a great leap. It was a little round pink disc of confetti. + +Aristide picked it up and began to dance and shake his fist at the +invisible police. + +"Aha!" he cried, "now we shall see who is right and who is wrong!" + +He began to search and soon found another bit of confetti. A little +further along he discovered a third and a fourth. By using his walking +stick he discovered that they formed a trail to a point in the wall. He +examined the wall. There, if his eyes did not deceive him, were +evidences of mortar dislodged by nefarious toes. And there, _mirabile +visu!_ at the very bottom of the wall lay a little woollen pompon or +tassel, just the kind of pompon that gives a finish to a pierrot's +shoes. Evidently the scoundrel had scraped it off against the bricks +while clambering over. + +The pig-headed masquer stood confessed. + +A less imaginative man than Aristide would have immediately acquainted +the police with his discovery. But Aristide had been insulted. A dull, +mechanical bureaucrat who tried to discover crime with a tape-measure +had dared to talk contemptuously of his intelligence! On his wooden head +should be poured the vials of his contempt. + +"_Tron de l'air!_" cried Aristide--a Provençal oath which he only used +on sublime occasions--"It is I who will discover the thief and make the +whole lot of you the laughing-stock of Perpignan." + +So did my versatile friend, joyously confident in his powers, start on +his glorious career as a private detective. + +"Madame Coquereau," said he, that evening, while she was dealing a hand +at piquet, "what would you say if I solved this mystery and brought the +scoundrel to justice?" + +"To say that you would have more sense than the police, would be a poor +compliment," said the old lady. + +Stéphanie raised cloistral eyes from her embroidery frame. She sat in a +distant corner of the formal room discreetly lit by a shaded lamp. + +"You have a clue, Monsieur?" she asked with adorable timidity. + +Aristide tapped his forehead with his forefinger. "All is there, +Mademoiselle." + +They exchanged a glance--the first they had exchanged--while Madame +Coquereau was frowning at her cards; and Aristide interpreted the glance +as the promise of supreme reward for great deeds accomplished. + +The mayor returned early from the café, a dejected man. The loss of his +hundred and twenty pounds weighed heavily on his mind. He kissed his +mother sorrowfully on the cheek, his niece on the brow, held out a +drooping hand to Aristide, and, subsiding into a stiff imitation Louis +XVI chair, rested his elbows on its unconsoling arms and hid his face in +his hands. + +"My poor uncle! You suffer so much?" breathed Stéphanie, in divine +compassion. + +"Little Saint!" murmured Aristide devoutly, as he declared four aces and +three queens. + +The Mayor moved his head sympathetically. He was suffering from the +sharpest pain in his pocket he had felt for many a day. Madame +Coquereau's attention wandered from the cards. + +"_Dis donc_, Fernand," she said sharply. "Why are you not wearing your +ring?" + +The Mayor looked up. + +"_Maman_," said he, "it is stolen." + +"Your beautiful ring?" cried Aristide. + +The Mayor's ring, which he usually wore, was a remarkable personal +adornment. It consisted in a couple of snakes in old gold clenching an +enormous topaz between their heads. Only a Mayor could have worn it with +decency. + +"You did not tell me, Fernand," rasped the old lady. "You did not +mention it to me as being one of the stolen objects." + +The Mayor rose wearily. "It was to avoid giving you pain, _maman_. I +know what a value you set upon the ring of my good Aunt Philomène." + +"And now it is lost," said Madame Coquereau, throwing down her cards. "A +ring that belonged to a saint. Yes, Monsieur Pujol, a saint, though she +was my sister. A ring that had been blessed by His Holiness the +Pope----" + +"But, _maman_," expostulated the Mayor, "that was an imagination of Aunt +Philomène. Just because she went to Rome and had an audience like anyone +else----" + +"Silence, impious atheist that you are!" cried the old lady. "I tell you +it was blessed by His Holiness--and when I tell you a thing it is true. +That is the son of to-day. He will call his mother a liar as soon as +look at her. It was a ring beyond price. A ring such as there are few in +the world. And instead of taking care of this precious heirloom, he goes +and locks it away in a safe. Ah! you fill me with shame. Monsieur Pujol, +I am sorry I can play no more, I must retire. Stéphanie, will you +accompany me?" + +And gathering up Stéphanie like a bunch of snowdrops, the yellow, +galvanized iron old lady swept out of the room. + +The Mayor looked at Aristide and moved his arms dejectedly. + +"Such are women," said he. + +"My own mother nearly broke her heart because I would not become a +priest," said Aristide. + +"I wish I were a Turk," said the Mayor. + +"I, too," said Aristide. + +He took pouch and papers and rolled a cigarette. + +"If there is a man living who can say he has not felt like that at least +once in his life he ought to be exhibited at a fair." + +"How well you understand me, my good Pujol," said Monsieur Coquereau. + +The next few days passed busily for Aristide. He devoted every spare +hour to his new task. He scrutinized every inch of ground between the +study window and the wall; he drew radiating lines from the point of +the wall whence the miscreant had started homeward and succeeded in +finding more confetti. He cross-examined every purveyor of pierrot shoes +and pig's heads in Perpignan. His researches soon came to the ears of +the police, still tracing the mysterious José Puégas. A certain +good-humoured brigadier whose Catalan French Aristide found difficult to +understand, but with whom he had formed a derisory kind of friendship, +urged him to desist from the hopeless task. + +"_Jamais de la vie!_" he cried--"The honour of Aristide Pujol is at +stake." + +The thing became an obsession. Not only his honour but his future was at +stake. If he discovered the thief, he would be the most talked of person +in Perpignan. He would know how to improve his position. He would rise +to dizzy heights. Perpignan-Ville de Plaisir would acclaim him as its +saviour. The Government would decorate him. And finally, both the Mayor +and Madame Coquereau would place the blushing and adorable Mademoiselle +Stéphanie in his arms and her two hundred and fifty thousand francs +dowry in his pocket. Never before had so dazzling a prize shimmered +before him in the near distance. + +On the last Saturday night of the Carnival, there was a special _corso_ +for the populace in the Avenue des Plantanes, the long splendid Avenue +of plane trees just outside the Porte Notre Dame, which is the special +glory of Perpignan. The masquers danced to three or four bands. They +threw confetti and _serpentins_. They rode hobby-horses and beat each +other with bladders. They joined in bands of youths and maidens and +whirled down the Avenue in Bacchic madness. It was a _corso blanc_, and +everyone wore white--chiefly modifications of Pierrot costume--and +everyone was masked. Chinese lanterns hung from the trees and in +festoons around the bandstands and darted about in the hands of the +revellers. Above, great standard electric lamps shed their white glare +upon the eddying throng casting a myriad of grotesque shadows. Shouts +and laughter and music filled the air. + +Aristide in a hideous red mask and with a bag of confetti under his arm, +plunged with enthusiasm into the revelry. To enjoy yourself you only had +to throw your arm round a girl's waist and swing her off wildly to the +beat of the music. If you wanted to let her go you did so; if not, you +talked in the squeaky voice that is the recognized etiquette of the +carnival. On the other hand any girl could catch you in her grip and +sweep you along with her. Your mad career generally ended in a crowd and +a free fight of confetti. There was one fair masquer, however, to whom +Aristide became peculiarly attracted. Her movements were free, her +figure dainty and her repartee, below her mask, more than usually +piquant. + +"This hurly-burly," said he, drawing her into a quiet eddy of the +stream, "is no place for the communion of two twin souls." + +"_Beau masque_," said she, "I perceive that you are a man of much +sensibility." + +"Shall we find a spot where we can mingle the overflow of our exquisite +natures?" + +"As you like." + +"_Allons! Hop!_" cried he, and seizing her round the waist danced +through the masquers to the very far end of the Avenue. + +"There is a sequestered spot round here," he said. + +They turned. The sequestered spot, a seat beneath a plane tree, with a +lonesome arc-lamp shining full upon it, was occupied. + +"It's a pity!" said the fair unknown. + +But Aristide said nothing. He stared. On the seat reposed an amorous +couple. The lady wore a white domino and a black mask. The cavalier, +whose arm was around the lady's waist, wore a pig's head, and a clown or +Pierrot's dress. + +Aristide's eyes fell upon the shoes. On one of them the pompon was +missing. + +The lady's left hand tenderly patted the cardboard snout of her lover. +The fierce light of the arc lamp caught the hand and revealed, on the +fourth finger, a topaz ring, the topaz held in its place by two snakes' +heads. + +Aristide stared for two seconds; it seemed to him two centuries. Then he +turned simply, caught his partner again, and with a "_Allons, Hop!_" +raced back to the middle of the throng. There, in the crush, he +unceremoniously lost her, and sped like a maniac to the entrance gates. +His friend the brigadier happened to be on duty. He unmasked himself, +dragged the police agent aside, and breathless, half-hysterical, +acquainted him with the astounding discovery. + +"I was right, _mon vieux!_ There at the end of the Avenue you will find +them. The pig-headed prowler I saw, with _my_ pompon missing from his +shoe, and his _bonne amie_ wearing the stolen ring. Ah! you police +people with your tape-measures and your José Puégas! It is I, Aristide +Pujol, who have to come to Perpignan to teach you your business!" + +"What do you want me to do?" asked the brigadier stolidly. + +"Do?" cried Aristide. "Do you think I want you to kiss them and cover +them with roses? What do you generally do with thieves in Perpignan?" + +"Arrest them," said the brigadier. + +"_Eh bien!_" said Aristide. Then he paused--possibly the drama of the +situation striking him. "No, wait. Go and find them. Don't take your +eyes off them. I will run and fetch Monsieur le Maire and he will +identify his property--_et puis nous aurons la scène à faire_." + +The stout brigadier grunted an assent and rolled monumentally down the +Avenue. Aristide, his pulses throbbing, his heart exulting, ran to the +Mayor's house. He was rather a panting triumph than a man. He had beaten +the police of Perpignan. He had discovered the thief. He was the hero of +the town. Soon would the wedding bells be playing.... He envied the +marble of the future statue. He would like to be on the pedestal +himself. + +He dashed past the maid-servant who opened the door and burst into the +prim salon. Madame Coquereau was alone, just preparing to retire for the +night. Mademoiselle Stéphanie had already gone to bed. + +"_Mon Dieu_, what is all this?" she cried. + +"Madame," shouted he, "glorious news. I have found the thief!" + +He told his tale. Where was Monsieur le Maire? + +"He has not yet come back from the café." + +"I'll go and find him," said Aristide. + +"And waste time? Bah!" said the iron-faced old lady, catching up a black +silk shawl. "I will come with you and identify the ring of my sainted +sister Philomène. Who should know it better than I?" + +"As you like, Madame," said Aristide. + +Two minutes found them on their journey. Madame Coquereau, in spite of +her sixty-five years trudged along with springing step. + +"They don't make metal like me, nowadays," she said scornfully. + +When they arrived at the gate of the Avenue, the police on guard +saluted. The mother of Monsieur le Maire was a power in Perpignan. + +"Monsieur," said Aristide, in lordly fashion, to a policeman, "will you +have the goodness to make a passage through the crowd for Madame +Coquereau, and then help the Brigadier Pésac to arrest the burglar who +broke into the house of Monsieur le Maire?" + +The man obeyed, went ahead clearing the path with the unceremoniousness +of the law, and Aristide giving his arm to Madame Coquereau followed +gloriously. As the impressive progress continued the revellers ceased +their revels and followed in the wake of Aristide. At the end of the +Avenue Brigadier Pésac was on guard. He approached. + +"They are still there," he said. + +"Good," said Aristide. + +The two police-officers, Aristide and Madame Coquereau turned the +corner. At the sight of the police the guilty couple started to their +feet. Madame Coquereau pounced like a hawk on the masked lady's hand. + +"I identify it," she cried. "Brigadier, give these people in charge for +theft." + +The white masked crowd surged around the group, in the midst of which +stood Aristide transfigured. It was his supreme moment. He flourished in +one hand his red mask and in the other a pompon which he had extracted +from his pocket. + +"This I found," said he, "beneath the wall of Monsieur le Maire's +garden. Behold the shoe of the accused." + +The crowd murmured their applause and admiration. Neither of the +prisoners stirred. The pig's head grinned at the world with its inane, +painted leer. A rumbling voice beneath it said: + +"We will go quietly." + +"_Attention s'il vous plaît_," said the policemen, and each holding a +prisoner by the arm they made a way through the crowd. Madame Coquereau +and Aristide followed close behind. + +"What did I tell you?" cried Aristide to the brigadier. + +"It's Puégas, all the same," said the brigadier, over his shoulder. + +"I bet you it's not," said Aristide, and striding swiftly to the back of +the male prisoner whipped off the pig's head, and revealed to the +petrified throng the familiar features of the Mayor of Perpignan. + +Aristide regarded him for two or three seconds open-mouthed, and then +fell back into the arms of the Brigadier Pésac screaming with convulsive +laughter. The crowd caught the infection of merriment. Shrieks filled +the air. The vast mass of masqueraders held their sides, swayed +helplessly, rolled in heaps, men and women, tearing each other's +garments as they fell. + +Aristide, deposited on the ground by the Brigadier Pésac laughed and +laughed. When he recovered some consciousness of surroundings, he found +the Mayor bending over him and using language that would have made +Tophet put its fingers in its ears. He rose. Madame Coquereau shook her +thin fists in his face. + +"Imbecile! Triple fool!" she cried. + +Aristide turned tail and fled. There was nothing else to do. + +And that was the end of his career at Perpignan. Vanished were the +dreams of civic eminence; melted into thin air the statue on the Quai +Sadi-Carnot; faded, too, the vision of the modest Stéphanie crowned with +orange-blossom; gone forever the two hundred and fifty thousand francs. +Never since Alnaschar kicked over his basket of crockery was there such +a hideous welter of shattered hopes. + +If the Mayor had been allowed to go disguised to the Police Station, he +could have disclosed his identity and that of the lady in private to +awe-stricken functionaries. He might have forgiven Aristide. But +Aristide had exposed him to the derision of the whole of Roussillon and +the never ending wrath of Madame Coquereau. Ruefully Aristide asked +himself the question: why had the Mayor not taken him into the +confidence of his masquerading escapade? Why had he not told him of the +pretty widow, whom, unknown to his mother, he was courting? Why had he +permitted her to wear the ring which he had given her so as to spite his +sainted Aunt Philomène? And why had he gone on wearing the pig's head +after Aristide had told him of his suspicions? Ruefully Aristide found +no answers save in the general chuckle-headedness of mankind. + +"If it hadn't been such a good farce I should have wept like a cow," +said Aristide, after relating this story. "But every time I wanted to +cry, I laughed. _Nom de Dieu!_ You should have seen his face! And the +face of Madame Coquereau! She opened her mouth wide showing ten yellow +teeth and squealed like a rabbit! Oh, it was a good farce! He was very +cross with me," he added after a smiling pause, "and when I got back to +Paris I tried to pacify him." + +"What did you do?" I asked. + +"I sent him my photograph," said Aristide. + + + + +VI + +THE ADVENTURE OF FLEURETTE + + +One day, when Aristide was discoursing on the inexhaustible subject of +woman, I pulled him up. + +"My good friend," said I, "you seem to have fallen in love with every +woman you have ever met. But for how many of them have you really +cared?" + +"_Mon Dieu!_ For all of them!" he cried, springing from his chair and +making a wind-mill of himself. + +"Come, come," said I; "all that amorousness is just Gallic exuberance. +Have you ever been really in love in your life?" + +"How should I know?" said he. But he lit a cigarette, turned away, and +looked out of window. + +There was a short silence. He shrugged his shoulders, apparently in +response to his own thoughts. Then he turned again suddenly, threw his +cigarette into the fire, and thrust his hands into his pockets. He +sighed. + +"Perhaps there was Fleurette," said he, not looking at me. "_Est-ce +qu'on sait jamais?_ That wasn't her real name--it was Marie-Joséphine; +but people called her Fleurette. She looked like a flower, you know." + +I nodded in order to signify my elementary acquaintance with the French +tongue. + +"The most delicate little flower you can conceive," he continued. +"_Tiens_, she was a slender lily--so white, and her hair the flash of +gold on it--and she had eyes--_des yeux de pervenche_, as we say in +French. What is _pervenche_ in English--that little pale-blue flower?" + +"Periwinkle," said I. + +"Periwinkle eyes! My God, what a language! Ah, no! She had _des yeux de +pervenche_.... She was _diaphane_, diaphanous ... impalpable as +cigarette-smoke ... a little nose like nothing at all, with nostrils +like infinitesimal sea-shells. Anyone could have made a mouthful of +her.... Ah! _Cré nom d'un chien!_ Life is droll. It has no common sense. +It is the game of a mountebank.... I've never told you about Fleurette. +It was this way." + +And the story he narrated I will do my best to set down. + + * * * * * + +The good M. Bocardon, of the Hôtel de la Curatterie at Nîmes, whose +grateful devotion to Aristide has already been recorded, had a brother +in Paris who managed the Hôtel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse (strange +conjuncture), a flourishing third-rate hostelry in the neighbourhood of +the Halles Centrales. Thither flocked sturdy Britons in knickerbockers, +stockings, and cloth caps, Teutons with tin botanizing boxes (for lunch +transportation), and American school-marms realizing at last the dream +of their modest and laborious lives. Accommodation was cheap, manners +were easy, and knowledge of the gay city less than rudimentary. + +To M. Bocardon of Paris Aristide, one August morning, brought glowing +letters of introduction from M. and Mme. Bocardon of Nîmes. M. Bocardon +of Paris welcomed Aristide as a Provençal and a brother. He brought out +from a cupboard in his private bureau an hospitable bottle of old +Armagnac, and discoursed with Aristide on the seductions of the South. +It was there that he longed to retire--to a dainty little hotel of his +own with a smart clientèle. The clientèle of the Hôtel du Soleil et de +l'Ecosse was not to his taste. He spoke slightingly of his guests. + +"There are people who know how to travel," said he, "and people who +don't. These lost muttons here don't, and they make hotel-keeping a +nightmare instead of a joy. A hundred times a day have I to tell them +the way to Notre Dame. _Pouah!_" said he, gulping down his disgust and +the rest of his Armagnac, "it is back-breaking." + +"_Tu sais, mon vieux_," cried Aristide--he had the most lightning way of +establishing an intimacy--"I have an idea. These lost sheep need a +shepherd." + +"_Eh bien?_" said M. Bocardon. + +"_Eh bien_," said Aristide. "Why should not I be the shepherd, the +official shepherd attached to the Hôtel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse?" + +"Explain yourself," said M. Bocardon. + +Aristide, letting loose his swift imagination, explained copiously, and +hypnotized M. Bocardon with his glittering eye, until he had assured to +himself a means of livelihood. From that moment he became the familiar +genius of the hotel. Scorning the title of "guide," lest he should be +associated in the minds of the guests with the squalid scoundrels who +infest the Boulevard, he constituted himself "Directeur de l'Agence +Pujol." An obfuscated Bocardon formed the rest of the agency and +pocketed a percentage of Aristide's earnings, and Aristide, addressed as +"Director" by the Anglo-Saxons, "M. le Directeur" by the Latins, and +"Herr Direktor" by the Teutons, walked about like a peacock in a +barn-yard. + + [Illustration: HE MUST HAVE DEALT OUT PARALYZING INFORMATION] + +At that period, and until he had learned up Baedeker by heart, a process +which nearly gave him brain-fever, and still, he declares, brings terror +into his slumbers, he knew little more of the history, topography, and +art-treasures of Paris than the flock he shepherded. He must have +dealt out paralyzing information. The Britons and the Germans seemed not +to heed; but now and then the American school-marms unmasked the +charlatan. On such occasions his unfaltering impudence reached heights +truly sublime. The sharp-witted ladies looked in his eyes, forgot their +wrongs, and, if he had told them that the Eiffel Tower had been erected +by the Pilgrim Fathers, would have accepted the statement meekly. + +"My friend," said Aristide, with Provençal flourish and braggadocio, "I +never met a woman that would not sooner be misled by me than be taught +by the whole Faculty of the Sorbonne." + +He had been practising this honourable profession for about a month, +lodging with the good Mme. Bidoux at 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, when, +one morning, in the vestibule of the hotel, he ran into his old friend +Batterby, whom he had known during the days of his professorship of +French at the Academy for Young Ladies in Manchester. The pair had been +fellow-lodgers in the same house in the Rusholme Road; but, whereas +Aristide lived in one sunless bed-sitting-room looking on a forest of +chimney-pots, Batterby, man of luxury and ease, had a suite of +apartments on the first floor and kept an inexhaustible supply of +whisky, cigars, and such-like etceteras of the opulent, and the very +ugliest prize bull-pup you can imagine. Batterby, in gaudy raiment, +went to an office in Manchester; in gaudier raiment he often attended +race meetings. He had rings and scarf-pins and rattled gold in his +trousers pockets. He might have been an insufferable young man for a +poverty-stricken teacher of French to have as a fellow-lodger; but he +was not. Like all those born to high estate, he made no vulgar parade of +his wealth, and to Aristide he showed the most affable hospitality. A +friendship had arisen between them, which the years had idealized rather +than impaired. So when they met that morning in the vestibule of the +Hôtel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse their greetings were fervent and +prolonged. + +In person Batterby tended towards burliness. He had a red, jolly face, +divided unequally by a great black moustache, and his manner was hearty. +He slapped Aristide on the back many times and shook him by the +shoulders. + +"We must have a drink on this straight away, old man," said he. + +"You're so strange, you English," said Aristide. "The moment you have an +emotion you must celebrate it by a drink. 'My dear fellow, I've just +come into a fortune; let us have a drink.' Or, 'My friend, my poor old +father has just been run over by an omnibus; let us have a drink.' My +good Reginald, look at the clock. It is only nine in the morning." + +"Rot!" said Reginald. "Drink is good at any time." + +They went into the dark and deserted smoking-room, where Batterby +ordered Scotch and soda and Aristide, an abstemious man, a plain +vermouth. + +"What's that muck?" asked Batterby, when the waiter brought the drinks. +Aristide explained. "Whisky's good enough for me," laughed the other. +Aristide laughed too, out of politeness and out of joy at meeting his +old friend. + +"With you playing at guide here," said Batterby, when he had learned +Aristide's position in the hotel, "it seems I have come to the right +shop. There are no flies on me, you know, but when a man comes to Paris +for the first time he likes to be put up to the ropes." + +"Your first visit to Paris?" cried Aristide. "_Mon vieux_, what wonders +are going to ravish your eyes! What a time you are going to have!" + +Batterby bit off the end of a great black cigar. + +"If the missus will let me," said he. + +"Missus? Your wife? You are married, my dear Reginald?" Aristide leaped, +in his unexpected fashion, from his chair and almost embraced him. "Ah, +but you are happy, you are lucky. It was always like that. You open your +mouth and the larks fall ready roasted into it! My congratulations. And +she is here, in this hotel, your wife? Tell me about her." + +Batterby lit his cigar. "She's nothing to write home about," he said, +modestly. "She's French." + +"French? No--you don't say so!" exclaimed Aristide, in ecstasy. + +"Well, she was brought up in France from her childhood, but her parents +were Finns. Funny place for people to come from--Finland--isn't it? You +could never expect it--might just as well think of 'em coming from +Lapland. She's an orphan. I met her in London." + +"But that's romantic! And she is young, pretty?" + +"Oh, yes; in a way," said the proprietary Briton. + +"And her name?" + +"Oh, she has a fool name--Fleurette. I wanted to call her Flossie, but +she didn't like it." + +"I should think not," said Aristide. "Fleurette is an adorable name." + +"I suppose it's right enough," said Batterby. "But if I want to call her +good old Flossie, why should she object? You married, old man? No? Well, +wait till you are. You think women are angels all wrapped up in feathers +and wings beneath their toggery, don't you? Well, they're just blooming +porcupines, all bristling with objections." + +"_Mais, allons, donc!_" cried Aristide. "You love her, your beautiful +Finnish orphan brought up in France and romantically met in London, with +the adorable name?" + +"Oh, that's all right," said the easy Batterby, lifting his half-emptied +glass. "Here's luck!" + +"Ah--no!" said Aristide, leaning forward and clinking his wineglass +against the other's tumbler. "Here is to madame." + +When they returned to the vestibule they found Mrs. Batterby patiently +awaiting her lord. She rose from her seat at the approach of the two +men, a fragile flower of a girl, about three-and-twenty, pale as a lily, +with exquisite though rather large features, and with eyes of the blue +of the _pervenche_ (in deference to Aristide I use the French name), +which seemed to smile trustfully through perpetual tears. She was +dressed in pale, shadowy blue--graceful, impalpable, like the smoke, +said Aristide, curling upwards from a cigarette. + +"Reggie has spoken of you many times, monsieur," said Fleurette, after +the introduction had been effected. + +Aristide was touched. "Fancy him remembering me! _Ce bon vieux +Reginald._ Madame," said he, "your husband is the best fellow in the +world." + +"Feed him with sugar and he won't bite," said Batterby; whereat they all +laughed, as if it had been a very good joke. + +"Well, what about this Paris of yours?" he asked, after a while. "The +missus knows as little of it as I do." + +"Really?" asked Aristide. + +"I lived all my life in Brest before I went to England," she said, +modestly. + +"She wants to see all the sights, the Louvre, the Morgue, the Cathedral +of What's-its-name that you've got here. I've got to go round, too. +Pleases her and don't hurt me. You must tote us about. We'll have a cab, +old girl, as you can't do much walking, and good old Pujol will come +with us." + +"But that is ideal!" cried Aristide, flying to the door to order the +cab; but before he could reach it he was stopped by three or four +waiting tourists, who pointed, some to the clock, some to the wagonette +standing outside, and asked the director when the personally-conducted +party was to start. Aristide, who had totally forgotten the +responsibilities attached to the directorship of the Agence Pujol and, +but for this reminder, would have blissfully left his sheep to err and +stray over Paris by themselves, returned crestfallen to his friends and +explained the situation. + +"But we'll join the party," said the cheery Batterby. "The more the +merrier--good old bean-feast! Will there be room?" + +"Plenty," replied Aristide, brightening. "But would it meet the wishes +of madame?" Her pale face flushed ever so slightly and the soft eyes +fluttered at him a half-astonished, half-grateful glance. + +"With my husband and you, monsieur, I should love it," she said. + +So Mr. and Mrs. Batterby joined the personally-conducted party, as they +did the next morning, and the next, and several mornings after, and +received esoteric information concerning the monuments of Paris that is +hidden even from the erudite. The evenings, however, Aristide, being off +duty, devoted to their especial entertainment. He took them to riotous +and perspiring restaurants where they dined gorgeously for three francs +fifty, wine included; to open-air _cafés-concerts_ in the Champs +Elysées, which Fleurette found infinitely diverting, but which bored +Batterby, who knew not French, to stertorous slumber; to crowded +brasseries on the Boulevard, where Batterby awakened, under a steady +flow of whisky, to appreciative contemplation of Paris life. As in the +old days of the Rusholme Road, Batterby flung his money about with +unostentatious generosity. He was out for a beano, he declared, and hang +the expense! Aristide, whose purse, scantily filled (truth to say) by +the profits of the Agence Pujol, could contribute but modestly to this +reckless expenditure, found himself forced to accept his friend's lavish +hospitality. Once or twice, delicately, he suggested withdrawal from the +evening's dissipation. + +"But, my good M. Pujol," said Fleurette, with childish tragicality in +her _pervenche_ eyes, "without you we shall be lost. We shall not enjoy +ourselves at all, at all." + +So Aristide, out of love for his friend, and out of he knew not what for +his friend's wife, continued to show them the sights of Paris. They went +to the cabarets of Montmartre--the _Ciel_, where one is served by +angels; the _Enfer_, where one is served by red devils in a Tartarean +lighting; the _Néant_, where one has coffins for tables--than all of +which vulgarity has imagined no more joy-killing dreariness, but which +caused Fleurette to grip Aristide's hand tight in scared wonderment and +Batterby to chuckle exceedingly. They went to the Bal Bullier and to +various other balls undreamed of by the tourist, where Fleurette danced +with Aristide, as light as an autumn leaf tossed by the wind, and +Batterby absorbed a startling assortment of alcohols. In a word, +Aristide procured for his friends prodigious diversion. + +"How do you like this, old girl?" Batterby asked one night, at the +Moulin de la Galette, a dizzying, not very decorous, and to the +unsophisticated visitor a dangerous place of entertainment. "Better than +Great Coram Street, isn't it?" + +She smiled and laid her hand on his. She was a woman of few words but of +many caressing actions. + +"I ought to let you into a secret," said he. "This is our honeymoon." + +"Who would have thought it?" + + [Illustration: FLEURETTE DANCED WITH ARISTIDE, AS LIGHT AS AN AUTUMN + LEAF TOSSED BY THE WIND] + +"A fortnight ago she was being killed in a Bloomsbury boarding-house. +There were two of 'em--she and a girl called Carrie. I used to call 'em +Fetch and Carrie. This one was Fetch. Well, she fetched me, didn't you, +old girl? And now you're Mrs. Reginald Batterby, living at your ease, +eh?" + +"Madame would grace any sphere," said Aristide. + +"I wish I had more education," said Fleurette, humbly. "M. Pujol and +yourself are so clever that you must laugh at me." + +"We do sometimes, but you mustn't mind us. Remember--at the +what-you-call-it--the little shanty at Versailles----?" + +"The Grand Trianon," replied Aristide. + +"That's it. When you were showing us the rooms. 'What is the Empress +Josephine doing now?'" He mimicked her accent. "Ha! ha! And the poor +soul gone to glory a couple of hundred years ago." + +The little mouth puckered at the corners and moisture gathered in the +blue eyes. + +"_Mais, mon Dieu_, it was natural, the mistake," cried Aristide, +gallantly. "The Empress Eugénie, the wife of another Napoleon, is still +living." + +"_Bien sûr_," said Fleurette. "How was I to know?" + +"Never mind, old girl," said Batterby. "You're living all right, and out +of that beastly boarding-house, and that's the chief thing. Another +month of it would have killed her. She had a cough that shook her to +bits. She's looking better already, isn't she, Pujol?" + +After this Aristide learned much of her simple history, which she, at +first, had been too shy to reveal. The child of Finnish sea-folk who had +drifted to Brest and died there, she had been adopted by an old Breton +sea-dog and his wife. On their death she had entered, as maid, the +service of an English lady residing in the town, who afterwards had +taken her to England. After a while reverses of fortune had compelled +the lady to dismiss her, and she had taken the situation in the +boarding-house, where she had ruined her health and met the opulent and +conquering Batterby. She had not much chance, poor child, of acquiring a +profound knowledge of the history of the First Empire; but her manners +were refined and her ways gentle and her voice was soft; and Aristide, +citizen of the world, for whom caste distinctions existed not, thought +her the most exquisite flower grown in earth's garden. He told her so, +much to her blushing satisfaction. + +One night, about three weeks after the Batterbys' arrival in Paris, +Batterby sent his wife to bed and invited Aristide to accompany him for +half an hour to a neighbouring café. He looked grave and troubled. + +"I've been upset by a telegram," said he, when drinks had been ordered. +"I'm called away to New York on business. I must catch the boat from +Cherbourg to-morrow evening. Now, I can't take Fleurette with me. Women +and business don't mix. She has jolly well got to stay here. I sha'n't +be away more than a month. I'll leave her plenty of money to go on with. +But what's worrying me is--how is she going to stick it? So look here, +old man, you're my pal, aren't you?" + +He stretched out his hand. Aristide grasped it impulsively. + +"Why, of course, _mon vieux!_" + +"If I felt that I could leave her in your charge, all on the square, as +a real straight pal--I should go away happy." + +"She shall be my sister," cried Aristide, "and I shall give her all the +devotion of a brother.... I swear it--_tiens_--what can I swear it on?" +He flung out his arms and looked round the café as if in search of an +object. "I swear it on the head of my mother. Have no fear. I, Aristide +Pujol, have never betrayed the sacred obligations of friendship. I +accept her as a consecrated trust." + +"You only need to have said 'Right-o,' and I would have believed you," +said Batterby. "I haven't told her yet. There'll be blubbering all +night. Let us have another drink." + +When Aristide arrived at the Hôtel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse at nine +o'clock the next morning he found that Batterby had left Paris by an +early train. Fleurette he did not meet until he brought back the +sight-seers to the fold in the evening. She had wept much during the +day; but she smiled bravely on Aristide. A woman could not stand in the +way of her husband's business. + +"By the way, what is Reginald's business?" Aristide asked. + +She did not know. Reginald never spoke to her of such things; perhaps +she was too ignorant to understand. + +"But he will make a lot of money by going to America," she said. Then +she was silent for a few moments. "_Mon Dieu!_" she sighed, at last. +"How long the day has been!" + +It was the beginning of many long days for Fleurette. Reginald did not +write from Cherbourg or cable from New York, as he had promised, and the +return American mail brought no letter. The days passed drearily. +Sometimes, for the sake of human society, she accompanied the tourist +parties of the Agence Pujol; but the thrill had passed from the Morgue +and the glory had departed from Versailles. Sometimes she wandered +out by herself into the streets and public gardens; but, pretty, +unprotected, and fragile, she attracted the attention of evil or +careless men, which struck cold terror into her heart. Most often she +sat alone and listless in the hotel, reading the feuilleton of the +_Petit Journal_, and waiting for the post to bring her news. + +"_Mon Dieu_, M. Pujol, what can have happened?" + +"Nothing at all, _chère petite madame_"--question and answer came many +times a day. "Only some foolish mischance which will soon be explained. +The good Reginald has written and his letter has been lost in the post. +He has been obliged to go on business to San Francisco or Buenos +Ayres--_et, que voulez-vous?_ one cannot have letters from those places +in twenty-four hours." + +"If only he had taken me with him!" + +"But, dear Mme. Fleurette, he could not expose you to the hardships +of travel. You, who are as fragile as a cobweb, how could you go to +Patagonia or Senegal or Baltimore, those wild places where there are no +comforts for women? You must be reasonable. I am sure you will get a +letter soon--or else in a day or two he will come, with his good, honest +face as if nothing had occurred--these English are like that--and call +for whisky and soda. Be comforted, _chère petite madame_." + +Aristide did his best to comfort her, threw her in the companionship of +decent women staying at the hotel, and devoted his evenings to her +entertainment. But the days passed, and Reginald Batterby, with the +good, honest face, neither wrote nor ordered whisky and soda. Fleurette +began to pine and fade. + +One day she came to Aristide. + +"M. Pujol, I have no more money left." + +"_Bigre!_" said Pujol. "The good Bocardon will have to give you credit. +I'll arrange it." + +"But I already owe for three weeks," said Fleurette. + +Aristide sought Bocardon. One week more was all the latter dared allow. + +"But her husband will return and pay you. He is my old and intimate +friend. I make myself hoarse in telling it to you, wooden-head that you +are!" + +But Bocardon, who had to account to higher powers, the proprietors of +the hotel, was helpless. At the end of the week Fleurette was called +upon to give up her room. She wept with despair; Aristide wept with +fury; Bocardon wept out of sympathy. Already, said Bocardon, the +proprietors would blame him for not using the legal right to detain +madame's luggage. + +"_Mon Dieu! mon Dieu!_ what is to become of me?" wailed Fleurette. + +"You forget, madame," said Aristide, with one of his fine flourishes, +"that you are the sacred trust of Aristide Pujol." + +"But I can't accept your money," objected Fleurette. + +"_Tron de l'air!_" he cried. "Did your husband put you in my charge or +did he not? Am I your legal guardian, or am I not? If I am your legal +guardian, what right have you to question the arrangements made by your +husband? Answer me that." + +Fleurette, too gentle and too miserable for intricate argument, sighed. + +"But it is your money, all the same." + +Aristide turned to Bocardon. "Try," said he, "to convince a woman! Do +you want proofs? Wait there a minute while I get them from the safe of +the Agence Pujol." + +He disappeared into the bureau, where, secure from observation, he tore +an oblong strip from a sheet of stiff paper, and, using an indelible +pencil, wrote out something fantastic halfway between a cheque and a +bill of exchange, forged as well as he could from memory the signature +of Reginald Batterby--the imitation of handwriting was one of Aristide's +many odd accomplishments--and made the document look legal by means of a +receipt stamp, which he took from Bocardon's drawer. He returned to the +vestibule with the strip folded and somewhat crumpled in his hand. +"_Voilà_," said he, handing it boldly to Fleurette. "Here is your +husband's guarantee to me, your guardian, for four thousand francs." + +Fleurette examined the forgery. The stamp impressed her. For the simple +souls of France there is magic in _papier timbré_. + +"It was my husband who wrote this?" she asked, curiously. + +"_Mais, oui_," said Aristide, with an offended air of challenge. + +Fleurette's eyes filled again with tears. + +"I only inquired," she said, "because this is the first time I have seen +his handwriting." + +"_Ma pauvre petite_," said Aristide. + +"I will do whatever you tell me, M. Pujol," said Fleurette, humbly. + +"Good! That is talking like _une bonne petite dame raisonnable_. Now, I +know a woman made up of holy bread whom St. Paul and St. Peter are +fighting to have next them when she goes to Paradise. Her name is Mme. +Bidoux, and she sells cabbages and asparagus and charcoal at No. 213 +bis, Rue Saint-Honoré. She will arrange our little affair. Bocardon, +will you have madame's trunks sent to that address?" + +He gave his arm to Fleurette, and walked out of the hotel, with serene +confidence in the powers of the sainted Mme. Bidoux. Fleurette +accompanied him unquestioningly. Of course she might have said: "If you +hold negotiable security from my husband to the amount of four thousand +francs, why should I exchange the comforts of the hotel for the doubtful +accommodation of the sainted Mme. Bidoux who sells cabbages?" But I +repeat that Fleurette was a simple soul who took for granted the wisdom +of so flamboyant and virile a creature as Aristide Pujol. + +Away up at the top of No. 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, was a little +furnished room to let, and there Aristide installed his sacred charge. +Mme. Bidoux, who, as she herself maintained, would have cut herself into +four pieces for Aristide--did he not save her dog's life? Did he not +marry her daughter to the brigadier of gendarmes (_sale voyou!_), who +would otherwise have left her lamenting? Was he not the most wonderful +of God's creatures?--Mme. Bidoux, although not quite appreciating +Aristide's quixotic delicacy, took the forlorn and fragile wisp of +misery to her capacious bosom. She made her free of the cabbages and +charcoal. She provided her, at a risible charge, with succulent meals. +She told her tales of her father and mother, of her neighbours, of the +domestic differences between the concierge and his wife (soothing idyll +for an Ariadne!), of the dirty thief of a brigadier of gendarmes, of her +bodily ailments--her body was so large that they were many; of the +picturesque death, through apoplexy, of the late M. Bidoux; the brave +woman, in short, gave her of her heart's best. As far as human hearts +could provide a bed for Fleurette, that bed was of roses. As a matter of +brutal fact, it was narrow and nubbly, and the little uncarpeted room +was ten feet by seven; but to provide it Aristide went to his own bed +hungry. And if the bed of a man's hunger is not to be accounted as one +of roses, there ought to be a vote for the reduction of the Recording +Angel's salary. + +It must not be imagined that Fleurette thought the bed hard. Her bed of +life from childhood had been nubbly. She never dreamed of complaining of +her little room under the stars, and she sat among the cabbages like a +tired lily, quite contented with her material lot. But she drooped and +drooped, and the cough returned and shook her; and Aristide, realizing +the sacredness of his charge, became a prey to anxious terrors. + +"Mère Bidoux," said he, "she must have lots of good, nourishing, tender, +underdone beef, good fillets, and _entrecôtes saignantes_." + +Mme. Bidoux sighed. She had a heart, but she also had a pocket which, +like Aristide's, was not over-filled. "That costs dear, my poor friend," +she said. + +"What does it matter what it costs? It is I who provide," said Aristide, +grandly. + +And Aristide gave up tobacco and coffee and the mild refreshment at +cafés essential to the existence of every Frenchman, and degraded his +soul by taking half-franc tips from tourists--a source of income which, +as Director, M. le Directeur, Herr Direktor of the Agence Pujol, he had +hitherto scorned haughtily--in order to provide Fleurette with underdone +beefsteaks. + +All his leisure he devoted to her. She represented something that +hitherto had not come into his life--something delicate, tender, +ethereal, something of woman that was exquisitely adorable, apart from +the flesh. Once, as he was sitting in the little shop, she touched his +temple lightly with her fingers. + +"Ah, you are good to me, Aristide." + +He felt a thrill such as no woman's touch had ever caused to pass +through him--far, far sweeter, cleaner, purer. If the _bon Dieu_ could +have given her to him then and there to be his wife, what bond could +have been holier? But he had bound himself by a sacred obligation. His +friend on his return should find him loyal. + +"Who could help being good to you, little Fleurette?" said he. "Even an +Apache would not tread on a lily of the valley!" + +"But you put me in water and tend me so carefully." + +"So that you can be fresh whenever the dear Reginald comes back." + +She sighed. "Tell me what I can do for you, my good Aristide." + +"Keep well and happy and be a valiant little woman," said he. + +Fleurette tried hard to be valiant; but the effort exhausted her +strength. As the days went on, even Aristide's inexhaustible +conversation failed to distract her from brooding. She lost the trick of +laughter. In the evenings, when he was most with her, she would sit, +either in the shop or in the little room at the back, her blue childish +eyes fixed on him wistfully. At first he tried to lure her into the gay +street; but walking tired her. He encouraged her to sit outside on the +pavement of the Rue Saint-Honoré and join with Mme. Bidoux in the gossip +of neighbours; but she listened to them with uncomprehending ears. In +despair Aristide, to coax a smile from her lips, practised his many +queer accomplishments. He conjured with cards; he juggled with oranges; +he had a mountebank's trick of putting one leg round his neck; he +imitated the voices of cats and pigs and ducks, till Mme. Bidoux held +her sides with mirth. He spent time and thought in elaborating what he +called _bonnes farces_, such as dressing himself up in Mme. Bidoux's +raiment and personifying a crabbed customer. + +Fleurette smiled but listlessly at all these comicalities. + +One day she was taken ill. A doctor, summoned, said many learned words +which Aristide and Mme. Bidoux tried hard to understand. + +"But, after all, what is the matter with her?" + + [Illustration: ARISTIDE PRACTISED HIS MANY QUEER ACCOMPLISHMENTS] + +"She has no strength to struggle. She wants happiness." + +"Can you tell me the druggist's where that can be procured?" asked +Aristide. + +The doctor shrugged his shoulders. "I tell you the truth. It is one of +those pulmonary cases. Happy, she will live; unhappy, she will die." + +"My poor Mme. Bidoux, what is to be done?" asked Aristide, after the +doctor had gone off with his modest fee. "How are we to make her happy?" + +"If only she could have news of her husband!" replied Mme. Bidoux. + +Aristide's anxieties grew heavier. It was November, when knickerbockered +and culture-seeking tourists no longer fill the cheap hotels of Paris. +The profits of the Agence Pujol dwindled. Aristide lived on bread and +cheese, and foresaw the time when cheese would be a sinful luxury. +Meanwhile Fleurette had her nourishing food, and grew more like the +ghost of a lily every day. But her eyes followed Aristide, wherever he +went in her presence, as if he were the god of her salvation. + +One day Aristide, with an unexpected franc or two in his pocket, +stopped in front of a _bureau de tabac_. A brown packet of caporal and +a book of cigarette-papers--a cigarette rolled--how good it would be! +He hesitated, and his glance fell on a collection of foreign stamps +exposed in the window. Among them were twelve Honduras stamps all +postmarked. He stared at them, fascinated. + +"_Mon brave Aristide!_" he cried. "If the _bon Dieu_ does not send you +these vibrating inspirations, it is because you yourself have already +conceived them!" + +He entered the shop and emerged, not with caporal and cigarette-papers, +but with the twelve Honduras stamps. + +That night he sat up in his little bedroom at No. 213 bis, Rue +Saint-Honoré, until his candle failed, inditing a letter in English to +Fleurette. At the head of his paper he wrote "Hotel Rosario, Honduras." +And at the end of the letter he signed the name of Reginald Batterby. +Where Honduras was, he had but a vague idea. For Fleurette, at any rate, +it would be somewhere at the other end of the world, and she would not +question any want of accuracy in local detail. Just before the light +went out he read the letter through with great pride. Batterby alluded +to the many letters he had posted from remote parts of the globe, gave +glowing forecasts of the fortune that Honduras had in store for him, +reminded her that he had placed sufficient funds for her maintenance in +the hands of Aristide Pujol, and assured her that the time was not far +off when she would be summoned to join her devoted husband. + +"Mme. Bidoux was right," said he, before going to sleep. "This is the +only way to make her happy." + +The next day Fleurette received the letter. The envelope bore the +postmarked Honduras stamp. It had been rubbed on the dusty pavement to +take off the newness. It was in her husband's handwriting. There was no +mistake about it--it was a letter from Honduras. + +"Are you happier now, little doubting female St. Thomas that you are?" +cried Aristide when she had told him the news. + +She smiled at him out of grateful eyes, and touched his hand. + +"Much happier, _mon bon ami_," she said, gently. + +Later in the day she handed him a letter addressed to Batterby. It had +no stamp. + +"Will you post this for me, Aristide?" + +Aristide put the letter in his pocket and turned sharply away, lest she +should see a sudden rush of tears. He had not counted on this innocent +trustfulness. He went to his room. The poor little letter! He had not +the heart to destroy it. No; he would keep it till Batterby came; it was +not his to destroy. So he threw it into a drawer. + +Having once begun the deception, however, he thought it necessary to +continue. Every week, therefore, he invented a letter from Batterby. To +interest her he drew upon his Provençal imagination. He described +combats with crocodiles, lion-hunts, feasts with terrific savages from +the interior, who brought their lady wives chastely clad in petticoats +made out of human teeth; he drew pictures of the town, a kind of +palm-shaded Paris by the sea, where one ate ortolans and oysters as big +as soup-plates, and where Chinamen with pigtails rode about the streets +on camels. It was not a correct description of Honduras, but, all the +same, an exotic atmosphere stimulating and captivating rose from the +pages. With this it was necessary to combine expressions of affection. +At first it was difficult. Essential delicacy restrained him. He had +also to keep in mind Batterby's vernacular. To address Fleurette, +impalpable creation of fairyland, as "old girl" was particularly +distasteful. By degrees, however, the artist prevailed. And then at last +the man himself took to forgetting the imaginary writer and poured out +words of love, warm, true, and passionate. + +And every week Fleurette would smile and tell him the wondrous news, and +would put into his hands an unstamped letter to post, which he, with a +wrench of the heart, would add to the collection in the drawer. + +Once she said, diffidently, with an unwonted blush and her pale blue +eyes swimming: "I write English so badly. Won't you read the letter and +correct my mistakes?" + +But Aristide laughed and licked the flap of the envelope and closed it. +"What has love to do with spelling and grammar? The good Reginald would +prefer your bad English to all the turned phrases of the Académie +Française." + +"It is as you like, Aristide," said Fleurette, with wistful eyes. + +Yet, in spite of the weekly letters, Fleurette continued to droop. The +winter came, and Fleurette was no longer able to stay among the cabbages +of Mme. Bidoux. She lay on her bed in the little room, ten feet by +seven, away, away at the top of the house in the Rue Saint Honoré. The +doctor, informed of her comparative happiness, again shrugged his +shoulders. There was nothing more to be done. + +"She is dying, monsieur, for want of strength to live." + +Then Aristide went about with a great heartache. Fleurette would die; +she would never see the man she loved again. What would he say when he +returned and learned the tragic story? He would not even know that +Aristide, loving her, had been loyal to him. When the Director of the +Agence Pujol personally conducted the clients of the Hôtel du Soleil et +de l'Ecosse to the Grand Trianon and pointed out the bed of the Empress +Josephine he nearly broke down. + +"What is the Empress doing now?" + +What was Fleurette doing now? Going to join the Empress in the world of +shadows. + +The tourists talked after the manner of their kind. + +"She must have found the bed very hard, poor dear." + +"Give me an iron bedstead and a good old spring mattress." + +"Ah, but, my dear sir, you forget. The Empress's bed was slung on the +back of tame panthers which Napoleon brought from Egypt." + +It was hard to jest convincingly to the knickerbockered with death in +one's soul. + +"Most belovèd little Flower," ran the last letter that Fleurette +received, "I have just had a cable from Aristide saying that you are +very ill. I will come to you as soon as I can. _Ces petits yeux de +pervenche_--I am learning your language here, you see--haunt me day and +night ..." etcetera, etcetera. + +Aristide went up to her room with a great bunch of chrysanthemums. The +letter peeped from under the pillow. Fleurette was very weak. Mme. +Bidoux, who, during Fleurette's illness, had allowed her green grocery +business to be personally conducted to the deuce by a youth of sixteen +very much in love with the lady who sold sausages and other +_charcuterie_ next door, had spread out the fortune-telling cards on +the bed and was prophesying mendaciously. Fleurette took the flowers +and clasped them to her bosom. + +"No letter for _ce cher Reginald_?" + +She shook her head. "I can write no more," she whispered. + +She closed her eyes. Presently she said, in a low voice:-- + +"Aristide--if you kiss me, I think I can go to sleep." + +He bent down to kiss her forehead. A fragile arm twined itself about his +neck and he kissed her on the lips. + +"She is sleeping," said Mme. Bidoux, after a while. + +Aristide tiptoed out of the room. + +And so died Fleurette. Aristide borrowed money from the kind-hearted +Bocardon for a beautiful funeral, and Mme. Bidoux and Bocardon and a few +neighbours and himself saw her laid to rest. When they got back to the +Rue Saint Honoré he told Mme. Bidoux about the letters. She wept and +clasped him, weeping too, in her kind, fat old arms. + +The next evening Aristide, coming back from his day's work at the Hôtel +du Soleil et de l'Ecosse, was confronted in the shop by Mme. Bidoux, +hands on broad hips. + +"_Tiens, mon petit_," she said, without preliminary greeting. "You are +an angel. I knew it. But that a man's an angel is no reason for his +being an imbecile. Read this." + +She plucked a paper from her apron pocket and thrust it into his hand. +He read it, and blinked in amazement. + +"Where did you get this, Mère Bidoux?" + +"Where I got many more. In your drawer. The letters you were saving for +this infamous scoundrel. I wanted to know what she had written to him." + +"Mère Bidoux!" cried Aristide. "Those letters were sacred!" + +"Bah!" said Mme. Bidoux, unabashed. "There is nothing sacred to a sapper +or an old grandmother who loves an imbecile. I have read the letters, +_et voilà, et voilà, et voilà!_" And she emptied her pockets of all the +letters, minus the envelopes, that Fleurette had written. + +And, after one swift glance at the first letter, Aristide had no +compunction in reading. They were all addressed to himself. + +They were very short, ill-written in a poor little uncultivated hand. +But they all contained one message, that of her love for Aristide. +Whatever illusions she may have had concerning Batterby had soon +vanished. She knew, with the unerring instinct of woman, that he had +betrayed and deserted her. Aristide's pious fraud had never deceived her +for a second. Too gentle, too timid to let him know what was in her +heart, she had written the secret patiently week after week, hoping +every time that curiosity, or pity, or something--she knew not +what--would induce him to open the idle letter, and wondering in her +simple peasant's soul at the delicacy that caused him to refrain. Once +she had boldly given him the envelope unclosed. + + [Illustration: HE READ IT, AND BLINKED IN AMAZEMENT] + +"She died for want of love, _parbleu_," said Aristide, "and there was +mine quivering in my heart and trembling on my lips all the time.... She +had _des yeux de pervenche_. Ah! _nom d'un chien!_ It is only with me +that Providence plays such tricks." + +He walked to the window and looked out into the grey street. Presently I +heard him murmuring the words of the old French song:-- + + Elle est morte en février; + Pauvre Colinette! + + + + +VII + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE MIRACLE + + +You have seen how Aristide, by attaching himself to the Hôtel du Soleil +et de l'Ecosse as a kind of glorified courier, had founded the Agence +Pujol. As he, personally, was the Agence, and the Agence was he, it +happened that when he was not in attendance at the hotel, the Agence +faded into space, and when he made his appearance in the vestibule and +hung up his placard by the bureau, the Agence at once burst again into +the splendour of existence. Apparently the fitful career of the Agence +Pujol lasted some years. Whenever a chance of more remunerative +employment turned up, Aristide took it and dissolved the Agence. +Whenever outrageous fortune chivied him with slings and arrows penniless +to Paris, there was always the Agence waiting to be resuscitated. + +It was during one of these periodic flourishings of the Agence Pujol +that Aristide met the Ducksmiths. + +Business was slack, few guests were at the hotel, and of those few none +desired to be personally conducted to the Louvre or Notre Dame or the +monument in the Place de la Bastille. They mostly wore the placid +expression of folks engaged in business affairs instead of the worried +look of pleasure-seekers. + +"My good Bocardon," said Aristide, lounging by the bureau and addressing +his friend the manager, "this is becoming desperate. In another minute I +shall take you out by main force and show you the Pont Neuf." + +At that moment the door of the stuffy salon opened, and a travelling +Briton, whom Aristide had not seen before, advanced to the bureau and +inquired his way to the Madeleine. Aristide turned on him like a flash. + +"Sir," said he, extracting documents from his pockets with lightning +rapidity, "nothing would give me greater pleasure than to conduct you +thither. My card. My tariff. My advertisement." He pointed to the +placard. "I am the managing director of the Agence Pujol, under the +special patronage of this hotel. I undertake all travelling +arrangements, from the Moulin Rouge to the Pyramids, and, as you see, my +charges are moderate." + +The Briton, holding the documents in a pudgy hand, looked at the +swift-gestured director with portentous solemnity. Then, with equal +solemnity, he looked at Bocardon. + +"Monsieur Ducksmith," said the latter, "you can repose every confidence +in Monsieur Aristide Pujol." + +"Umph!" said Mr. Ducksmith. + +After another solemn inspection of Aristide, he stuck a pair of +gold-rimmed glasses on his fleshy nose and perused the documents. He was +a fat, heavy man of about fifty years of age, and his scanty hair was +turning grey. His puffy cheeks hung jowl-like, giving him the appearance +of some odd dog--a similarity greatly intensified by the eye-sockets, +the lower lids of which were dragged down in the middle, showing the red +like a bloodhound's; but here the similarity ended, for the man's eyes, +dull and blue, had the unspeculative fixity of a rabbit's. His mouth, +small and weak, dribbled away at the corners into the jowls which, in +their turn, melted into two or three chins. He was decently dressed in +grey tweeds, and wore a diamond ring on his little finger. + +"Umph!" said he, at last; and went back to the salon. + +As soon as the door closed behind him Aristide sprang into an attitude +of indignation. + +"Did you ever see such a bear! If I ever saw a bigger one I would eat +him without salt or pepper. _Mais nom d'un chien_, such people ought to +be made into sausages!" + +"_Flègme britannique!_" laughed Bocardon. + +Half an hour passed, and Mr. Ducksmith made no reappearance from the +salon. In the forlorn hope of a client Aristide went in after him. He +found Mr. Ducksmith, glasses on nose, reading a newspaper, and a plump, +black-haired lady, with an expressionless face, knitting a grey woollen +sock. Why they should be spending their first morning--and a crisp, +sunny morning, too--in Paris in the murky staleness of this awful little +salon, Aristide could not imagine. As he entered, Mr. Ducksmith regarded +him vacantly over the top of his gold-rimmed glasses. + +"I have looked in," said Aristide, with his ingratiating smile, "to see +whether you are ready to go to the Madeleine." + +"Madeleine?" the lady inquired, softly, pausing in her knitting. + +"Madame," Aristide came forward, and, hand on heart, made her the lowest +of bows. "Madame, have I the honour of speaking to Madame Ducksmith? +Enchanted, madame, to make your acquaintance," he continued, after a +grunt from Mr. Ducksmith had assured him of the correctness of his +conjecture. "I am Monsieur Aristide Pujol, director of the Agence Pujol, +and my poor services are absolutely at your disposal." + +He drew himself up, twisted his moustache, and met her eyes--they were +rather sad and tired--with the roguish mockery of his own. She turned to +her husband. + +"Are you thinking of going to the Madeleine, Bartholomew?" + +"I am, Henrietta," said he. "I have decided to do it. And I have also +decided to put ourselves in the charge of this gentleman. Mrs. Ducksmith +and I are accustomed to all the conveniences of travel--I may say that +we are great travellers--and I leave it to you to make the necessary +arrangements. I prefer to travel at so much per head per day." + +He spoke in a wheezy, solemn monotone, from which all elements of life +and joy seemed to have been eliminated. His wife's voice, though softer +in timbre, was likewise devoid of colour. + +"My husband finds that it saves us from responsibilities," she remarked. + +"And over-charges, and the necessity of learning foreign languages, +which at our time of life would be difficult. During all our travels we +have not been to Paris before, owing to the impossibility of finding a +personally-conducted tour of an adequate class." + +"Then, my dear sir," cried Aristide, "it is Providence itself that has +put you in the way of the Agence Pujol. I will now conduct you to the +Madeleine without the least discomfort or danger." + +"Put on your hat, Henrietta," said Mr. Ducksmith, "while this gentleman +and I discuss terms." + +Mrs. Ducksmith gathered up her knitting and retired, Aristide dashing +to the door to open it for her. This gallantry surprised her ever so +little, for a faint flush came into her cheek and the shadow of a smile +into her eyes. + +"I wish you to understand, Mr. Pujol," said Mr. Ducksmith, "that being, +I may say, a comparatively rich man, I can afford to pay for certain +luxuries; but I made a resolution many years ago, which has stood me in +good stead during my business life, that I would never be cheated. You +will find me liberal but just." + +He was as good as his word. Aristide, who had never in his life +exploited another's wealth to his own advantage, suggested certain +terms, on the basis of so much per head per day, which Mr. Ducksmith +declared, with a sigh of relief, to be perfectly satisfactory. + +"Perhaps," said he, after further conversation, "you will be good enough +to schedule out a month's railway tour through France, and give me an +inclusive estimate for the three of us. As I say, Mrs. Ducksmith and I +are great travellers--we have been to Norway, to Egypt, to Morocco and +the Canaries, to the Holy Land, to Rome, and lovely Lucerne--but we find +that attention to the trivial detail of travel militates against our +enjoyment." + +"My dear sir," said Aristide, "trust in me, and your path and that of +the charming Mrs. Ducksmith will be strewn with roses." + +Whereupon Mrs. Ducksmith appeared, arrayed for walking out, and +Aristide, having ordered a cab, drove with them to the Madeleine. They +alighted in front of the majestic flight of steps. Mr. Ducksmith stared +at the classical portico supported on its Corinthian columns with his +rabbit-like, unspeculative gaze--he had those filmy blue eyes that never +seem to wink--and after a moment or two turned away. + +"Umph!" said he. + +Mrs. Ducksmith, dutiful and silent, turned away also. + +"This sacred edifice," Aristide began, in his best cicerone manner, "was +built, after a classic model, by the great Napoleon, as a Temple of +Fame. It was afterwards used as a church. You will observe--and, if you +care to, you can count, as a conscientious American lady did last +week--the fifty-six Corinthian columns. You will see they are Corinthian +by the acanthus leaves on the capitals. For the vulgar, who have no +architectural knowledge, I have _memoria technica_ for the instant +recognition of the three orders--Cabbages, Corinthian; horns, Ionic; +anything else, Doric. We will now mount the steps and inspect the +interior." + +He was dashing off in his eager fashion, when Mr. Ducksmith laid a +detaining hand on his arm. + +"No," said he, solemnly. "I disapprove of Popish interiors. Take us to +the next place." + + [Illustration: HE MIGHT AS WELL HAVE POINTED OUT THE MARVELS OF KUBLA + KHAN'S PLEASURE-DOME TO A COUPLE OF GUINEA-PIGS] + +He entered the waiting victoria. His wife meekly followed. + +"I suppose the Louvre is the next place?" said Aristide. + +"I leave it to you," said Mr. Ducksmith. + +Aristide gave the order to the cabman and took the little seat in the +cab facing his employers. On the way down the Rue Royale and the Rue de +Rivoli he pointed out the various buildings of interest--Maxim's, the +Cercle Royal, the Ministère de la Marine, the Hôtel Continental. Two +expressionless faces, two pairs of unresponsive eyes, met his merry +glance. He might as well have pointed out the marvels of Kubla Khan's +pleasure-dome to a couple of guinea-pigs. + +The cab stopped at the entrance to the galleries of the Louvre. They +entered and walked up the great staircase on the turn of which the +Winged Victory stands, with the wind of God in her vesture, proclaiming +to each beholder the deathless, ever-soaring, ever-conquering spirit of +man, and heralding the immortal glories of the souls, wind-swept +likewise by the wind of God, that are enshrined in the treasure-houses +beyond. + +"There!" said Aristide. + +"Umph! No head," said Mr. Ducksmith, passing it by with scarcely a +glance. + +"Would it cost very much to get a new one?" asked Mrs. Ducksmith, +timidly. She was three or four paces behind her spouse. + +"It would cost the blood and tears and laughter of the human race," said +Aristide. + +("That was devilish good, wasn't it?" remarked Aristide, when telling me +this story. He always took care not to hide his light under the least +possibility of a bushel.) + +The Ducksmiths looked at him in their lacklustre way, and allowed +themselves to be guided into the picture-galleries, vaguely hearing +Aristide's comments, scarcely glancing at the pictures, and +manifesting no sign of interest in anything whatever. From the Louvre +they drove to Notre Dame, where the same thing happened. The venerable +pile, standing imperishable amid the vicissitudes of centuries (the +phrase was that of the director of the Agence Pujol), stirred in their +bosoms no perceptible emotion. Mr. Ducksmith grunted and declined to +enter; Mrs. Ducksmith said nothing. + +As with pictures and cathedrals, so it was with their food at lunch. +Beyond a solemn statement to the effect that in their quality of +practised travellers they made a point of eating the food and drinking +the wine of the country, Mr. Ducksmith did not allude to the meal. At +any rate, thought Aristide, they don't clamour for underdone chops and +tea. So far they were human. Nor did they maintain an awful silence +during the repast. On the contrary, Mr. Ducksmith loved to talk--in a +dismal, pompous way--chiefly of British politics. His method of +discourse was to place himself in the position of those in authority and +to declare what he would do in any given circumstances. Now, unless the +interlocutor adopts the same method and declares what _he_ would do, +conversation is apt to become one-sided. Aristide, having no notion of a +policy should he find himself exercising the functions of the British +Chancellor of the Exchequer, cheerfully tried to change the ground of +debate. + +"What would you do, Mr. Ducksmith, if you were King of England?" + +"I should try to rule the realm like a Christian statesman," replied Mr. +Ducksmith. + +"I should have a devil of a time!" said Aristide. + +"I beg your pardon?" said Mr. Ducksmith. + +"I should have a--ah, I see--_pardon_. I should----" He looked from +one paralyzing face to the other, and threw out his arms. "_Parbleu!_" +said he, "I should decapitate your Mrs. Grundy, and make it compulsory +for bishops to dance once a week in Trafalgar Square. _Tiens!_ I would +have it a capital offence for any English cook to prepare hashed +mutton without a license, and I would banish all the bakers of the +kingdom to Siberia--ah! your English bread, which you have to eat +stale so as to avoid a horrible death!--and I would open two hundred +thousand _cafés_--_mon Dieu!_ how thirsty I have been there!--and I +would make every English work-girl do her hair properly, and I would +ordain that everybody should laugh three times a day, under pain of +imprisonment for life." + +"I am afraid, Mr. Pujol," remarked Mr. Ducksmith, seriously, "you would +not be acting as a constitutional monarch. There is such a thing as the +British Constitution, which foreigners are bound to admire, even though +they may not understand." + +"To be a king must be a great responsibility," said Mrs. Ducksmith. + +"Madame," said Aristide, "you have uttered a profound truth." And to +himself he murmured, though he should not have done so, "_Nom de Dieu! +Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" + +After lunch they drove to Versailles, which they inspected in the same +apathetic fashion; then they returned to the hotel, where they +established themselves for the rest of the day in the airless salon, Mr. +Ducksmith reading English newspapers and his wife knitting a grey +woollen sock. + +"_Mon vieux!_" said Aristide to Bocardon, "they are people of a +nightmare. They are automata endowed with the faculty of digestion. _Ce +sont des gens invraisemblables._" + +Paris providing them, apparently, with no entertainment, they started, +after a couple of days, _Aristide duce et auspice Pujol_, on their +railway tour through France, to Aristide a pilgrimage of unimaginable +depression. They began with Chartres, continued with the Châteaux of the +Loire, and began to work their way south. Nothing that Aristide could do +roused them from their apathy. They were exasperatingly docile, made few +complaints, got up, entrained, detrained, fed, excursioned, slept, just +as they were bidden. But they looked at nothing, enjoyed nothing (save +perhaps English newspapers and knitting), and uttered nothing by way of +criticism or appreciation when Aristide attempted to review the wonders +through which they had passed. They did not care to know the history, +authentic or Pujolic, of any place they visited; they were impressed by +no scene of grandeur, no corner of exquisite beauty. To go on and on, in +a dull, non-sentient way, so long as they were spared all forethought, +all trouble, all afterthought, seemed to be their ideal of travel. +Sometimes Aristide, after a fruitless effort to capture their interest, +would hold his head, wondering whether he or the Ducksmith couple were +insane. It was a dragon-fly personally conducting two moles through a +rose-garden. + +Once only, during the early part of their journey, did a gleam of +joyousness pierce the dull glaze of Mr. Ducksmith's eyes. He had +procured from the bookstall of a station a pile of English newspapers, +and was reading them in the train, while his wife knitted the +interminable sock. Suddenly he folded a _Daily Telegraph_, and handed +it over to Aristide so that he should see nothing but a half-page +advertisement. The great capitals leaped to Aristide's eyes:-- + + "DUCKSMITH'S DELICATE JAMS." + +"I am _the_ Ducksmith," said he. "I started and built up the business. +When I found that I could retire, I turned it into a limited liability +company, and now I am free and rich and able to enjoy the advantages of +foreign travel." + +Mrs. Ducksmith started, sighed, and dropped a stitch. + +"Did you also make pickles?" asked Aristide. + +"I did manufacture pickles, but I made my name in jam. In the trade you +will find it an honoured one." + +"It is that in every nursery in Europe," Aristide declared, with polite +hyperbole. + +"I have done my best to deserve my reputation," said Mr. Ducksmith, as +impervious to flattery as to impressions of beauty. + +"_Pécaïre!_" said Aristide to himself, "how can I galvanize these +corpses?" + +As the soulless days went by this problem grew to be Aristide's main +solicitude. He felt strangled, choked, borne down by an intolerable +weight. What could he do to stir their vitality? Should he fire off +pistols behind them, just to see them jump? But would they jump? Would +not Mr. Ducksmith merely turn his rabbit-eyes, set in their bloodhound +sockets, vacantly on him, and assume that the detonations were part of +the tour's programme? Could he not fill him up with conflicting +alcohols, and see what inebriety would do for him? But Mr. Ducksmith +declined insidious potations. He drank only at meal-times, and +sparingly. Aristide prayed that some Thaïs might come along, cast her +spell upon him, and induce him to wink. He himself was powerless. His +raciest stories fell on dull ears; none of his jokes called forth a +smile. At last, having taken them to nearly all the historic châteaux of +Touraine, without eliciting one cry of admiration, he gave Mr. Ducksmith +up in despair and devoted his attention to the lady. + +Mrs. Ducksmith parted her smooth black hair in the middle and fastened +it in a knob at the back of her head. Her clothes were good and new, but +some desolate dressmaker had contrived to invest them with an air of +hopeless dowdiness. At her bosom she wore a great brooch, containing +intertwined locks of a grandfather and grandmother long since defunct. +Her mind was as drearily equipped as her person. She had a vague idea +that they were travelling in France; but if Aristide had told her that +it was Japan she would have meekly accepted the information. She had no +opinions. Still she was a woman, and Aristide, firm in his conviction +that when it comes to love-making all women are the same, proceeded +forthwith to make love to her. + +"Madame," said he, one morning--she was knitting in the vestibule of the +Hôtel du Faisan at Tours, Mr. Ducksmith being engaged, as usual, in the +salon with his newspapers--"how much more charming that beautiful grey +dress would be if it had a spot of colour." + +His audacious hand placed a deep crimson rose against her corsage, and +he stood away at arm's length, his head on one side, judging the effect. + +"Magnificent! If madame would only do me the honour to wear it." + +Mrs. Ducksmith took the flower hesitatingly. + +"I'm afraid my husband does not like colour," she said. + +"He must be taught," cried Aristide. "You must teach him. I must teach +him. Let us begin at once. Here is a pin." + +He held the pin delicately between finger and thumb, and controlled her +with his roguish eyes. She took the pin and fixed the rose to her dress. + +"I don't know what Mr. Ducksmith will say." + +"What he ought to say, madame, is 'Bountiful Providence, I thank Thee +for giving me such a beautiful wife.'" + +Mrs. Ducksmith blushed and, to conceal her face, bent it over her +resumed knitting. She made woman's time-honoured response. + +"I don't think you ought to say such things, Mr. Pujol." + +"Ah, madame," said he, lowering his voice; "I have tried not to; but, +_que voulez-vous_, it was stronger than I. When I see you going about +like a little grey mouse"--the lady weighed at least twelve stone--"you, +who ought to be ravishing the eyes of mankind, I feel indignation +here"--he thumped his chest; "my Provençal heart is stirred. It is +enough to make one weep." + +"I don't quite understand you, Mr. Pujol," she said, dropping stitches +recklessly. + +"Ah, madame," he whispered--and the rascal's whisper on such occasions +could be very seductive--"that I will never believe." + +"I am too old to dress myself up in fine clothes," she murmured. + +"That's an illusion," said he, with a wide-flung gesture, "that will +vanish at the first experiment." + +Mr. Ducksmith emerged from the salon, _Daily Telegraph_ in hand. Mrs. +Ducksmith shot a timid glance at him and the knitting needles clicked +together nervously. But the vacant eyes of the heavy man seemed no more +to note the rose on her bosom than they noted any point of beauty in +landscape or building. + +Aristide went away chuckling, highly diverted by the success of his +first effort. He had touched some hidden springs of feeling. Whatever +might happen, at any rate, for the remainder of the tour he would not +have to spend his emotional force in vain attempts to knock sparks out +of a jelly-fish. He noticed with delight that at dinner that evening +Mrs. Ducksmith, still wearing the rose, had modified the rigid sweep +of her hair from the mid-parting. It gave just a wavy hint of +coquetry. He made her a little bow and whispered, "Charming!" +Whereupon she coloured and dropped her eyes. And during the meal, +while Mr. Ducksmith discoursed on bounty-fed sugar, his wife and +Aristide exchanged, across the table, the glances of conspirators. +After dinner he approached her. + +"Madame, may I have the privilege of showing you the moon of Touraine?" + +She laid down her knitting. "Bartholomew, will you come out?" + +He looked at her over his glasses and shook his head. + +"What is the good of looking at moonshine? The moon itself I have +already seen." + +So Aristide and Mrs. Ducksmith sat by themselves outside the hotel, and +he expounded to her the beauty of moonlight and its intoxicating effect +on folks in love. + +"Wouldn't you like," said he, "to be lying on that white burnished cloud +with your beloved kissing your feet?" + +"What odd things you think of." + +"But wouldn't you?" he insinuated. + +Her bosom heaved and swelled on a sigh. She watched the strip of silver +for a while and then murmured a wistful "Yes." + +"I can tell you of many odd things," said Aristide. "I can tell you how +flowers sing and what colour there is in the notes of birds. And how a +cornfield laughs, and how the face of a woman who loves can outdazzle +the sun. _Chère madame_," he went on, after a pause, touching her little +plump hand, "you have been hungering for beauty and thirsting for +sympathy all your life. Isn't that so?" + +She nodded. + +"You have always been misunderstood." + +A tear fell. Our rascal saw the glistening drop with peculiar +satisfaction. Poor Mrs. Ducksmith! It was a child's game. _Enfin_, +what woman could resist him? He had, however, one transitory qualm of +conscience, for, with all his vagaries, Aristide was a kindly and +honest man. Was it right to disturb those placid depths? Was it right +to fill this woman with romantic aspirations that could never be +gratified? He himself had not the slightest intention of playing +Lothario and of wrecking the peace of the Ducksmith household. The +realization of the saint-like purity of his aims reassured him. When +he wanted to make love to a woman, _pour tout de bon_, it would not be +to Mrs. Ducksmith. + +"Bah!" said he to himself. "I am doing a noble and disinterested act. I +am restoring sight to the blind. I am giving life to one in a state of +suspended animation. _Tron de l'Air!_ I am playing the part of a +soul-reviver! And, _parbleu!_ it isn't Jean or Jacques that can do that. +It takes an Aristide Pujol!" + +So, having persuaded himself, in his Southern way, that he was executing +an almost divine mission, he continued, with a zest now sharpened by an +approving conscience, to revive Mrs. Ducksmith's soul. + +The poor lady, who had suffered the blighting influence of Mr. Ducksmith +for twenty years with never a ray of counteracting warmth from the +outside, expanded like a flower to the sun under the soul-reviving +process. Day by day she exhibited some fresh timid coquetry in dress and +manner. Gradually she began to respond to Aristide's suggestions of +beauty in natural scenery and exquisite building. On the ramparts of +Angoulême, daintiest of towns in France, she gazed at the smiling +valleys of the Charente and the Son stretching away below, and of her +own accord touched his arm lightly and said: "How beautiful!" She +appealed to her husband. + +"Umph!" said he. + +Once more (it had become a habit) she exchanged glances with Aristide. +He drew her a little farther along, under pretext of pointing out the +dreamy sweep of the Charente. + +"If he appreciates nothing at all, why on earth does he travel?" + +Her eyelids fluttered upwards for a fraction of a second. + +"It's his mania," she said. "He can never rest at home. He must always +be going on--on." + +"How can you endure it?" he asked. + +She sighed. "It is better now that you can teach me how to look at +things." + +"Good!" thought Aristide. "When I leave them she can teach him to look +at things and revive his soul. Truly I deserve a halo." + +As Mr. Ducksmith appeared to be entirely unperceptive of his wife's +spiritual expansion, Aristide grew bolder in his apostolate. He +complimented Mrs. Ducksmith to his face. He presented her daily with +flowers. He scarcely waited for the heavy man's back to be turned to +make love to her. If she did not believe that she was the most +beautiful, the most ravishing, the most delicate-souled woman in the +world, it was through no fault of Aristide. Mr. Ducksmith went his +pompous, unseeing way. At every stopping-place stacks of English +daily papers awaited him. Sometimes, while Aristide was showing them +the sights of a town--to which, by the way, he insisted on being +conducted--he would extract a newspaper from his pocket and read with +dull and dogged stupidity. Once Aristide caught him reading the +advertisements for cooks and housemaids. In these circumstances Mrs. +Ducksmith spiritually expanded at an alarming rate; and, +correspondingly, dwindled the progress of Mr. Ducksmith's sock. + +They arrived at Perigueux, in Perigord, land of truffles, one morning, +in time for lunch. Towards the end of the meal the _maître d'hôtel_ +helped them to great slabs of _pâté de foie gras_, made in the +house--most of the hotel-keepers in Perigord make _pâté de foie gras_, +both for home consumption and for exportation--and waited expectant of +their appreciation. He was not disappointed. Mr. Ducksmith, after a +hesitating glance at the first mouthful, swallowed it, greedily devoured +his slab, and, after pointing to his empty plate, said, solemnly:-- + +"_Plou._" + +Like Oliver, he asked for more. + +"_Tiens!_" thought Aristide, astounded. "Is he, too, developing a soul?" + +But, alas! there were no signs of it when they went their dreary round +of the town in the usual ramshackle open cab. The cathedral of +Saint-Front, extolled by Aristide and restored by Abadie--a terrible +fellow who has capped with tops of pepper-castors every pre-Gothic +building in France--gave him no thrill; nor did the picturesque, +tumble-down ancient buildings on the banks of the Dordogne, nor the +delicate Renaissance façades in the cool, narrow Rue du Lys. + +"We will now go back to the hotel," said Mr. Ducksmith. + +"But have we seen it all?" asked his wife. + +"By no means," said Aristide. + +"We will go back to the hotel," repeated her husband, in his +expressionless tones. "I have seen enough of Perigueux." + +This was final. They drove back to the hotel. Mr. Ducksmith, without a +word, went straight into the salon, leaving Aristide and his wife +standing in the vestibule. + +"And you, madame," said Aristide; "are you going to sacrifice the glory +of God's sunshine to the manufacture of woollen socks?" + +She smiled--she had caught the trick at last--and said, in happy +submission: "What would you have me do?" + +With one hand he clasped her arm; with the other, in a superb gesture, +he indicated the sunlit world outside. + +"Let us drain together," cried he, "the loveliness of Perigueux to its +dregs!" + +Greatly daring, she followed him. It was a rapturous escapade--the +first adventure of her life. She turned her comely face to him and he +saw smiles round her lips and laughter in her eyes. Aristide, worker +of miracles, strutted by her side choke-full of vanity. They wandered +through the picturesque streets of the old town with the gaiety of +truant children, peeping through iron gateways into old courtyards, +venturing their heads into the murk of black stairways, talking (on +the part of Aristide) with mothers who nursed chuckling babes on their +doorsteps, crossing the thresholds, hitherto taboo, of churches, and +meeting the mystery of coloured glass and shadows and the heavy smell +of incense. + +Her hand was on his arm when they entered the flagged courtyard of an +ancient palace, a stately medley of the centuries, with wrought +ironwork in the balconies, tourelles, oriels, exquisite Renaissance +ornaments on architraves, and a great central Gothic doorway, with +great window-openings above, through which was visible the stone +staircase of honour leading to the upper floors. In a corner stood a +mediæval well, the sides curiously carved. One side of the courtyard +blazed in sunshine, the other lay cool and grey in shadow. Not a human +form or voice troubled the serenity of the spot. On a stone bench +against the shady wall Aristide and Mrs. Ducksmith sat down to rest. + +"_Voilà!_" said Aristide. "Here one can suck in all the past like an +omelette. They had the feeling for beauty, those old fellows." + +"I have wasted twenty years of my life," said Mrs. Ducksmith, with a +sigh. "Why didn't I meet someone like you when I was young? Ah, you +don't know what my life has been, Mr. Pujol." + +"Why not Aristide when we are alone? Why not, Henriette?" + +He too had the sense of adventure, and his eyes were more than usually +compelling and his voice more seductive. For some reason or other, +undivined by Aristide--over-excitement of nerves, perhaps--she burst +into tears. + +"_Henriette! Henriette, ne pleurez pas._" + +His arm crept round her--he knew not how; her head sank on his shoulder, +she knew not why--faithlessness to her lord was as far from her thoughts +as murder or arson; but for one poor little moment in a lifetime it is +good to weep on someone's shoulder and to have someone's sympathetic arm +around one's waist. + +"_Pauvre petite femme!_ And is it love she is pining for?" + +She sobbed; he lifted her chin with his free hand--and what less could +mortal apostle do?--he kissed her on her wet cheek. + +A bellow like that of an angry bull caused them to start asunder. They +looked up, and there was Mr. Ducksmith within a few yards of them, his +face aflame, his rabbit's eyes on fire with rage. He advanced, shook his +fists in their faces. + +"I've caught you! At last, after twenty years, I've caught you!" + +"Monsieur," cried Aristide, starting up, "allow me to explain." + +He swept Aristide aside like an intercepting willow-branch, and poured +forth a torrent of furious speech upon his wife. + +"I have hated you for twenty years. Day by day I have hated you more. +I've watched you, watched you, watched you! But, you sly jade, you've +been too clever for me till now. Yes; I followed you from the hotel. I +dogged you. I foresaw what would happen. Now the end has come. I've +hated you for twenty years--ever since you first betrayed me----" + +Mrs. Ducksmith, who had sat with overwhelmed head in her hands, started +bolt upright, and looked at him like one thunderstruck. + +"I betrayed you?" she gasped, in bewilderment. "My God! When? How? What +do you mean?" + +He laughed--for the first time since Aristide had known him--but it was +a ghastly laugh, that made the jowls of his cheeks spread horribly to +his ears; and again he flooded the calm, stately courtyard with the +raging violence of words. The veneer of easy life fell from him. He +became the low-born, petty tradesman, using the language of the hands +of his jam factory. No, he had never told her. He had awaited his +chance. Now he had found it. He called her names.... + + [Illustration: "I'VE CAUGHT YOU! AT LAST, AFTER TWENTY YEARS, I'VE + CAUGHT YOU!"] + +Aristide interposed, his Southern being athrob with the insults heaped +upon the woman. + +"Say that again, monsieur," he shouted, "and I will take you up in my +arms like a sheep and throw you down that well." + +The two men glared at one another, Aristide standing bent, with crooked +fingers, ready to spring at the other's throat. The woman threw herself +between them. + +"For Heaven's sake," she cried, "listen to me! I have done no wrong. I +have done no wrong now--I never did you wrong, so help me God!" + +Mr. Ducksmith laughed again, and his laugh re-echoed round the quiet +walls and up the vast staircase of honour. + +"You'd be a fool not to say it. But now I've done with you. Here, you, +sir. Take her away--do what you like with her; I'll divorce her. I'll +give you a thousand pounds never to see her again." + +"_Goujat! Triple goujat!_" cried Aristide, more incensed than ever at +this final insult. + +Mrs. Ducksmith, deadly white, swayed sideways, and Aristide caught her +in his arms and dragged her to the stone bench. The fat, heavy man +looked at them for a second, laughed again, and sped through the +_porte-cochère_. Mrs. Ducksmith quickly recovered from her fainting +attack, and gently pushed the solicitous Aristide away. + +"Merciful Heaven!" she murmured. "What is to become of me?" + +The last person to answer the question was Aristide. For once in his +adventurous life resource failed him. He stared at the woman for whom he +cared not the snap of a finger, and who, he knew, cared not the snap of +a finger for him, aghast at the havoc he had wrought. If he had set out +to arouse emotion in these two sluggish breasts he had done so with a +vengeance. He had thought he was amusing himself with a toy cannon, and +he had fired a charge of dynamite. + +He questioned her almost stupidly--for a man in the comic mask does not +readily attune himself to tragedy. She answered with the desolate +frankness of a lost soul. And then the whole meaning--or the lack of +meaning--of their inanimate lives was revealed to him. Absolute +estrangement had followed the birth of their child nearly twenty years +ago. The child had died after a few weeks. Since then he saw--and the +generous blood of his heart froze as the vision came to him--that the +vulgar, half-sentient, rabbit-eyed bloodhound of a man had nursed an +unexpressed, dull, implacable resentment against the woman. It did not +matter that the man's suspicion was vain. To Aristide the woman's blank +amazement at the preposterous charge was proof enough; to the man the +thing was real. For nearly twenty years the man had suffered the cancer +to eat away his vitals, and he had watched and watched his blameless +wife, until now, at last, he had caught her in this folly. No wonder he +could not rest at home; no wonder he was driven, Io-wise, on and on, +although he hated travel and all its discomforts, knew no word of a +foreign language, knew no scrap of history, had no sense of beauty, was +utterly ignorant, as every single one of our expensively State-educated +English lower classes is, of everything that matters on God's earth; no +wonder that, in the unfamiliarity of foreign lands, feeling as helpless +as a ballet-dancer in a cavalry charge, he looked to Cook, or Lunn, or +the Agence Pujol to carry him through his uninspired pilgrimage. For +twenty years he had shown no sign of joy or sorrow or anger, scarcely +even of pleasure or annoyance. A tortoise could not have been more +unemotional. The unsuspected volcano had slumbered. To-day came +disastrous eruption. And what was a mere laughing, crying child of +a man like Aristide Pujol in front of a Ducksmith volcano? + +"What is to become of me?" wailed Mrs. Ducksmith again. + +"_Ma foi!_" said Aristide, with a shrug of his shoulders. "What's going +to become of anyone? Who can foretell what will happen in a minute's +time? _Tiens!_" he added, kindly laying his hand on the sobbing woman's +shoulder. "Be comforted, my poor Henriette. Just as nothing in this +world is as good as we hope, so nothing is as bad as we fear. _Voyons!_ +All is not lost yet. We must return to the hotel." + +She weepingly acquiesced. They walked through the quiet streets like +children whose truancy had been discovered and who were creeping back to +condign punishment at school. When they reached the hotel, Mrs. +Ducksmith went straight up to the woman's haven, her bedroom. + +Aristide tugged at his Vandyke beard in dire perplexity. The situation +was too pregnant with tragedy for him to run away and leave the pair +to deal with it as best they could. But what was he to do? He sat down +in the vestibule and tried to think. The landlord, an unstoppable +gramophone of garrulity, entering by the street-door and bearing down +upon him, put him to flight. He, too, sought his bedroom, a cool +apartment with a balcony outside the French window. On this balcony, +which stretched along the whole range of first-floor bedrooms, he +stood for a while, pondering deeply. Then, in an absent way, he +overstepped the limit of his own room-frontage. A queer sound startled +him. He paused, glanced through the open window, and there he saw a +sight which for the moment paralyzed him. + + [Illustration: THERE HE SAW A SIGHT WHICH FOR THE MOMENT PARALYZED HIM] + +Recovering command of his muscles, he tiptoed his way back. He +remembered now that the three rooms adjoined. Next to his was Mr. +Ducksmith's, and then came Mrs. Ducksmith's. It was Mr. Ducksmith whom +he had seen. Suddenly his dark face became luminous with laughter, his +eyes glowed, he threw his hat in the air and danced with glee about the +room. Having thus worked off the first intoxication of his idea, he +flung his few articles of attire and toilet necessaries into his bag, +strapped it, and darted, in his dragon-fly way, into the corridor and +tapped softly at Mrs. Ducksmith's door. She opened it. He put his finger +to his lips. + +"Madame," he whispered, bringing to bear on her all the mocking +magnetism of his eyes, "if you value your happiness you will do exactly +what I tell you. You will obey me implicitly. You must not ask +questions. Pack your trunks at once. In ten minutes' time the porter +will come for them." + +She looked at him with a scared face. "But what am I going to do?" + +"You are going to revenge yourself on your husband." + +"But I don't want to," she replied, piteously. + +"I do," said he. "Begin, _chère madame_. Every moment is precious." + +In a state of stupefied terror the poor woman obeyed him. He saw her +start seriously on her task and then went downstairs, where he held a +violent and gesticulatory conversation with the landlord and with a man +in a green baize apron summoned from some dim lair of the hotel. After +that he lit a cigarette and smoked feverishly, walking up and down the +pavement. In ten minutes' time his luggage with that of Mrs. Ducksmith +was placed upon the cab. Mrs. Ducksmith appeared trembling and +tear-stained in the vestibule. + + * * * * * + +The man in the green baize apron knocked at Mr. Ducksmith's door and +entered the room. + +"I have come for the baggage of monsieur," said he. + +"Baggage? What baggage?" asked Mr. Ducksmith, sitting up. + +"I have descended the baggage of Monsieur Pujol," said the porter in his +stumbling English, "and of madame, and put them in a cab, and I +naturally thought monsieur was going away, too." + +"Going away!" He rubbed his eyes, glared at the porter, and dashed into +his wife's room. It was empty. He dashed into Aristide's room. It was +empty, too. Shrieking inarticulate anathema, he rushed downstairs, the +man in the green baize apron following at his heels. + +Not a soul was in the vestibule. No cab was at the door. Mr. Ducksmith +turned upon his stupefied satellite. + +"Where are they?" + +"They must have gone already. I filled the cab. Perhaps Monsieur Pujol +and madame have gone before to make arrangements." + +"Where have they gone to?" + +"In Perigueux there is nowhere to go to with baggage but the railway +station." + +A decrepit vehicle with a gaudy linen canopy hove in sight. Mr. +Ducksmith hailed it as the last victims of the Flood must have hailed +the Ark. He sprang into it and drove to the station. + +There, in the _salle d'attente_, he found Aristide mounting guard over +his wife's luggage. He hurled his immense bulk at his betrayer. + +"You blackguard! Where is my wife?" + +"Monsieur," said Aristide, puffing a cigarette, sublimely impudent and +debonair, "I decline to answer any questions. Your wife is no longer +your wife. You offered me a thousand pounds to take her away. I am +taking her away. I did not deign to disturb you for such a trifle as a +thousand pounds, but, since you are here----" + +He smiled engagingly and held out his curved palm. Mr. Ducksmith foamed +at the corners of the small mouth that disappeared into the bloodhound +jowls. + +"My wife!" he shouted. "If you don't want me to throw you down and +trample on you." + +A band of loungers, railway officials, peasants, and other travellers +awaiting their trains, gathered round. As the altercation was conducted +in English, which they did not understand, they could only hope for the +commencement of physical hostilities. + +"My dear sir," said Aristide, "I do not understand you. For twenty years +you hold an innocent and virtuous woman under an infamous suspicion. She +meets a sympathetic soul, and you come across her pouring into his ear +the love and despair of a lifetime. You have more suspicion. You tell me +you will give me a thousand pounds to go away with her. I take you at +your word. And now you want to stamp on me. _Ma foi!_ it is not +reasonable." + +Mr. Ducksmith seized him by the lapels of his coat. A gasp of +expectation went round the crowd. But Aristide recognized an agonized +appeal in the eyes now bloodshot. + +"My wife!" he said hoarsely. "I want my wife. I can't live without her. +Give her back to me. Where is she?" + +"You had better search the station," said Aristide. + +The heavy man unconsciously shook him in his powerful grasp, as a child +might shake a doll. + +"Give her to me! Give her to me, I say! She won't regret it." + + [Illustration: MR. DUCKSMITH SEIZED HIM BY THE LAPELS OF HIS COAT] + +"You swear that?" asked Aristide, with lightning quickness. + +"I swear it, by God! Where is she?" + +Aristide disengaged himself, waved his hand airily towards Perigueux, +and smiled blandly. + +"In the salon of the hotel, waiting for you to prostrate yourself on +your knees before her." + +Mr. Ducksmith gripped him by the arm. + +"Come back with me. If you're lying I'll kill you." + +"The luggage?" queried Aristide. + +"Confound the luggage!" said Mr. Ducksmith, and dragged him out of the +station. + +A cab brought them quickly to the hotel. Mr. Ducksmith bolted like an +obese rabbit into the salon. A few moments afterwards Aristide, +entering, found them locked in each other's arms. + +They started alone for England that night, and Aristide returned to the +directorship of the Agence Pujol. But he took upon himself enormous +credit for having worked a miracle. + + * * * * * + +"One thing I can't understand," said I, after he had told me the story, +"is what put this sham elopement into your crazy head. What did you see +when you looked into Mr. Ducksmith's bedroom?" + +"Ah, _mon vieux_, I did not tell you. If I had told you, you would not +have been surprised at what I did. I saw a sight that would have melted +the heart of a stone. I saw Ducksmith wallowing on his bed and sobbing +as if his heart would break. It filled my soul with pity. I said: 'If +that mountain of insensibility can weep and sob in such agony, it is +because he loves--and it is I, Aristide, who have reawakened that +love.'" + +"Then," said I, "why on earth didn't you go and fetch Mrs. Ducksmith and +leave them together?" + +He started from his chair and threw up both hands. + +"_Mon Dieu!_" cried he. "You English! You are a charming people, but you +have no romance. You have no dramatic sense. I will help myself to a +whisky and soda." + + + + +VIII + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE FICKLE GODDESS + + +It may be remembered that Aristide Pujol had aged parents, browned and +wrinkled children of the soil, who had passed all their days in the +desolation of Aigues-Mortes, the little fortified, derelict city in the +salt marshes of Provence. Although they regarded him with the same +unimaginative wonder as a pair of alligators might regard an Argus +butterfly, their undoubted but freakish progeny, and although Aristide +soared high above their heads in all phases of thought and emotion, the +mutual ties remained strong and perdurable. Scarcely a year passed +without Aristide struggling somehow south to visit _ses vieux_, as he +affectionately called them, and whenever Fortune shed a few smiles on +him, one or two at least were sure to find their way to Aigues-Mortes in +the shape of, say, a silver-mounted umbrella for his father or a deuce +of a Paris hat for the old lady's Sunday wear. Monsieur and Madame Pujol +had a sacred museum of these unused objects--the pride of their lives. +Aristide was entirely incomprehensible, but he was a good son. A bad son +in France is rare. + +But once Aristide nearly killed his old people outright. An envelope +from him contained two large caressive slips of bluish paper, which when +scrutinized with starting eyes turned out to be two one-thousand-franc +notes. Mon Dieu! What had happened? Had Aristide been robbing the Bank +of France? They stood paralyzed and only recovered motive force when a +neighbour suggested their reading the accompanying letter. It did not +explain things very clearly. He was in Aix-les-Bains, a place which they +had never heard of, making his fortune. He was staying at the Hôtel de +l'Europe, where Queen Victoria (they had heard of Queen Victoria) had +been contented to reside, he was a glittering figure in a splendid +beau-monde, and if _ses vieux_ would buy a few cakes and a bottle of vin +cacheté with the enclosed trifle, to celebrate his prosperity, he would +deem it the privilege of a devoted son. But Pujol senior, though +wondering where the devil he had fished all that money from, did not +waste it in profligate revelry. He took the eighty pounds to the bank +and exchanged the perishable paper for one hundred solid golden louis +which he carried home in a bag curiously bulging beneath his woollen +jersey and secreted it with the savings of his long life in the mattress +of the conjugal bed. + +"If only he hasn't stolen it," sighed the mother. + +"What does it matter, since it is sewn up there all secure?" said the +old man. "No one can find it." + +The Provençal peasant is as hard-headed and practical as a Scottish +miner, and if left alone by the fairies would produce no imaginative +effect whatever upon his generation; but in his progeniture he is more +preposterously afflicted with changelings than any of his fellows the +world over, which, though ethnologically an entirely new proposition, +accounts for a singular number of things and _inter alia_ for my +dragon-fly friend, Aristide Pujol. + +Now, Aristide, be it said at the outset, had not stolen the money. It +(and a vast amount more) had been honestly come by. He did not lie when +he said that he was staying at the Hôtel de l'Europe, Aix-les-Bains, +honoured by the late Queen Victoria (pedantic accuracy requires the +correction that the august lady rented the annexe, the Villa Victoria, +on the other side of the shady way--but no matter--an hotel and its +annexe are the same thing) nor did he lie in boasting of his prodigious +prosperity. Aristide was in clover. For the first, and up to now as I +write, the only, time in his life he realized the gorgeous visions of +pallid years. He was leading the existence of the amazing rich. He could +drink champagne--not your miserable _tisane_ at five francs a quart--but +real champagne, with year of vintage and _gôut américan_ or _gôut +anglais_ marked on label, fabulously priced; he could dine lavishly at +the Casino restaurants or at Nikola's, prince of restaurateurs, among +the opulent and the fair; he could clothe himself in attractive raiment; +he could step into a fiacre and bid the man drive and not care whither +he went or what he paid; he could also distribute five-franc pieces to +lame beggars. He scattered his money abroad with both hands, according +to his expansive temperament; and why not, when he was drawing wealth +out of an inexhaustible fount? The process was so simple, so sure. All +you had to do was to believe in the cards on which you staked your +money. If you knew you were going to win, you won. Nothing could be +easier. + +He had drifted into Aix-les-Bains from Geneva on the lamentable +determination of a commission agency in the matter of some patent fuel, +with a couple of louis in his pocket forlornly jingling the tale of his +entire fortune. As this was before the days when you had to exhibit +certificates of baptism, marriage, sanity and bank-balance before being +allowed to enter the baccarat rooms, Aristide paid his two francs and +made a bee line for the tables. I am afraid Aristide was a gambler. He +was never so happy as when taking chances; his whole life was a gamble, +with Providence holding the bank. Before the night was over he had +converted his two louis into fifty. The next day they became five +hundred. By the end of a week his garments were wadded with bank notes +whose value amounted to a sum so stupendous as to be beyond need of +computation. He was a celebrity in the place and people nudged each +other as he passed by. And Aristide passed by with a swagger, his head +high and the end of his pointed beard sticking joyously up in the air. + +We see him one August morning, in the plentitude of his success, +lounging in a wicker chair on the shady lawn of the Hôtel de l'Europe. +He wore white buckskin shoes--I begin with these as they were the first +point of his person to attract the notice of the onlooker--lilac silk +socks, a white flannel suit with a zig-zag black stripe, a violet tie +secured by a sapphire and diamond pin, and a rakish panama hat. On his +knees lay the _Matin_; the fingers of his left hand held a fragrant +corona; his right hand was uplifted in a gesture, for he was talking. He +was talking to a couple of ladies who sat near by, one a mild-looking +Englishwoman of fifty, dressed in black, the other, her daughter, a +beautiful girl of twenty-four. That Aristide should fly to feminine +charms, like moth to candle, was a law of his being; that he should lie, +with shriveled wings, at Miss Errington's feet was the obvious result. +Her charms were of the winsome kind to which he was most susceptible. +She had an oval face, a little mouth like crumpled rose petals (so +Aristide himself described it), a complexion the mingling of ivory and +peach blossom (Aristide again), a straight little nose, appealing eyes +of the deepest blue veiled by sweeping lashes and fascinating fluffiness +of dark hair over a pure brow. She had a graceful figure, and the +slender foot below her white piqué skirt was at once the envy and +admiration of Aix-les-Bains. + +Aristide talked. The ladies listened, with obvious amusement. In the +easy hotel way he had fallen into their acquaintance. As the man of +wealth, the careless player who took five-hundred-louis banks at the +table with the five-louis minimum, and cleared out the punt, he felt it +necessary to explain himself. I am afraid he deviated from the narrow +path of truth. + +"What perfect English you speak," Miss Errington remarked, when he had +finished his harangue and had put the corona between his lips. Her voice +was a soft contralto. + +"I have mixed much in English society, since I was a child," replied +Aristide, in his grandest manner. "Fortune has made me know many of your +county families and members of Parliament." + +Miss Errington laughed. "Our M. P.'s are rather a mixed lot, Monsieur +Pujol." + +"To me an English Member of Parliament is a high-bred conservative. I +do not recognize the others," said Aristide. + +"Unfortunately we have to recognize them," said the elder lady with a +smile. + +"Not socially, madame. They exist as mechanical factors of the +legislative machine; but that is all." He swelled as if the blood of the +Montmorencys and the Colignys boiled in his veins. "We do not ask them +into our drawing rooms. We do not allow them to marry our daughters. We +only salute them with cold politeness when we pass them in the street." + +"It's astonishing," said Miss Errington, "how strongly the aristocratic +principle exists in republican France. Now, there's our friend, the +Comte de Lussigny, for instance----" + +A frown momentarily darkened the cloudless brow of Aristide Pujol. He +did not like the Comte de Lussigny---- + +"With Monsieur de Lussigny," he interposed, "it is a matter of +prejudice, not of principle." + +"And with you?" + +"The reasoned philosophy of a lifetime, mademoiselle," answered +Aristide. He turned to Mrs. Errington. + +"How long have you known Monsieur de Lussigny, madame?" + +She looked at her daughter. "It was in Monte Carlo the winter before +last, wasn't it, Betty? Since then we have met him frequently in +England and Paris. We came across him, just lately, at Trouville. I +think he's charming, don't you?" + +"He's a great gambler," said Aristide. + +Betty Errington laughed again. "But so are you. So is mamma. So am I, in +my poor little way." + +"We gamble for amusement," said Aristide loftily. + +"I'm sure I don't," cried Miss Betty, with merry eyes--and she looked +adorable--"When I put my despised five-franc piece down on the table I +want desperately to win, and when the horrid croupier rakes it up I want +to hit him--Oh! I want to hit him hard." + +"And when you win?" + +"I'm afraid I don't think of the croupier at all," said Miss Betty. + +Her mother smiled indulgently and exchanged a glance with Aristide. +This pleased him; there was an agreeable little touch of intimacy in +it. It confirmed friendly relations with the mother. What were his +designs as regards the daughter he did not know. They were not evil, +certainly. For all his southern blood, Latin traditions and +devil-may-care upbringing, Aristide, though perhaps not reaching our +divinely set and therefore unique English standard of morality, was a +decent soul; further, partly through his pedagogic sojourn among them, +and partly through his childish adoration of the frank, fair-cheeked, +northern goddesses talking the quick, clear speech, who passed him by +when he was a hunted little devil of a _chasseur_ in the Marseilles +café, he had acquired a peculiarly imaginative reverence for English +girls. The reverence, indeed, extended to English ladies generally. +Owing to the queer circumstances of his life they were the only women +of a class above his own, with whom he had associated on terms of +equality. He had, then, no dishonorable designs as regards Miss Betty +Errington. On the other hand, the thoughts of marriage had as yet not +entered his head. You see, a Frenchman and an Englishman or an +American, view marriage from entirely different angles. The +Anglo-Saxon of honest instincts, attracted towards a pretty girl at +once thinks of the possibilities of marriage; if he finds them +infinitely remote, he makes romantic love to her in the solitude of +his walks abroad or of his sleepless nights, and, in her presence, is +as dumb and dismal as a freshly hooked trout. The equally honest Gaul +does nothing of the kind. The attraction in itself is a stimulus to +adventure. He makes love to her, just because it is the nature of a +lusty son of Adam to make love to a pretty daughter of Eve. He lives +in the present. The rest doesn't matter. He leaves it to chance. I am +speaking, be it understood, not of deep passions--that is a different +matter altogether--but of the more superficial sexual attractions +which we, as a race, take so seriously and puritanically, often to our +most disastrous undoing, and which the Latin light-heartedly regards +as essential, but transient phenomena of human existence. Aristide +made the most respectful love in the world to Betty Errington, because +he could not help himself. "_Tonnerre de Dieu!_" he cried when from my +Britannic point of view, I talked to him on the subject. "You English +whom I try to understand and can never understand are so funny! It +would have been insulting to Miss Betty Errington--_tiens!_--a purple +hyacinth of spring--that was what she was--not to have made love to +her. Love to a pretty woman is like a shower of rain to hyacinths. It +passes, it goes. Another one comes. _Qu'importe?_ But the shower is +necessary--Ah! _sacré gredin_, when will you comprehend?" + +All this to make as clear as an Englishman, in the confidence of a +changeling child of Provence can hope to do, the attitude of Aristide +Pujol towards the sweet and innocent Betty Errington with her mouth like +crumpled rose-petals, her ivory and peach-blossom complexion, her soft +contralto voice, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, as per foregoing bald +description, and as per what can, by imaginative effort, be pictured +from the Pujolic hyperbole, by which I, the unimportant narrator of +these chronicles, was dazzled and overwhelmed. + +"I'm afraid I don't think of the croupier at all," said Betty. + +"Do you think of no one who brings you good fortune?" asked Aristide. He +threw the _Matin_ on the grass, and, doubling himself up in his chair +regarded her earnestly. "Last night you put five louis into my bank----" + +"And I won forty. I could have hugged you." + +"Why didn't you? Ah!" His arms spread wide and high. "What I have lost!" + +"Betty!" cried Mrs. Errington. + +"Alas, Madame," said Aristide, "that is the despair of our artificial +civilization. It prohibits so much spontaneous expression of emotion." + +"You'll forgive me, Monsieur Pujol," said Mrs. Errington dryly, "but I +think our artificial civilization has its advantages." + +"If you will forgive me, in your turn," said Aristide, "I see a doubtful +one advancing." + +A man approached the group and with profuse gestures took off a straw +hat which he thrust under his right arm, exposing an amazingly flat head +on which the closely cropped hair stood brush-fashion upright. He had an +insignificant pale face to which a specious individuality was given by a +moustache with ends waxed up to the eyes and by a monocle with a +tortoise shell rim. He was dressed (his valet had misjudged things--and +valets like the rest of us are fallible) in what was yesterday a fairly +white flannel suit. + +"Madame--Mademoiselle." He shook hands with charming grace. "Monsieur." +He bowed stiffly. Aristide doffed his Panama hat with adequate ceremony. +"May I be permitted to join you?" + +"With pleasure, Monsieur de Lussigny," said Mrs. Errington. + +Monsieur de Lussigny brought up a chair and sat down. + +"What time did you get to bed, last night?" asked Betty Errington. She +spoke excellently pure French, and so did her mother. + +"Soon after we parted, mademoiselle, quite early for me but late for +you. And you look this morning as if you had gone to bed at sundown and +got up at dawn." + +Miss Betty's glance responsive to the compliment filled Aristide with +wrath. What right had the Comte de Lussigny, a fellow who consorted with +Brazilian Rastaquouères and perfumed Levantine nondescripts, to win such +a glance from Betty Errington? + +"If Mademoiselle can look so fresh," said he, "in the artificial +atmosphere of Aix, what is there of adorable that she must not resemble +in the innocence of her Somersetshire home?" + +"You cannot imagine it, Monsieur," said the Count; "but I have had the +privilege to see it." + +"I hope Monsieur Pujol will visit us also in our country home, when we +get back," said Mrs. Errington with intent to pacificate. "It is modest, +but it is old-world and has been in our family for hundreds of years." + +"Ah, these old English homes!" said Aristide. + +"Would you care to hear about it?" + +"I should," said he. + +He drew his chair courteously a foot or so nearer that of the mild lady; +Monsieur de Lussigny took instant advantage of the move to establish +himself close to Miss Betty. Aristide turned one ear politely to Mrs. +Errington's discourse, the other ragingly and impotently to the +whispered conversation between the detached pair. + +Presently a novel fell from the lady's lap. Aristide sprang to his feet +and restored it. He remained standing. Mrs. Errington consulted a watch. +It was nearing lunch time. She rose, too. Aristide took her a pace or +two aside. + +"My dear Mrs. Errington," said he, in English. "I do not wish to be +indiscreet--but you come from your quiet home in Somerset and your +beautiful daughter is so young and inexperienced, and I am a man of the +world who has mingled in all the society of Europe--may I warn you +against admitting the Comte de Lussigny too far into your intimacy." + +She turned an anxious face. "Monsieur Pujol, is there anything against +the Count?" + +Aristide executed the large and expressive shrug of the Southerner. + +"I play high at the tables for my amusement--I know the principal +players, people of high standing. Among them Monsieur de Lussigny's +reputation is not spotless." + +"You alarm me very much," said Mrs. Errington, troubled. + +"I only put you on your guard," said he. + +The others who had risen and followed, caught them up. At the entrance +to the hotel the ladies left the men elaborately saluting. The latter, +alone, looked at each other. + +"Monsieur." + +"Monsieur." + +Each man raised his hat, turned on his heel and went his way. Aristide +betook himself to the café on the Place Carnot on the side of the square +facing the white Etablissement des Bains, with a stern sense of having +done his duty. It was monstrous that this English damask rose should +fall a prey to so detestable a person as the Comte de Lussigny. He +suspected him of disgraceful things. If only he had proof. Fortune, ever +favoring him, stood at his elbow. She guided him straight to a table in +the front row of the terrace where sat a black-haired, hard-featured +though comely youth deep in thought, in front of an untouched glass of +beer. At Aristide's approach he raised his head, smiled, nodded and +said: "Good morning, sir. Will you join me?" + +Aristide graciously accepted the invitation and sat down. The young +man was another hotel acquaintance, one Eugene Miller of Atlanta, +Georgia, a curious compound of shrewdness and simplicity, to whom +Aristide had taken a fancy. He was twenty-eight and ran a colossal +boot-factory in partnership with another youth and had a consuming +passion for stained-glass windows. From books he knew every square +foot of old stained-glass in Europe. But he had crossed the Atlantic +for the first time only six weeks before, and having indulged his +craving immoderately, had rested for a span at Aix-les-Bains to +recover from æsthetic indigestion. He had found these amenities +agreeable to his ingenuous age. He had also, quite recently, come +across the Comte de Lussigny. Hence the depth of thought in which +Aristide discovered him. Now, the fact that North is North and South +is South and that never these twain shall meet is a proposition all +too little considered. One of these days when I can retire from the +dull but exacting avocation of tea-broking in the City, I think I +shall write a newspaper article on the subject. Anyhow, I hold +the theory that the Northerners of all nations have a common +characteristic and the Southerners of all nations have a common +characteristic, and that it is this common characteristic in each +case that makes North seek and understand North and South seek and +understand South. I will not go further into the general proposition; +but as a particular instance I will state that the American of the +South and the Frenchman of the South found themselves in essential +sympathy. Eugene Miller had the unfearing frankness of Aristide Pujol. + +"I used rather to look down upon Europe as a place where people knew +nothing at all," said he. "We're sort of trained to think it's an +extinct volcano, but it isn't. It's alive. My God! It's alive. It's Hell +in the shape of a Limburger cheese. I wish the whole population of +Atlanta, Georgia, would come over and just see. There's a lot to be +learned. I thought I knew how to take care of myself, but this +tortoise-shell-eyed Count taught me last night that I couldn't. He +cleaned me out of twenty-five hundred dollars----" + +"How?" asked Aristide, sharply. + +"Ecarté." + +Aristide brought his hand down with a bang on the table and uttered +anathemas in French and Provençal entirely unintelligible to Eugene +Miller; but the youth knew by instinct that they were useful, +soul-destroying curses and he felt comforted. + +"Ecarté! You played ecarté with Lussigny? But my dear young friend, do +you know anything of ecarté?" + +"Of course," said Miller. "I used to play it as a child with my +sisters." + +"Do you know the _jeux de règle_?" + +"The what?" + +"The formal laws of the game--the rules of discards----" + +"Never heard of them," said Eugene Miller. + +"But they are as absolute as the Code Napoléon," cried Aristide. "You +can't play without knowing them. You might as well play chess without +knowing the moves." + +"Can't help it," said the young man. + +"Well, don't play ecarté any more." + +"I must," said Miller. + +"_Comment?_" + +"I must. I've fixed it up to get my revenge this afternoon--in my +sitting room at the hotel." + +"But it's imbecile!" + +The sweep of Aristide's arm produced prismatic chaos among a tray-full +of drinks which the waiter was bringing to the family party at the next +table. "It's imbecile," he cried, as soon as order was apologetically +and pecuniarily restored. "You are a little mutton going to have its +wool taken off." + +"I've fixed it up," said Miller. "I've never gone back on an engagement +yet in my own country and I'm not going to begin this side." + +Aristide argued. He argued during the mechanical absorption of four +glasses of _vermouth-cassis_--after which prodigious quantity of black +currant syrup he rose and took the Gadarene youth to Nikola's where he +continued the argument during déjeuner. Eugene Miller's sole concession +was that Aristide should be present at the encounter and, backing his +hand, should have the power (given by the rules of the French game) to +guide his play. Aristide agreed and crammed his young friend with the +_jeux de règle_ and _pâté de foie gras_. + +The Count looked rather black when he found Aristide Pujol in Miller's +sitting room. He could not, however, refuse him admittance to the game. +The three sat down, Aristide by Miller's side, so that he could overlook +the hand and, by pointing, indicate the cards that it was advisable to +play. The game began. Fortune favored Mr. Eugene Miller. The Count's +brow grew blacker. + +"You are bringing your own luck to our friend, Monsieur Pujol," said he, +dealing the cards. + +"He needs it," said Aristide. + +"_Le roi_," said the Count, turning up the king. + +The Count won the vole, or all five tricks, and swept the stakes towards +him. Then, fortune quickly and firmly deserted Mr. Miller. The Count +besides being an amazingly fine player, held amazingly fine hands. The +pile of folded notes in front of him rose higher and higher. Aristide +tugged at his beard in agitation. Suddenly, as the Count dealt a king as +trump card, he sprang to his feet knocking over the chair behind him. + +"You cheat, monsieur. You cheat!" + +"Monsieur!" cried the outraged dealer. + +"What has he done?" + +"He has been palming kings and neutralizing the cut. I've been watching. +Now I catch him," cried Aristide in great excitement. "_Ah, sale voleur! +Maintenant je vous tiens!_" + +"Monsieur," said the Comte de Lussigny with dignity, stuffing his +winnings into his jacket pocket. "You insult me. It is an infamy. Two of +my friends will call upon you." + +"And Monsieur Miller and I will kick them over Mont Revard." + +"You cannot treat _gens d'honneur_ in such a way, monsieur." He turned +to Miller, and said haughtily in his imperfect English, "Did you see the +cheat, you?" + +"I can't say that I did," replied the young man. "On the other hand that +torch-light procession of kings doesn't seem exactly natural." + +"But you did not see anything! _Bon!_" + +"But I saw. Isn't that enough, _hein_?" shouted Aristide brandishing his +fingers in the Count's face. "You come here and think there's nothing +easier than to cheat young foreigners who don't know the rules of +ecarté. You come here and think you can carry off rich young English +misses. Ah, _sale escroc!_ You never thought you would have to reckon +with Aristide Pujol. You call yourself the Comte de Lussigny. Bah! I +know you----" he didn't, but that doesn't matter--"your _dossier_ is in +the hands of the prefect of Police. I am going to get that _dossier_. +Monsieur Lepine is my intimate friend. Every autumn we shoot together. +Aha! You send me your two galley-birds and see what I do to them." + +The Comte de Lussigny twirled the tips of his moustache almost to his +forehead and caught up his hat. + +"My friends shall be officers in the uniform of the French Army," he +said, by the door. + +"And mine shall be two gendarmes," retorted Aristide. "_Nom de Dieu!_" +he cried, after the other had left the room. "We let him take the +money!" + +"That's of no consequence. He didn't get away with much anyway," said +young Miller. "But he would have if you hadn't been here. If ever I can +do you a return service, just ask." + +Aristide went out to look for the Erringtons. But they were not to be +found. It was only late in the afternoon that he met Mrs. Errington in +the hall of the hotel. He dragged her into a corner and in his +impulsive fashion told her everything. She listened white faced, in +great distress. + +"My daughter's engaged to him. I've only just learned," she faltered. + +"Engaged? _Sacrebleu!_ Ah, _le goujat!_"--for the second he was +desperately, furiously, jealously in love with Betty Errington. "_Ah, le +sale type! Voyons!_ This engagement must be broken off. At once! You are +her mother." + +"She will hear of nothing against him." + +"You will tell her this. It will be a blow; but----" + +Mrs. Errington twisted a handkerchief between helpless fingers. "Betty +is infatuated. She won't believe it." She regarded him piteously. "Oh, +Monsieur Pujol, what can I do? You see she has an independent fortune +and is over twenty-one. I am powerless." + +"I will meet his two friends," exclaimed Aristide magnificently--"and I +will kill him. _Voilà!_" + +"Oh, a duel? No! How awful!" cried the mild lady horror-stricken. + +He thrust his cane dramatically through a sheet of a newspaper, which he +had caught up from a table. "I will run him through the body like +that"--Aristide had never handled a foil in his life--"and when he is +dead, your beautiful daughter will thank me for having saved her from +such an execrable fellow." + +"But you mustn't fight. It would be too dreadful. Is there no other +way?" + +"You must consult first with your daughter," said Aristide. + +He dined in the hotel with Eugene Miller. Neither the Erringtons nor the +Comte de Lussigny were anywhere to be seen. After dinner, however, he +found the elder lady waiting for him in the hall. They walked out into +the quiet of the garden. She had been too upset to dine, she explained, +having had a terrible scene with Betty. Nothing but absolute proofs of +her lover's iniquity would satisfy her. The world was full of slanderous +tongues; the noblest and purest did not escape. For herself, she had +never been comfortable with the Comte de Lussigny. She had noticed too +that he had always avoided the best French people in hotels. She would +give anything to save her daughter. She wept. + +"And the unhappy girl has written him compromising letters," she +lamented. + +"They must be got back." + +"But how? Oh, Monsieur Pujol, do you think he would take money for +them?" + +"A scoundrel like that would take money for his dead mother's shroud," +said Aristide. + +"A thousand pounds?" + +She looked very haggard and helpless beneath the blue arc-lights. +Aristide's heart went out to her. He knew her type--the sweet +gentlewoman of rural England who comes abroad to give her pretty +daughter a sight of life, ingenuously confident that foreign +watering-places are as innocent as her own sequestered village. + +"That is much money, _chère madame_," said Aristide. + +"I am fairly well off," said Mrs. Errington. + +Aristide reflected. At the offer of a smaller sum the Count would +possibly bluff. But to a Knight of Industry, as he knew the Count to be, +a certain thousand pounds would be a great temptation. And after all to +a wealthy Englishwoman what was a thousand pounds? + +"Madame," said he, "if you offer him a thousand pounds for the letters, +and a written confession that he is not the Comte de Lussigny, but a +common adventurer, I stake my reputation that he will accept." + +They walked along for a few moments in silence; the opera had begun at +the adjoining Villa des Fleurs and the strains floated through the still +August air. After a while she halted and laid her hand on his sleeve. + +"Monsieur Pujol, I have never been faced with such a thing, before. Will +you undertake for me this delicate and difficult business?" + +"Madame," said he, "my life is at the service of yourself and your most +exquisite daughter." She pressed his hand. "Thank God, I've got a friend +in this dreadful place," she said brokenly. "Let me go in." And when +they reached the lounge, she said, "Wait for me here." + +She entered the lift. Aristide waited. Presently the lift descended and +she emerged with a slip of paper in her hand. + +"Here is a bearer cheque, Monsieur Pujol, for a thousand pounds. Get the +letters and the confession if you can, and a mother's blessing will go +with you." + +She left him and went upstairs again in the lift. Aristide athirst with +love, living drama and unholy hatred of the Comte de Lussigny, cocked +his black, soft-felt evening hat at an engaging angle on his head and +swaggered into the Villa des Fleurs. As he passed the plebeian crowd +round the petits-chevaux table--these were the days of little horses and +not the modern equivalent of _la boule_--he threw a louis on the square +marked 5, waited for the croupier to push him his winnings, seven louis +and his stake on the little white horse, and walked into the baccarat +room. A bank was being called for thirty louis at the end table. + +"_Quarante_," said Aristide. + +"_Ajugé à quarante louis_," cried the croupier, no one bidding higher. + +Aristide took the banker's seat and put down his forty louis. Looking +round the long table he saw the Comte de Lussigny sitting in the punt. +The two men glared at each other defiantly. Someone went "banco." +Aristide won. The fact of his holding the bank attracted a crowd round +the table. The regular game began. Aristide won, lost, won again. Now it +must be explained, without going into the details of the game, that the +hand against the bank is played by the members of the punt in turn. + +Suddenly, before dealing the cards, Aristide asked, "_A qui la main?_" + +"_C'est à Monsieur_," said the croupier, indicating Lussigny. + +"_Il y a une suite_," said Aristide, signifying, as was his right, that +he would retire from the bank with his winnings. "The face of that +gentleman does not please me." + +There was a hush at the humming table. The Count grew dead white and +looked at his fingernails. Aristide superbly gathered up his notes and +gold, and tossing a couple of louis to the croupiers, left the table, +followed by all eyes. It was one of the thrilling moments of Aristide's +life. He had taken the stage, commanded the situation. He had publicly +offered the Comte de Lussigny the most deadly insult and the Comte de +Lussigny sat down beneath it like a lamb. He swaggered slowly through +the crowded room, twirling his moustache, and went into the cool of the +moonlit deserted garden beyond, where he waited gleefully. He had a +puckish knowledge of human nature. After a decent interval, and during +the absorbing interest of the newly constituted bank, the Comte de +Lussigny slipped unnoticed from the table and went in search of +Aristide. He found him smoking a large corona and lounging in one wicker +chair with his feet on another, beside a very large whisky and soda. + +"Ah, it's you," said he without moving. + +"Yes," said the Count furiously. + +"I haven't yet had the pleasure of kicking your friends over Mont +Revard," said Aristide. + +"Look here, _mon petit_, this has got to finish," cried the Count. + +"_Parfaitement._ I should like nothing better than to finish. But let us +finish like well-bred people," said Aristide suavely. "We don't want the +whole Casino as witnesses. You'll find a chair over there. Bring it up." + +He was enjoying himself immensely. The Count glared at him, turned and +banged a chair over by the side of the table. + +"Why do you insult me like this?" + +"Because," said Aristide, "I've talked by telephone this evening with my +good friend Monsieur Lepine, Prefect of Police of Paris." + +"You lie," said the Count. + +"_Vous verrez._ In the meantime, perhaps we might have a little +conversation. Will you have a whisky and soda? It is one of my English +habits." + +"No," said the Count emphatically. + +"You permit me then?" He drank a great draught. "You are wrong. It helps +to cool one's temper. _Eh bien_, let us talk." + +He talked. He put before the Count the situation of the beautiful Miss +Errington. He conducted the scene like the friend of the family whose +astuteness he had admired as a boy in the melodramas that found their +way to Marseilles. + +"Look," said he, at last, having vainly offered from one hundred to +eight hundred pounds for poor Betty Errington's compromising letters. +"Look----" He drew the cheque from his note-case. "Here are twenty-five +thousand francs. The signature is that of the charming Madame Errington +herself. The letters, and a little signed word, just a little word. +'Mademoiselle, I am a _chevalier d'industrie_. I have a wife and five +children. I am not worthy of you. I give you back your promise.' Just +that. And twenty-five thousand francs, _mon ami_." + +"Never in life!" exclaimed the Count rising. "You continue to insult +me." + +Aristide for the first time abandoned his lazy and insolent attitude and +jumped to his feet. + +"And I'll continue to insult you, _canaille_ that you are, all through +that room," he cried, with a swift-flung gesture towards the brilliant +doorway. "You are dealing with Aristide Pujol. Will you never +understand? The letters and a confession for twenty-five thousand +francs." + +"Never in life," said the Count, and he moved swiftly away. + +Aristide caught him by the collar as he stood on the covered terrace, a +foot or two from the threshold of the gaming-room. + +"I swear to you, I'll make a scandal that you won't survive." + +The Count stopped and pushed Aristide's hand away. + +"I admit nothing," said he. "But you are a gambler and so am I. I will +play you for those documents against twenty-five thousand francs." + +"Eh?" said Aristide, staggered for the moment. + +The Comte de Lussigny repeated his proposition. + +"_Bon_," said Aristide. "_Trés bon. C'est entendu. C'est fait._" + +If Beelzebub had arisen and offered to play beggar-my-neighbour for his +soul, Aristide would have agreed; especially after the large whisky and +soda and the Mumm Cordon Rouge and the Napoleon brandy which Eugene +Miller had insisted on his drinking at dinner. + +"I have a large room at the hotel," said he. + +"I will join you," said the Count. "Monsieur," he took off his hat very +politely. "Go first. I will be there in three minutes." + +Aristide trod on air during the two minutes' walk to the Hôtel de +l'Europe. At the bureau he ordered a couple of packs of cards and a +supply of drinks and went to his palatial room on the ground floor. In a +few moments the Comte de Lussigny appeared. Aristide offered him a two +francs corona which was ceremoniously accepted. Then he tore the +wrapping off one of the packs of cards and shuffled. + +"Monsieur," said he, still shuffling. "I should like to deal two hands +at ecarté. It signifies nothing. It is an experiment. Will you cut?" + +"_Volontiers_," said the Count. + +Aristide took up the pack, dealt three cards to the Count, three cards +to himself, two cards to the Count, two to himself and turned up the +King of Hearts as the eleventh card. + +"Monsieur," said he, "expose your hand and I will expose mine." + +Both men threw their hands face uppermost on the table. Aristide's was +full of trumps, the Count's of valueless cards. + +He looked at his adversary with his roguish, triumphant smile. The Count +looked at him darkly. + +"The ordinary card player does not know how to deal like that," he said +with sinister significance. + +"But I am not ordinary in anything, my dear sir," laughed Aristide, in +his large boastfulness. "If I were, do you think I would have agreed to +your absurd proposal? _Voyons_, I only wanted to show you that in +dealing cards I am your equal. Now, the letters----" The Count threw a +small packet on the table. "You will permit me? I do not wish to read +them. I verify only. Good," said he. "And the confession?" + +"What you like," said the Count, coldly. Aristide scribbled a few lines +that would have been devastating to the character of a Hyrcanean tiger +and handed the paper and fountain pen to the Count. + +"Will you sign?" + +The Count glanced at the words and signed. + +"_Voilà_," said Aristide, laying Mrs. Errington's cheque beside the +documents. "Now let us play. The best of three games?" + +"Good," said the Count. "But you will excuse me, monsieur, if I claim to +play for ready money. The cheque will take five days to negotiate and if +I lose, I shall evidently have to leave Aix to-morrow morning." + +"That's reasonable," said Aristide. + +He drew out his fat note-case and counted twenty-five one-thousand-franc +notes on to the table. And then began the most exciting game of cards he +had ever played. In the first place he was playing with another person's +money for a fantastic stake, a girl's honour and happiness. Secondly he +was pitted against a master of ecarté. And thirdly he knew that his +adversary would cheat if he could and that his adversary suspected him +of fraudulent designs. So as they played, each man craned his head +forward and looked at the other man's fingers with fierce intensity. + +Aristide lost the first game. He wiped the sweat from his forehead. In +the second game, he won the vole in one hand. The third and final game +began. They played slowly, carefully, with keen quick eyes. Their +breathing came hard. The Count's lips parted beneath his uptwisted +moustache showed his teeth like a cat's. Aristide lost sense of all +outer things in the thrill of the encounter. They snarled the +stereotyped phrases necessary for the conduct of the game. At last the +points stood at four for Aristide and three for his adversary. It was +Aristide's deal. Before turning up the eleventh card he paused for the +fraction of a second. If it was the King, he had won. He flicked it +neatly face upward. It was not the King. + +_"J'en donne."_ + +_"Non. Le roi."_ + +The Count played and marked the King. Aristide had no trumps. The game +was lost. + +He sat back white, while the Count smiling gathered up the bank-notes. + +"And now, Monsieur Pujol," said he impudently, "I am willing to sell +you this rubbish for the cheque." + +Aristide jumped to his feet. "Never!" he cried. Madness seized him. +Regardless of the fact that he had nothing like another thousand pounds +left wherewith to repay Mrs. Errington if he lost, he shouted: "I will +play again for it. Not ecarté. One cut of the cards. Ace lowest." + +"All right," said the Count. + +"Begin, you." + +Aristide watched his hand like cat, as he cut. He cut an eight. Aristide +gave a little gasp of joy and cut quickly. He held up a Knave and +laughed aloud. Then he stopped short as he saw the Count about to pounce +on the documents and the cheque. He made a swift movement and grabbed +them first, the other man's hand on his. + +"_Canaille!_" + +He dashed his free hand into the adventurer's face. The man staggered +back. Aristide pocketed the precious papers. The Count scowled at him +for an undecided second, and then bolted from the room. + +"Whew!" said Aristide, sinking into his chair and wiping his face. "That +was a narrow escape." + +He looked at his watch. It was only ten o'clock. It had seemed as if his +game with Lussigny had lasted for hours. He could not go to bed and +stood confronted with anti-climax. After a while he went in search of +Eugene Miller and having found him in solitary meditation on stained +glass windows in the dim-lit grounds of the Villa, sat down by his side +and for the rest of the evening poured his peculiar knowledge of Europe +into the listening ear of the young man from Atlanta. + +On the following morning, as soon as he was dressed, he learned from the +Concierge that the Comte de Lussigny had left for Paris by the early +train. + +"Good," said Aristide. + +A little later Mrs. Errington met him in the lounge and accompanied him +to the lawn where they had sat the day before. + +"I have no words to thank you, Monsieur Pujol," she said with tears in +her eyes. "I have heard how you shamed him at the tables. It was brave +of you." + +"It was nothing." He shrugged his shoulders as if he were in the habit +of doing deeds like that every day of his life. "And your exquisite +daughter, Madame?" + +"Poor Betty! She is prostrate. She says she will never hold up her head +again. Her heart is broken." + +"It is young and will be mended," said Aristide. + +She smiled sadly. "It will be a question of time. But she is grateful to +you, Monsieur Pujol. She realizes from what a terrible fate you have +saved her." She sighed. There was a brief silence. + +"After this," she continued, "a further stay in Aix would be too +painful. We have decided to take the Savoy express this evening and get +back to our quiet home in Somerset." + +"Ah, madame," said Aristide earnestly. "And shall I not have the +pleasure of seeing the charming Miss Betty again?" + +"You will come and stay with us in September. Let me see? The fifteenth. +Why not fix a date? You have my address? No? Will you write it down?" +she dictated: "Wrotesly Manor, Burnholme, Somerset. There I'll try to +show you how grateful I am." + +She extended her hand. He bowed over it and kissed it in his French way +and departed a very happy man. + +The Erringtons left that evening. Aristide waylaid them as they were +entering the hotel omnibus, with a preposterous bouquet of flowers which +he presented to Betty, whose pretty face was hidden by a motor-veil. He +bowed, laid his hand on his heart and said: "_Adieu, mademoiselle._" + +"No," she said in a low voice, but most graciously, "_Au revoir_, +Monsieur Pujol." + +For the next few days Aix seemed to be tame and colourless. In an +inexplicable fashion, too, it had become unprofitable. Aristide no +longer knew that he was going to win; and he did not win. He lost +considerably. So much so that on the morning when he was to draw the +cash for the cheque, at the Crédit Lyonnais, he had only fifty pounds +and some odd silver left. Aristide looking at the remainder rather +ruefully made a great resolution. He would gamble no more. Already he +was richer than he had ever been in his life. He would leave Aix. +_Tiens!_ why should he not go to his good friends the Bocardons at +Nîmes, bringing with him a gold chain for Bocardon and a pair of +ear-rings for the adorable Zette? There he would look about him. He +would use the thousand pounds as a stepping-stone to legitimate fortune. +Then he would visit the Erringtons in England, and if the beautiful Miss +Betty smiled on him--why, after all, _sacrebleu_ he was an honest man, +without a feather on his conscience. + +So, jauntily swinging his cane, he marched into the office of the Crédit +Lyonnais, went into the inner room and explained his business. + +"Ah, your cheque, monsieur, that we were to collect. I am sorry. It has +come back from the London bankers." + +"How come back?" + +"It has not been honoured. See, monsieur. 'Not known. No account.'" The +cashier pointed to the grim words across the cheque. + +"_Comprends pas_," faltered Aristide. + +"It means that the person who gave you the cheque has no account at this +bank." + +Aristide took the cheque and looked at it in a dazed way. + +"Then I do not get my twenty-five thousand francs?" + +"Evidently not," said the cashier. + +Aristide stood for a while stunned. What did it mean? His thousand +pounds could not be lost. It was impossible. There was some mistake. It +was an evil dream. With a heavy weight on the top of his head, he went +out of the Crédit Lyonnais and mechanically crossed the little street +separating the Bank from the café on the Place Carnot. There he sat +stupidly and wondered. The waiter hovered in front of him. "_Monsieur +désire?_" Aristide waved him away absently. Yes, it was some mistake. +Mrs. Errington in her agitation must have used the wrong cheque book. +But even rich English people do not carry about with them a circulating +library assortment of cheque books. It was incomprehensible--and +meanwhile, his thousand pounds.... + +The little square blazed before him in the August sunshine. Opposite +flashed the white mass of the Etablissement des Bains. There was the old +Roman Arch of Titus, gray and venerable. There were the trees of the +gardens in riotous greenery. There on the right marking the hour of +eleven on its black face was the clock of the Comptoir National. It was +Aix; familiar Aix; not a land of dreams. And there coming rapidly across +from the Comptoir National was the well knit figure of the young man +from Atlanta. + +"_Nom de Dieu_," murmured Aristide. "_Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" + +Eugene Miller, in a fine frenzy, threw himself into a chair beside +Aristide. + +"See here. Can you understand this?" + +He thrust into his hand a pink strip of paper. It was a cheque for a +hundred pounds, made payable to Eugene Miller, Esquire, signed by Mary +Errington, and marked "Not known. No account." + +"_Tonnerre de Dieu!_" cried Aristide. "How did you get this?" + +"How did I get it? I cashed it for her--the day she went away. She said +urgent affairs summoned her from Aix--no time to wire for funds--wanted +to pay her hotel bill--and she gave me the address of her old English +home in Somerset and invited me to come there in September. Fifteenth of +September. Said that you were coming. And now I've got a bum cheque. I +guess I can't wander about this country alone. I need blinkers and +harness and a man with a whip." + +He went on indignantly. Aristide composed his face into an expression of +parental interest; but within him there was shivering and sickening +upheaval. He saw it all, the whole mocking drama.... + +He, Aristide Pujol, was the most sweetly, the most completely swindled +man in France. + +The Comte de Lussigny, the mild Mrs. Errington and the beautiful Betty +were in league together and had exquisitely plotted. They had conspired, +as soon as he had accused the Count of cheating. The rascal must have +gone straight to them from Miller's room. No wonder that Lussigny, when +insulted at the tables, had sat like a tame rabbit and had sought him in +the garden. No wonder he had accepted the accusation of adventurer. No +wonder he had refused to play for the cheque which he knew to be +valueless. But why, thought Aristide, did he not at once consent to sell +the papers on the stipulation that he should be paid in notes? Aristide +found an answer. He wanted to get everything for nothing, afraid of the +use that Aristide might make of a damning confession, and also relying +for success on his manipulation of the cards. Finally he had desired to +get hold of a dangerous cheque. In that he had been foiled. But the trio +has got away with his thousand pounds, his wonderful thousand pounds. He +reflected, still keeping an attentive eye on young Eugene Miller and +interjecting a sympathetic word, that after he had paid his hotel bill, +he would be as poor on quitting Aix-les-Bains as he was when he had +entered it. _Sic transit_.... As it was in the beginning with Aristide +Pujol, is now and ever shall be.... + +"But I have my clothes--such clothes as I've never had in my life," +thought Aristide. "And a diamond and sapphire tie-pin and a gold watch, +and all sorts of other things. _Tron de l'air_, I'm still rich." + +"Who would have thought she was like that?" said he. "And a hundred +pounds, too. A lot of money." + +For nothing in the world would he have confessed himself a +fellow-victim. + +"I don't care a cent for the hundred pounds," cried the young man. "Our +factory turns out seven hundred and sixty-seven million pairs of boots +per annum." (Aristide, not I, is responsible for the statistics.) "But I +have a feeling that in this hoary country I'm just a little toddling +child. And I hate it. I do, sir. I want a nurse to take me round." + +Aristide flashed the lightning of his wit upon the young man from +Atlanta, Georgia. + +"You do, my dear young friend. I'll be your nurse, at a weekly +salary--say a hundred francs--it doesn't matter. We will not quarrel." +Eugene Miller was startled. "Yes," said Aristide, with a convincing +flourish. "I'll clear robbers and sirens and harpies from your path. +I'll show you things in Europe--from Tromsö to Cap Spartivento that you +never dreamed of. I'll lead you to every stained glass window in the +world. I know them all." + +"I particularly want to see those in the church of St. Sebald in +Nuremberg." + +"I know them like my pocket," said Aristide. "I will take you there. We +start to-day." + +"But, Mr. Pujol," said the somewhat bewildered Georgian. "I thought you +were a man of fortune." + +"I am more than a man. I am a soldier. I am a soldier of Fortune. The +fickle goddess has for the moment deserted me. But I am loyal. I have +for all worldly goods, two hundred and fifty dollars, with which I shall +honorably pay my hotel bill. I say I am a soldier of Fortune. But," he +slapped his chest, "I am the only honorable one on the Continent of +Europe." + +The young man fixed upon him the hard blue eyes, not of the enthusiast +for stained glass windows, but of the senior partner in the boot factory +of Atlanta, Georgia. + +"I believe you," said he. "It's a deal. Shake." + +"And now," said Aristide, after having shaken hands, "come and lunch +with me at Nikola's for the last time." + +He rose, stretched out both arms in a wide gesture and smiled with his +irresistible Ancient Mariner's eyes at the young man. + +"We lunch. We eat ambrosia. Then we go out together and see the +wonderful world through the glass-blood of saints and martyrs and +apostles and the good Father Abraham and Louis Quatorze. _Viens, mon +cher ami._ It is the dream of my life." + +Practically penniless and absolutely disillusioned, the amazing man was +radiantly happy. + + + + +IX + +THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN'S SUMMER + + +My good friend Blessington, who is a mighty man in the Bordeaux +wine-trade, happening one day to lament the irreparable loss of a +deceased employé, an Admirable Crichton of a myriad accomplishments and +linguistic attainments whose functions it had been, apparently, to +travel about between London, Bordeaux, Marseilles and Algiers, I +immediately thought of a certain living and presumably unemployed +paragon of my acquaintance. + +"I know the very man you're looking for," said I. + +"Who is he?" + +"He's a kind of human firework," said I, "and his name is Aristide +Pujol." + +I sketched the man--in my desire to do a good turn to Aristide, perhaps +in exaggerated colour. + +"Let me have a look at him," said Blessington. + +"He may be anywhere on the continent of Europe," said I. "How long can +you give me to produce him?" + +"A week. Not longer." + +"I'll do my best," said I. + +By good luck my telegram, sent off about four o'clock, found him at 213 +_bis_ Rue Saint-Honoré. He had just returned to Paris after some mad +dash for fortune (he told me afterwards a wild and disastrous story of a +Russian Grand-Duke, a Dancer and a gold mine in the Dolomites) and had +once more resumed the dreary conduct of the Agence Pujol at the Hôtel du +Soleil et de l'Ecosse. My summons being imperative, he abandoned the +Agence Pujol as a cat jumps off a wall, and, leaving the guests of the +Hotel guideless, to the indignation of Monsieur Bocardon, whom he had +served this trick several times before, paid his good landlady, Madam +Bidoux, what he owed her, took a third-class ticket to London, bought, +lunatic that he was, a ripe Brie cheese, a foot in diameter, a present +to myself, which he carried in his hand most of the journey, and turned +up at my house at eight o'clock the next morning with absolutely empty +pockets and the happiest and most fascinating smile that ever irradiated +the face of man. As a matter of fact, he burst his way past my +scandalized valet into my bedroom and woke me up. + +"Here I am, my dear friend, and here is something French you love that I +have brought you," and he thrust the Brie cheese under my nose. + +"-- -- --," said I. + +If you were awakened by a Brie cheese, an hour before your time, you +would say the same. Aristide sat at the foot of the bed and laughed till +the tears ran down his beard. + +As soon as it was decent I sent him into the city to interview +Blessington. Three hours afterward he returned more radiant than ever. +He threw himself into my arms; before I could disentagle myself, he +kissed me on both cheeks; then he danced about the room. + +"_Me voici_," he said, "accredited representative of the great Maison +Dulau et Compagnie. I have hundreds of pounds a year. I go about. I +watch. I control. I see that the Great British Public can assuage its +thirst with the pure juice of the grape and not with the dregs of a +laboratory. I test vintages. I count barrels. I enter them in books. I +smile at Algerian wine growers and say, 'Ha! ha! none of your _petite +piquette frélateé_ for me but good sound wine.' It is diplomacy. It is +as simple as kissing hands. And I have a sustained income. Now I can be +_un bon bourgeois_ instead of a stray cat. And all due to you, _mon cher +ami_. I am grateful--_voyons_--if anybody ever says Aristide Pujol is +ungrateful, he is a liar. You believe me! Say you believe me." + +He looked at me earnestly. + +"I do, old chap," said I. + +I had known Aristide for some years, and in all kinds of little ways he +had continuously manifested his gratitude for the trifling service I had +rendered him, at our first meeting, in delivering him out of the hands +of the horrific Madam Gougasse. That gratitude is the expectation of +favors to come was, in the case of Aristide, a cynical and inapplicable +proposition. And here, as this (as far as I can see) is the last of +Aristide's adventures I have to relate, let me make an honest and +considered statement:-- + +During the course of an interesting and fairly prosperous life, I have +made many delightful Bohemian, devil-may-care acquaintances, but among +them all Aristide stands as the one bright star who has never asked me +to lend him money. I have offered it times without number, but he has +refused. I believe there is no man living to whom Aristide is in debt. +In the depths of the man's changeling and feckless soul is a principle +which has carried him untarnished through many a wild adventure. If +he ever accepted money--money to the Provençal peasant is the +transcendental materialised, and Aristide (save by the changeling +theory) was Provençal peasant bone and blood--it was always for what he +honestly thought was value received. If he met a man who wanted to take +a mule ride among the Mountains of the Moon, Aristide would at once have +offered himself as guide. The man would have paid him; but Aristide, by +some quaint spiritual juggling, would have persuaded him that the +ascent of Primrose Hill was equal to any lunar achievement, seeing that, +himself, Aristide Pujol, was keeper of the Sun, Moon and Seven Stars; +and the gift to that man of Aristide's dynamic personality would have +been well worth anything that he would have found in the extinct volcano +we know to be the moon. + +"The only thing I would suggest, if you would allow me to do so," said +I, "is not to try to make the fortune of Messrs. Dulau & Co. by some +dazzling but devastating _coup_ of your own." + +He looked at me in his bright, shrewd way. "You think it time I +restrained my imagination?" + +"Exactly." + +"I will read The Times and buy a family Bible," said Aristide. + +A week after he had taken up his work in the City, under my friend +Blessington, I saw the delighted and prosperous man again. It was a +Saturday and he came to lunch at my house. + +"_Tiens!_" said he, when he had recounted his success in the office, "it +is four years since I was in England?" + +"Yes," said I, with a jerk of memory. "Time passes quickly." + +"It is three years since I lost little Jean." + +"Who is little Jean?" I asked. + +"Did I not tell you when I saw you last in Paris?" + +"No." + +"It is strange. I have been thinking about him and my heart has been +aching for him all the time. You must hear. It is most important." He +lit a cigar and began. + +It was then that he told me the story of which I have already related +in these chronicles:[A] how he was scouring France in a ramshackle +automobile as the peripatetic vendor of a patent corn cure and found a +babe of nine months lying abandoned in the middle of that silent road +through the wilderness between Salon and Arles; how instead of +delivering it over to the authorities, he adopted it and carried it +about with him from town to town, a motor accessory sometimes +embarrassing, but always divinely precious; how an evil day came upon +him at Aix-en-Provence when, the wheezing automobile having uttered +its last gasp, he found his occupation gone; how, no longer being able +to care for _le petit_ Jean, he left him with a letter and half his +fortune outside the door of a couple of English maiden ladies who, +staying in the same hotel, had manifested great interest in the baby +and himself; and how, in the dead of the night, he had tramped away +from Aix-en-Provence in the rain, his pockets light and his heart as +heavy as lead. + + [A] The Adventures of the Foundling. + +"And I have never heard of my little Jean again," said Aristide. + +"Why didn't you write?" I asked. + +"I knew their names, Honeywood; Miss Janet was the elder, Miss Anne the +younger. But the name of the place they lived at I have never been able +to remember. It was near London--they used to come up by train to +matinées and afternoon concerts. But what it is called, _mon Dieu_, I +have racked my brain for it. _Sacré mille tonnerres!_" He leaped to his +feet in his unexpected, startling way, and pounced on a Bradshaw's +Railway Guide lying on my library table. "Imbecile, pig, triple ass that +I am! Why did I not think of this before? It is near London. If I look +through all the stations near London on every line, I shall find it." + +"All right," said I, "go ahead." + +I lit a cigarette and took up a novel. I had not read very far when a +sudden uproar from the table caused me to turn round. Aristide danced +and flourished the Bradshaw over his head. + +"Chislehurst! Chislehurst! Ah, _mon ami_, now I am happy. Now I have +found my little Jean. You will forgive me--but I must go now and embrace +him." + +He held out his hand. + +"Where are you off to?" I demanded. + +"The Chislehurst, where else?" + +"My dear fellow," said I, rising, "do you seriously suppose that these +two English maiden ladies have taken on themselves the responsibility of +that foreign brat's upbringing?" + +"_Mon Dieu!_" said he taken aback for the moment, hypothesis having +entered his head. Then, with a wide gesture, he flung the preposterous +idea to the winds. "Of course. They have hearts, these English women. +They have maternal instincts. They have money." He looked at Bradshaw +again, then at his watch. "I have just time to catch a train. _Au +revoir, mon vieux._" + +"But," I objected, "why don't you write? It's the natural thing to do." + +"Write? _Bah!_ Did you ever hear of a Provençal writing when he could +talk?" He tapped his lips, and in an instant, like a whirlwind, he +passed from my ken. + + * * * * * + +Aristide on his arrival at Chislehurst looked about the pleasant, leafy +place--it was a bright October afternoon and the wooded hillside blazed +in russet and gold--and decided it was the perfect environment for Miss +Janet and Miss Anne, to say nothing of little Jean. A neat red brick +house with a trim garden in front of it looked just the kind of a house +wherein Miss Janet and Miss Anne would live. He rang the bell. A +parlour-maid, in spotless black and white, tutelary nymph of Suburbia, +the very parlour-maid who would minister to Miss Janet and Miss Anne, +opened the door. + +"Miss Honeywood?" he inquired. + +"Not here, sir," said the parlour-maid. + +"Where is she? I mean, where are they?" + +"No one of that name lives here," said the parlour-maid. + +"Who does live here?" + +"Colonel Brabazon." + +"And where do the two Miss Honeywood live?" he asked with his engaging +smile. + +But English suburban parlour-maids are on their guard against smiles, no +matter how engaging. She prepared to shut the door. + +"I don't know." + +"How can I find out?" + +"You might enquire among the tradespeople." + +"Thank you, mademoiselle, you are a most intelligent young----" + +The door shut in his face. Aristide frowned. She was a pretty +parlour-maid, and Aristide didn't like to be so haughtily treated by a +pretty woman. But his quest being little Jean and not the eternal +feminine, he took the maid's advice and made enquiries at the prim and +respectable shops. + +"Oh, yes," said a comely young woman in a fragrant bakers' and +confectioners'. "They were two ladies, weren't they? They lived at Hope +Cottage. We used to supply them. They left Chislehurst two years ago." + +"_Sacré nom d'un chien!_" said Aristide. + +"Beg pardon?" asked the young woman. + +"I am disappointed," said Aristide. "Where did they go to?" + +"I'm sure I can't tell you." + +"Do you remember whether they had a baby?" + +"They were maiden ladies," said the young woman rebukingly. + +"But anybody can keep a baby without being its father or mother. I want +to know what has become of the baby." + +The young woman gazed through the window. + +"You had better ask the policeman." + +"That's an idea," said Aristide, and, leaving her, he caught up the +passing constable. + +The constable knew nothing of maiden ladies with a baby, but he directed +him to Hope Cottage. He found a pretty half-timber house lying back from +the road, with a neat semi-circular gravelled path leading to a porch +covered thick with Virginia creeper. Even more than the red brick +residence of Colonel Brabazon did it look, with its air of dainty +comfort, the fitting abode of Miss Janet and Miss Anne. He rang the bell +and interviewed another trim parlour-maid. More susceptible to smiles +than the former, she summoned her master, a kindly, middle-aged man, who +came out into the porch. Yes, Honeywood was the name of the previous +tenants. Two ladies, he believed. He had never seen them and knew +nothing about a child. Messrs. Tompkin & Briggs, the estate agents in +the High Street, could no doubt give him information. Aristide thanked +him and made his way to Messrs. Tompkin & Briggs. A dreary spectacled +youth in resentful charge of the office--his principals, it being +Saturday afternoon, were golfing the happy hours away--professed blank +ignorance of everything. Aristide fixed him with his glittering eye and +flickered his fingers and spoke richly. The youth in a kind of mesmeric +trance took down a battered, dog's eared book and turned over the pages. + +"Honeywood--Miss--Beverly Stoke--near St. Albans--Herts. That's it," he +said. + +Aristide made a note of the address. "Is that all you can tell me?" + +"Yes," said the youth. + +"I thank you very much, my young friend," said Aristide, raising his +hat, "and here is something to buy a smile with," and, leaving a +sixpence on the table to shimmer before the youth's stupefied eyes, +Aristide strutted out of the office. + + * * * * * + +"You had much better have written," said I, when he came back and told +me of his experiences. "The post-office would have done all that for +you." + +"You have no idea of business, _mon cher ami_"--(I--a successful +tea-broker of twenty-five years' standing!--the impudence of the +fellow!)--"If I had written to-day, the letter would have reached +Chislehurst on Monday morning. It would be redirected and reach +Hertfordshire on Tuesday. I should not get any news till Wednesday. I go +down to Beverly Stoke to-morrow, and then I find at once Miss Janet and +Miss Anne and my little Jean! The secret of business men, and I am a +business man, the accredited representative of Dulau et Compagnie--never +forget that--the secret of business is no delay." + +He darted across the room to Bradshaw. + +"For God's sake," said I, "put that nightmare of perpetual motion in +your pocket and go mad over it in the privacy of your own chamber." + +"Very good," said he, tucking the brain-convulsing volume under his arm. +"I will put it on top of The Times and the family Bible and I will say +'Ha! now I am British. Now I am very respectable!' What else can I do?" + +"Rent a pew in a Baptist chapel," said I. + + * * * * * + +After a three-mile trudge from St. Albans Aristide, following +directions, found himself on a high road running through the middle of a +straggy common decked here and there with great elms splendid in autumn +bravery, and populated chiefly by geese, who when he halted in some +perplexity--for on each side, beyond the green, were indications of a +human settlement--advanced in waddling flocks towards him and signified +their disapproval of his presence. A Sundayfied youth in a rainbow tie +rode past on a bicycle. Aristide took off his hat. The youth nearly fell +off the bicycle, but British doggedness saved him from disaster. + +"Beverly Stoke? Will you have the courtesy----" + +"Here," bawled the youth, with a circular twist of his head, and, eager +to escape from a madman, he rode on furiously. + +Aristide looked to left and right at the little houses beyond the +green--some white and thatched and dilapidated, others horridly new and +perky--but all poor and insignificant. As his eyes became accustomed to +the scene they were aware of human forms dotted sparsely about the +common. He struck across and accosted one, an elderly woman with a +prayer-book. "Miss Honeywood? A lady from London?" + +"That house over there--the third beyond the poplar." + +"And little Jean--a beautiful child about four years old?" + +"That I don't know, sir. I live at Wilmer's End, a good half mile from +here." + +Aristide made for the third house past the poplar. First there was a +plank bridge across a grass-grown ditch; then a tiny patch of garden; +then a humble whitewashed cottage with a small leaded casement window on +each side of the front door. Unlike Hope Cottage, it did not look at all +the residence of Miss Janet and Miss Anne. Its appearance, indeed, was +woe-begone. Aristide, however, went up to the door; as there was neither +knocker nor bell, he rapped with his knuckles. The door opened, and +there, poorly dressed in blouse and skirt, stood Miss Anne. + +She regarded him for a moment in a bewildered way, then, recognizing +him, drew back into the stone flagged passage with a sharp cry. + +"You? You--Mr. Pujol?" + +"_Oui, Mademoiselle, c'est moi._ It is I, Aristide Pujol." + +She put her hands on her bosom. "It is rather a shock seeing you--so +unexpectedly. Will you come in?" + +She led the way into a tiny parlour, very clean, very simple with its +furniture of old oak and brass, and bade him sit. She looked a little +older than when he had seen her at Aix-en-Provence. A few lines had +marred the comely face and there was here and there a touch of grey in +the reddish hair, and, though still buxom, she had grown thinner. Care +had set its stamp upon her. + +"Miss Honeywood," said Aristide. "It is on account of little Jean that I +have come----" + +She turned on him swiftly. "Not to take him away!" + +"Then he is here!" He jumped to his feet and wrung both her hands and +kissed them to her great embarrassment. "Ah, mademoiselle, I knew it. I +felt it. When such an inspiration comes to a man, it is the _bon Dieu_ +who sends it. He is here, actually here, in this house?" + +"Yes," said Miss Anne. + +Aristide threw out his arms. "Let me see him. _Ah, le cher petit!_ I +have been yearning after him for three years. It was my heart that I +ripped out of my body that night and laid at your threshold." + +"Hush!" said Miss Anne, with an interrupting gesture. "You must not talk +so loud. He is asleep in the next room. You mustn't wake him. He is very +ill." + +"Ill? Dangerously ill?" + +"I'm afraid so." + +"_Mon Dieu_," said he, sitting down again in the oak settle. To Aristide +the emotion of the moment was absorbing, overwhelming. His attitude +betokened deepest misery and dejection. + +"And I expected to see him full of joy and health!" + +"It is not my fault, Mr. Pujol," said Miss Anne. + +He started. "But no. How could it be? You loved him when you first set +eyes on him at Aix-en-Provence." + +Miss Anne began to cry. "God knows," said she, "what I should do without +him. The dear mite is all that is left to me." + +"All? But there is your sister, the dear Miss Janet." + +Miss Anne's eyes were hidden in her handkerchief. "My poor sister died +last year, Mr. Pujol." + +"I am very sorry. I did not know," said Aristide gently. + +There was a short silence. "It was a great sorrow to you," he said. + +"It was God's will," said Anne. Then, after another pause, during which +she dried her eyes, she strove to smile. "Tell me about yourself. How do +you come to be here?" + +Aristide replied in a hesitating way. He was in the presence of grief +and sickness and trouble; the Provençal braggadocio dropped from him and +he became the simple and childish creature that he was. He accounted +very truthfully, very convincingly, for his queer life; for his +abandonment of little Jean, for his silence, for his sudden and +unexpected appearance. During the ingenuous _apologia pro vita sua_ Miss +Anne regarded him with her honest candour. + +"Janet and I both understood," she said. "Janet was gifted with a divine +comprehension and pity. The landlady at the hotel, I remember, said some +unkind things about you; but we didn't believe them. We felt that you +were a good man--no one but a good man could have written that +letter--we cried over it--and when she tried to poison our minds we said +to each other: 'What does it matter? Here God in his mercy has given us +a child.' But, Mr. Pujol, why didn't you take us into your confidence?" + +"My dear Miss Anne," said Aristide, "we of the South do things +impulsively, by lightning flashes. An idea comes suddenly. _Vlan!_ we +carry it out in two seconds. We are not less human than the Northerner, +who reflects two months." + +"That is almost what dear, wise Janet told me," said Miss Anne. + +"Then you know in your heart," said Aristide, after a while, "that if I +had not been only a football at the feet of fortune, I should never have +deserted little Jean?" + +"I do, Mr. Pujol. My sister and I have been footballs, too." She added +with a change of tone: "You tell me you saw our dear home at +Chislehurst?" + +"Yes," said Aristide. + +"And you see this. There is a difference." + +"What has happened?" asked Aristide. + +She told him the commonplace pathetic story. Their father had left them +shares in the company of which he had been managing director. For many +years they had enjoyed a comfortable income. Then the company had become +bankrupt and only a miserable ninety pounds a year had been saved from +the wreckage. The cottage at Beverly Stoke belonging to them--it had +been their mother's--they had migrated thither with their fallen +fortunes and little Jean. And then Janet had died. She was delicate and +unaccustomed to privation and discomfort--and the cottage had its +disadvantages. She, Anne herself, was as strong as a horse and had never +been ill in her life, but others were not quite so hardy. "However"--she +smiled--"one has to make the best of things." + +"_Parbleu_," said Aristide. + +Miss Anne went on to talk of Jean, a miraculous infant of infinite +graces and accomplishments. Up to now he had been the sturdiest and +merriest fellow. + +"At nine months old he saw that life was a big joke," said Aristide. +"How he used to laugh." + +"There's not much laugh left in him, poor darling," she sighed. And she +told how he had caught a chill which had gone to his lungs and how the +night before last she thought she had lost him. + +She sat up and listened. "Will you excuse me for a moment?" + +She went out and presently returned, standing at the doorway. "He is +still asleep. Would you like to see him? Only"--she put her fingers on +her lips--"you must be very, very quiet." + +He followed her into the next room and looked about him shyly, +recognizing that it was Miss Anne's own bedroom; and there, lying in a +little cot beside the big bed, he saw the sleeping child, his brown face +flushed with fever. He had a curly shock of black hair and well formed +features. An old woolly lamb nose to nose with him shared his pillow. +Aristide drew from his pocket a Teddy bear, and, having asked Miss +Anne's permission with a glance, laid it down gently on the coverlid. + +His eyes were wet when they returned to the parlour. So were Miss +Anne's. The Teddy bear was proof of the simplicity of his faith in her. + +After a while, conscious of hunger, he rose to take leave. He must be +getting back to St. Albans. But might he be permitted to come back later +in the afternoon? Miss Anne reddened. It outraged her sense of +hospitality to send a guest away from her house on a three-mile walk for +food. And yet---- + +"Mr. Pujol," she said bravely, "I would ask you to stay to luncheon if I +had anything to offer you. But I am single handed, and, with Jean's +illness, I haven't given much thought to housekeeping. The woman who +does some of the rough work won't be back till six. I hate to let you go +all those miles--I am so distressed----" + +"But, mademoiselle," said Aristide. "You have some bread. You have +water. It has been a banquet many a day to me, and this time it would +be the most precious banquet of all." + +"I can do a little better than that," faltered Miss Anne. "I have plenty +of eggs and there is bacon." + +"Eggs--bacon!" cried Aristide, his bright eyes twinkling and his hands +going up in the familiar gesture. "That is superb. _Tiens!_ you shall +not do the cooking. You shall rest. I will make you an _omelette au +lard_--_ah!_"--he kissed the tips of his fingers--"such an omelette as +you have not eaten since you were in France--and even there I doubt +whether you have ever eaten an omelette like mine." His soul simmering +with omelette, he darted towards the door. "The kitchen--it is this +way?" + +"But, Mr. Pujol----!" Miss Anne laughed, protestingly. Who could be +angry with the vivid and impulsive creature? + +"It is the room opposite Jean's--not so?" + +She followed him into the clean little kitchen, half amused, half +flustered. Already he had hooked off the top of the kitchen range. "Ah! +a good fire. And your frying-pan?" He dived into the scullery. + +"Please don't be in such a hurry," she pleaded. "You will have made the +omelette before I've had time to lay the cloth, and it will get cold. +Besides, I want to learn how to do it." + +"_Trés bien_," said Aristide, laying down the frying-pan. "You shall see +how it is made--the omelette of the universe." + +So he helped Miss Anne to lay the cloth on the gate-legged oak table in +the parlour and to set it out with bread and butter and the end of a +tinned tongue and a couple of bottles of stout. After which they went +back to the little kitchen, where in a kind of giggling awe she watched +him shred the bacon and break the eggs with his thin, skilful fingers +and perform his magic with the frying-pan and turn out the great golden +creation into the dish. + +"Now," said he, pulling her in his enthusiasm, "to table while it is +hot." + +Miss Anne laughed. She lost her head ever so little. The days had been +drab and hopeless of late and she was still young; so, if she felt +excited at this unhoped for inrush of life and colour, who shall blame +her? The light sparkled once more in her eyes and the pink of her +naturally florid complexion shone on her cheek as they sat down to +table. + +"It is I who help it," said Aristide. "Taste that." He passed the plate +and waited, with the artist's expectation for her approval. + +"It's delicious." + +It was indeed the perfection of omelette, all its suave juiciness +contained in film as fine as goldbeater's skin. + +"Yes, it's good." He was delighted, childlike, at the success of his +cookery. His gaiety kept the careworn woman in rare laughter during the +meal. She lost all consciousness that he was a strange man plunged down +suddenly in the midst of her old maidish existence--and a strange man, +too, who had once behaved in a most outrageous fashion. But that was +ever the way of Aristide. The moment you yielded to his attraction he +made you feel that you had known him for years. His fascination +possessed you. + +"Miss Anne," said he, smoking a cigarette, at her urgent invitation, "is +there a poor woman in Beverly Stoke with whom I could lodge?" + +She gasped. "You lodge in Beverly Stoke?" + +"Why yes," said Aristide, as if it were the most natural thing in the +world. "I am engaged in the city from ten to five every day. I can't +come here and go back to London every night, and I can't stay a whole +week without my little Jean. And I have my duty to Jean. I stand to him +in the relation of a father. I must help you to nurse him and make him +better. I must give him soup and apples and ice cream and----" + +"You would kill the darling in five minutes," interrupted Miss Anne. + +He waved his forefinger in the air. "No, no, I have nursed the sick in +my time. My dear friend," said he, with a change of tone, "when did you +go to bed last?" + +"I don't know," she answered in some confusion. "The district nurse has +helped me--and the doctor has been very good. Jean has turned the corner +now. Please don't worry. And as for your coming to live down here, it's +absurd." + +"Of course, if you formally forbid me to do so, mademoiselle, and if you +don't want to see me----" + +"How can you say a thing like that? Haven't I shown you to-day that you +are welcome?" + +"Dear Miss Anne," said he, "forgive me. But what is that great vast town +of London to me who know nobody there? Here in this tiny spot is +concentrated all I care for in the world. Why shouldn't I live in it?" + +"You would be so dreadfully uncomfortable," said Miss Anne, weakly. + +"Bah!" cried Aristide. "You talk of discomfort to an old client of +_L'Hôtel de la Belle Étoile_?" + +"The Hotel of the Beautiful Star? Where is that?" asked the innocent +lady. + +"Wherever you like," said Aristide. "Your bed is dry leaves and your +bed-curtains, if you demand luxury, are a hedge, and your ceiling, if +you are fortunate, is ornamented with stars." + +She looked at him wide-eyed, in great concern. + +"Do you mean that you have ever been homeless?" + +He laughed. "I think I've been everything imaginable, except married." + +"Hush!" she said. "Listen!" Her keen ear had caught a child's cry. "It's +Jean. I must go." + +She hurried out. Aristide prepared to light another cigarette. But a +second before the application of the flaring match an idea struck him. +He blew out the match, replaced the cigarette in his case, and with a +dexterity that revealed the professional of years ago, began to clear +the table. He took the things noiselessly into the kitchen, shut the +door, and master of the kitchen and scullery washed up. Then, the most +care-free creature in the world, he stole down the stone passage into +the wilderness of Beverly Stoke. + +An hour afterwards he knocked at the front door, Anne Honeywood admitted +him. + +"I have arranged with the good Mrs. Buttershaw. She lives a hundred +yards down the road. I bring my baggage to-morrow evening." + +Anne regarded him in a humorous, helpless way. "I can't prevent you," +she said, "but I can give you a piece of advice." + +"What is it?" + +"Don't wash up for Mrs. Buttershaw." + + * * * * * + +So it came to pass that Aristide Pujol took up his residence at +Beverly Stoke, trudging every morning three miles to catch his +business train at St. Albans, and trudging back every evening three +miles to Beverly Stoke. Every morning he ran into the cottage for a +sight of little Jean and every evening after a digestion-racking meal +prepared by Mrs. Buttershaw he went to the cottage armed with toys +and weird and injudicious food for little Jean and demanded an account +of the precious infant's doings during the day. Gradually Jean +recovered of his congestion, being a sturdy urchin, and, to Aristide's +delight, resumed the normal life of childhood. + +"_Moi, je suis papa_," said Aristide. "He has got to speak French, and +he had better begin at once. It is absurd that anyone born between Salon +and Arles should not speak French and Provençal; we'll leave Provençal +till later. _Moi, je suis papa, Jean._ Say _papa_." + +"I don't quite see how he can call you that, Mr. Pujol," said Anne, with +the suspicion of a flush on her cheek. + +"And why not? Has the poor child any other papa in the whole wide world? +And at four years old not to have a father is heart-breaking. Do you +want us to bring him up an orphan? No. You shan't be an orphan, _mon +brave_," he continued, bending over the child and putting his little +hands against his bearded face, "you couldn't bear such a calamity, +could you? And so you will call me _papa_." + +"_Papa_," said Jean, with a grin. + +"There, he has settled it," said Aristide. "_Moi je suis papa._ And you, +mademoiselle?" + +"I am Auntie Anne," she replied demurely. + +Saturday afternoons and Sundays were Aristide's days of delight. He +could devote himself entirely to Jean. The thrill of the weeks when he +had paraded the child in the market places of France while he sold his +corn cure again ran through his veins. The two rows of cottages +separated by the common, which was the whole of Beverly Stoke, became +too small a theatre for his parental pride. He bewailed the loss of his +automobile that had perished of senile decay at Aix-en-Provence. If he +only had it now he could exhibit Jean to the astonished eyes of St. +Albans, Watford--nay London itself! + +"I wish I could take him to Dulau & Company," said he. + +"Good Heavens!" cried Miss Anne in alarm, for Aristide was capable of +everything. "What in the world would you do with him there?" + +"What would I do with him?" replied Aristide, picking the child up in +his arms--the three were strolling on the common--"_Parbleu!_ I would +use him to strike the staff of Dulau & Company green with envy. Do you +think the united efforts of the whole lot of them, from the good Mr. +Blessington to the office boy, could produce a hero like this? You are a +hero, Jean, aren't you?" + +"Yes, papa," said Jean. + +"He knows it," shouted Aristide with a delighted gesture which nearly +cast Jean to the circumambient geese. "Miss Anne, we have the most +wonderful child in the universe." + +This, as far as Anne was concerned, was a proposition which for the past +three years she had regarded as incontrovertible. She smiled at +Aristide, who smiled at her, and Jean, seeing them happy, smiled largely +at them both. + +In a very short time Aristide, who could magically manufacture boats +and cocks and pigs and giraffes out of bits of paper, who could bark +like a dog and quack like a goose, who could turn himself into a horse +or a bear at a minute's notice, whose pockets were a perennial mine of +infantile ecstasy, established himself in Jean's mind as a kind of +tame, necessary and beloved jinn. Being a loyal little soul, the child +retained his affection for Auntie Anne, but he was swept off his +little feet by his mirific parent. The time came when, if he was not +dressed in his tiny woollen jersey and knee breeches and had not his +nose glued against the parlour window in readiness to scramble to the +front door for Aristide's morning kiss, he would have thought that +chaos had come again. And Anne, humouring the child, hastened to get +him washed and dressed in time; until at last, so greatly was she +affected by his obsession, she got into the foolish habit of watching +the clock and saying to herself: "In another minute he will be here," +or: "He is a minute late. What can have happened to him?" + +So Aristide, in his childlike way, found remarkable happiness in +Beverly Stoke. A very wet summer had been followed by a dry and mellow +autumn. Aristide waxed enthusiastic over the English climate and +rejoiced in the mild country air. He was also happy under my friend +Blessington, who spoke of him to me in glowing terms. At the back of +all Aristide's eccentricities was the Provençal peasant's shrewdness. +He realized that, for the first time in his life, he had taken up a +sound and serious avocation. Also, he was no longer irresponsible. He +had found little Jean. Jean's future was in his hands. Jean was to be +an architect--God knows why--but Aristide settled it, definitely, +off-hand. He would have to be educated. "And, my dear friend," said +he, when we were discussing Jean--and for months I heard nothing but +Jean, Jean, Jean, so that I loathed the brat, until I met the +brown-skinned, black-eyed, merry little wretch and fell, like +everybody else, fatuously in love with him--"my dear friend," said he, +"an architect, to be the architect that I mean him to be, must have +universal knowledge. He must know the first word of the classic, the +last word of the modern. He must be steeped in poetry, his brain must +vibrate with science. He must be what you call in England a gentleman. +He must go to one of your great public schools--Eton, Winchester, +Rugby, Harrow--you see I know them all--he must go to Cambridge or +Oxford. Ah, I tell you, he is to be a big man. I, Aristide Pujol, did +not pick him up on that deserted road, in the Arabia Petrea of +Provence, between Salon and Arles, for nothing. He was wrapped, as I +have told you, in an old blanket--and _ma foi_ it smelt bad--and I +dressed him in my pyjamas and made a Neapolitan cap for him out of one +of my socks. The _bon Dieu_ sent him, and I shall arrange just as the +_bon Dieu_ intended. Poor Miss Anne Honeywood with her ninety pounds a +year, what can she do? Pouf! It is for me to look after the future of +little Jean." + +By means of such discourse he convinced Miss Anne that Jean was +predestined to greatness and that Providence had appointed him, +Aristide, as the child's agent in advance. Very much bewildered by his +riotous flow of language and very reluctant to sacrifice her woman's +pride, she agreed to allow him to contribute towards Jean's upbringing. + +"Dear Miss Anne," said he, "it is my right. It is Jean's right. You +would love to put him on top of the pinnacle of fame, would you not?" + +"Of course," said Miss Anne. + +"_Eh bien!_ we will work together. You will give him what can be given +by a beautiful and exquisite woman, and I will do all that can be done +by the accredited agent of Dulau et Compagnie, Wine Shippers of +Bordeaux." + +So, I repeat, Aristide was entirely happy. His waking dreams were of the +four-year-old child. The glad anticipation of the working day in Great +Tower St., E. C., was the evening welcome from the simple but capable +gentlewoman and the sense of home and intimacy in her little parlour no +bigger than the never-entered and nerve-destroying salon of his parents +at Aigues Mortes, but smiling with the grace of old oak and faded +chintz. At Aigues Mortes the salon was a comfortless, tasteless +convention, set apart for the celebrations of baptisms and marriages and +deaths, a pride and a terror to the inhabitants. But here everything +seemed to be as much a warm bit of Anne Honeywood as the tortoise-shell +comb in her hair and the square of Brussels lace that rose and fell on +the bosom of her old evening frock. For, you see, since she expected a +visitor in the evenings, Anne had taken to dressing for her sketch of a +dinner. For all her struggle with poverty she had retained the charm +that four years before had made her touch upon Jean seem a consecration +to the impressionable man. And now that he entered more deeply into her +life and thoughts, he found himself in fragrant places that were very +strange to him. He discovered, too, with some surprise, that a man who +has been at fierce grips with Fortune all his life from ten to forty is +ever so little tired in spirit and is glad to rest. In the tranquility +of Anne Honeywood's presence his soul was singularly at peace. He also +wondered why Anne Honeywood seemed to grow younger, and, in her gentle +fashion, more laughter-loving, every day. + +The Saint Martin's summer lasted to the beginning of December, and then +it came to an end, and with it the idyll of Aristide and Anne Honeywood. + +One Saturday afternoon, when the rain was falling dismally, she received +him with an embarrassment she could scarcely conceal. The usual +heightened colour no longer gave youth to her cheek; an anxious frown +knitted her candid brows; and there was no laughter in her eyes. He +looked at her questioningly. Was anything the matter with Jean? But Jean +answered the question for himself by running down the passage and +springing like a puppy into Aristide's arms. Anne turned her face away, +as if the sight pained her, and, pleading a headache and the desire to +lie down, she left the two together. Returning after a couple of hours +with the tea-tray, she found them on the floor breathlessly absorbed in +the erection of card pagodas. She bit her lip and swallowed a sob. +Aristide jumped up and took the tray. Was not the headache better? He +was so grieved. Jean must be very quiet and drink up his milk quietly +like a hero because Auntie was suffering. Tea was a very subdued affair. +Then Anne carried off Jean to bed, refusing Aristide's helpful +ministrations. It was his Saturday and Sunday joy to bath Jean amid a +score of crawly tin insects which he had provided for the child's +ablutionary entertainment, and it formed the climax of Jean's blissful +day. But this afternoon Anne tore the twain asunder. Aristide looked +mournfully over the rain-swept common through the leaded panes, and +speculated on the enigma of woman. A man, feeling ill, would have been +only too glad for somebody to do his work; but a woman, just because she +was ill, declined assistance. Surely women were an intellect-baffling +sex. + +She came back, having put Jean to bed. + +"My dear friend," she said, with a blurt of bravery, "I have something +very hard to say, but I must say it. You must go away from Beverly +Stoke." + +"Ah!" cried Aristide, "is it I, then, that give you a headache?" + +"It's not your fault," she said gently. "You have been everything that a +loyal gentleman could be--and it's because you're a loyal gentleman that +you must go." + +"I don't understand," said he, puzzled. "I must go away because I give +you a headache, although it is not my fault." + +"It's nothing to do with headaches," she explained. "Don't you see? +People around here are talking." + +"About you and me?" + +"Yes," said Miss Anne, faintly. + +"_Saprelotte!_" cried Aristide, with a fine flourish, "let them talk!" + +"Against Jean and myself?" + +The reproach brought him to his feet. "No," said he. "No. Sooner than +they should talk, I would go out and strangle every one of them. But it +is infamous. What do they say?" + +"How can I tell you? What would they say in your own country?" + +"France is France and England is England." + +"And a little cackling village is the same all the world over. No, my +dear friend--for you are my dear friend--you must go back to London, for +the sake of my good name and Jean's." + +"But let us leave the cackling village." + +"There are geese on every common," said Anne. + +"_Nom de Dieu!_" muttered Aristide, walking about the tiny parlour. +"_Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" He stood in front of her and flung out +his arms wide. "But without Jean and you life will have no meaning for +me. I shall die. I shall fade away. I shall perish. Tell me, dear Miss +Anne, what they are saying, the miserable peasants with souls of mud." + +But Anne could tell him no more. It had been hateful and degrading to +tell him so much. She shivered through all her purity. After a barren +discussion she held out her hand, large and generous like herself. + +"Good-bye"--she hesitated for the fraction of a second--"Good-bye, +Aristide. I promise you shall provide for Jean's future. I will bring +him up to London now and then to see you. We will find some way out of +the difficulty. But you see, don't you, that you must leave Beverly +Stoke?" + +Aristide went back to his comfortless lodgings aflame with bewilderment, +indignation and despair. He fell upon Mrs. Buttershaw, a slatternly and +sour-visaged woman, and hurled at her a tornado of questions. She +responded with the glee of a hag, and Aristide learned the amazing fact +that in the matter of sheer uncharitableness, unkindness and foulness of +thought Beverly Stoke, with its population of three hundred hinds, could +have brought down upon it the righteous indignation of Sodom, Gomorrah, +Babylon, Paris, and London. For a fortnight or so Anne Honeywood's life +in the village had been that of a pariah dog. + +"And now you've spoke of it yourself," said Mrs. Buttershaw, her hands +on her hips, "I'm glad. I'm a respectable woman, I am, and go to church +regularly, and I don't want to be mixed up in such goings on. And I +never have held with foreigners, anyway. And the sooner you find other +lodgings, the better." + +For the first and only time in his life words failed Aristide Pujol. He +stood in front of the virtuous harridan, his lips working, his fingers +convulsively clutching the air. + +"You--you--you--you naughty woman!" he gasped, and, sweeping her away +from the doorway of his box of a sitting-room, he rushed up to his +tinier bedroom and in furious haste packed his portmanteau. + +"I would rather die than sleep another night beneath your slanderous +roof," he cried at the foot of the stairs. "Here is more than your +week's money." He flung a couple of gold coins on the floor and dashed +out into the darkness and the rain. + +He hammered at Anne Honeywood's door. She opened it in some alarm. + +"You?--but----" she stammered. + +"I have come," said he, dumping his portmanteau in the passage, "to take +you and Jean away from this abomination of a place. It is a Tophet +reserved for those who are not good enough for hell. In hell there is +dignity, _que diable!_ Here there is none. I know what you have +suffered. I know how they insult you. I know what they say. You cannot +stay one more night here. Pack up all your things. Pack up all Jean's +things. I have my valise here. I walk to St. Albans and I come back for +you in an automobile. You lock up the door. I tell the policeman to +guard the cottage. You come with me. We take a train to London. You and +Jean will stay at a hotel. I will go to my good friend who saved me +from Madam Gougasse. After that we will think." + +"That's just like you," she said, smiling in spite of her trouble, "you +act first and think afterwards. Unfortunately I'm in the habit of doing +the reverse." + +"But it's I who am doing all the thinking for you. I have thought till +my brain is red hot." He laughed in his luminous and excited way, and, +seizing both her hands, kissed them one after the other. "There!" said +he, "be ready by the time I return. Do not hesitate. Do not look back. +Remember Lot's wife!" He flourished his hat and was gone like a flash +into the heavy rain and darkness of the December evening. Anne cried +after him, but he too remembering Lot's wife would not turn. He marched +on buoyantly, heedless of the wet and the squirting mud from unseen +puddles. It was an adventure such as he loved. It was a knightly errand, +_parbleu!_ Was he not delivering a beautiful lady from the dragon of +calumny? And in an automobile, too! His imagination fondled the idea. + +At a garage in St. Albans he readily found a car for hire. He was all +for driving it himself--that is how he had pictured the rescue--but the +proprietor, dull and unimaginative tradesman, declined firmly. It was a +hireling who drove the car to Beverly Stoke. Anne, unhatted and +uncloaked, admitted him. + +"You are not ready?" + +"My dear friend, how can I----?" + +"You are not coming?" His hands dropped to his sides and his face was +the incarnation of disappointment. + +"Let us talk things over reasonably," she urged, opening the parlour +door. + +"But I have brought the automobile." + +"He can wait for five minutes, can't he?" + +"He can wait till Doomsday," said Aristide. + +"Take off your dripping coat. You must be wet through. Oh, how impulsive +you are!" + +He took off his overcoat dejectedly and followed her into the parlour, +where she tried to point out the impossibility of his scheme. How could +she abandon her home at a moment's notice? Failing to convince him, she +said at last in some embarrassment, but with gentle dignity: "Suppose we +did run away together in your romantic fashion, would it not confirm the +scandal in the eyes of this wretched village?" + +"You are right," said Aristide. "I had not thought of it." + +He knew himself to be a madman. It was not thus that ladies were rescued +from calumny. But to leave her alone to face it for time indefinite was +unthinkable. And, meanwhile, what would become of him severed from her +and little Jean? He sighed and looked around the little room where he +had been so happy, and at the sweet-faced woman whose companionship had +been so dear to him. And then the true meaning of all the precious +things that had been his life for the past two months appeared before +him like a smiling valley hitherto hidden and now revealed by dissolving +mist. A great gladness gathered round his heart. He leaned across the +table by which he was sitting and looked at her and for the first time +noticed that her eyes were red. + +"You have been crying, dear Anne," said he, using her name boldly. +"Why?" + +A man ought not to put a question like that at a woman's head and bid +her stand and deliver. How is she to answer? Anne felt Aristide's bright +eyes upon her and the colour mounted and mounted and deepened on her +cheeks and brow. + +"I don't like changes," she said in a low voice. + +Aristide slipped noiselessly to the side of her chair and knelt on one +knee and took her hand. + +"Anne--my beloved Anne!" said he. + +And Anne neither moved nor protested, but looked away from him into the +fire. + + * * * * * + +And that is all that Aristide told me. There are sacred and beautiful +things in life that one man does not tell to another. He did, however, +mention that they forgot all about the unfortunate chauffeur sitting in +the rain till about three hours afterwards, when Aristide sped away to a +St. Albans hotel in joyous solitude. + +The very next day he burst in upon me in a state of bliss bordering on +mania. + +"But there is a tragic side to it," he said when the story was over. +"For half the year I shall be exiled to Bordeaux, Marseilles and Algiers +as the representative of Dulau et Compagnie." + +"The very best thing that could happen for your domestic happiness," +said I. + +"What? With my heart"--he thumped his heart--"with my heart hurting like +the devil all the time?" + +"So long as your heart hurts," said I, "you know it isn't dead." + +A short while afterwards they were married in London. I was best man and +Jean, specklessly attired, was page of honour, and the vicar of her own +church at Chislehurst performed the ceremony. The most myopic of +creatures could have seen that Anne was foolishly in love with her +rascal husband. How could she help it? + +As soon as the newly wedded pair had received the exhortation, Aristide, +darting to the altar-rail, caught Jean up in his arms, and, to the +consternation of the officiating clergy, the verger, and Anne's +conventional friends, cried out exultingly: + +"_Ah, mon petit._ It was a lucky day for both of us when I picked you +up on the road between Salon and Arles. Put your hands together as you +do when you're saying your prayers, _mon brave_, and say, 'God bless +father and mother.'" + +Jean obediently adopted the attitude of the infant Samuel in the +pictures. + +"God bless father and mother," said he, and the childish treble rang out +queerly in the large, almost empty church. + +There was a span of silence and then all the women-folk fell on little +Jean and that was the end of that wedding. + + + THE END. + + + * * * * * + + + + + THE GLORY OF CLEMENTINA + BY + William J. Locke + + Author of "The Belovèd Vagabond," "Simon the Jester," etc. + + _Cloth_ _12mo_ _$1.30 net_ _Postage 12 cents_ + + Illustrations by Arthur I. Keller + +"Mr. Locke has succeeded in uniting with the firm carefulness of his +early work the rapid, fluent, vibrating style that makes his later books +so delightful; therefore it is easy to make the deduction that +'Clementina' is the best piece of work he has done."--_New York Evening +Sun_ + +"Among the novels of the past five years no books have more consistently +produced an effect at once certain, satisfactory and delightful than +those of William J. Locke. This latest addition to his shelf is full of +life and laughter and the love not only of man for woman but of man for +man and for humanity. Mr. Locke is a born story-teller and a master of +the art of expression."--_The Outlook_ + +"The book contains a mass of good material, with original +characterization, and is written in a style piquant and clever."--_The +Literary Digest_ + +"A story containing the essence of humanity, with an abundance of +sensible and sensitive, casual and unobtrusive commentary upon life and +man, and especially upon woman."--_Boston Evening Transcript_ + +"It contains even more of the popular qualities than are usually +associated with the writings of this noted author."--_Boston Times_ + +"Mr. Locke's flights into the realms of fancy have been a delight to +many readers. He has a lightness of touch that is entirely captivating, +and his remarkable characterization of inconsequent people gives them a +reality that is very insistent."--_Baltimore Evening Sun_ + +"Never has he drawn so deeply from that well that is the human heart; +never so near those invisible heights which are the soul; and, if we are +not altogether mistaken, 'The Glory of Clementina' will also prove to be +that of its author."--_Baltimore News_ + +"A fascinating story with delicate, whimsical touches."--_Albany +Times-Union_ + +"The book seems destined to live longer than any written by the author +to date, because it is so sane and so fundamentally +true."--_Philadelphia Enquirer_ + + +JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK + + + + + MANALIVE + BY + Gilbert K. Chesterton + + Author of "The Innocence of Father Brown," "Heretics," "Orthodoxy," etc. + + _Cloth_ _12mo_ _$1.30 net_ _Postage 12 cents_ + + Frontispiece and Jacket Illustration by Will Foster + +"Mr. Chesterton has undertaken in this quaint narrative to make +burlesque the vehicle of a sermon and a philosophy. It is all a part of +the author's war upon artificial attitudes which enclose the living men +like a shell and make for human purposes a dead man of him. He speaks +here in a parable--a parable of his own kind, having about it a broad +waggishness like that of Mr. Punch and a distinct flavor of that sort of +low comedy which one finds in Dickens and Shakespeare. You are likely to +find, before you are done with the parable, that there has been forced +upon your attention a possible view of the life worth living. 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Locke. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + + .notes {background-color: #a95b71; color: #dadad0; padding: .5em; + margin-left: 31%; margin-right: 31%; text-align: center;} + + p { margin-top: .75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + + h1,h2,h3,h4 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; + } + + h6 { text-align: center; font-size: 3em; + clear: both; + } + + hr { width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + clear: both; + } + + table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;} + + body{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + + .box { width: 250px; + margin: 0 auto; + text-align: center; + padding: 1em; + border-style: solid; border-width: thin; } + + .box1 { width: 700px; + margin: 0 auto; + text-align: center; + padding: 1em; + border-style: none; } + + .box2 { width: 700px; + margin: 0 auto; + text-align: center; + padding: 1em; + border-top: double; border-bottom: double; } + + .pagenum { visibility: hidden; + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + } /* page numbers */ + + .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;} + + .center {text-align: center;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + + .caption {font-weight: bold; font-variant: small-caps;} + a { text-decoration: none; } + + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;} + .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;} + .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;} + .fnanchor {font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;} + + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol, by +William J. Locke + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol + +Author: William J. Locke + +Release Date: July 31, 2008 [EBook #26154] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADVENTURES OF ARISTIDE PUJOL *** + + + + +Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p class="notes"><strong>Transcriber’s Note: Table of Contents added.</strong></p> +<p> </p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 376px;"> +<img src="images/imgcover.jpg" width="376" height="588" alt="Cover" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p> + +<div class="box"> + +<h3><em>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</em></h3> + +<p><span class="smcap">Idols</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Septimus</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Derelicts</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">The Usurper</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Where Love Is</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">The White Dove</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Simon the Jester</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">A Study in Shadows</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">A Christmas Mystery</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">The Belovèd Vagabond</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">At the Gate of Samaria</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">The Demagogue and Lady Phayre</span></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">The Glory of Clementina</span></p> + +</div> + +<div class="box1"> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p> + +<a name="img003" id="img003"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 404px;"> +<img src="images/img003.jpg" width="404" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +</div> +<p class="center"><span class="caption">at the beginning of the fourth kiss +out came her father</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 23em;"><strong><em>See page <a href="#Page_34">34</a></em></strong></span></p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p> +<h2>THE</h2> +<h6>JOYOUS ADVENTURES</h6> +<h6>OF ARISTIDE PUJOL</h6> + +<p> </p> + +<h4>BY</h4> +<h2>WILLIAM J. LOCKE</h2> + +<p> </p> + +<h4><span class="smcap">Illustrations by</span></h4> +<h2>ALEC BALL</h2> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<p class="center"><strong>NEW YORK<br /> +JOHN LANE COMPANY<br /> +MCMXII</strong></p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<h2>CONTENTS</h2> + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="7" cellspacing="0" summary=""> + +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#I">I</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE FAIR PATRONNE</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#II">II</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE ARLÉSIENNE</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#III">III</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE KIND MR. SMITH</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#IV">IV</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE FOUNDLING</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#V">V</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE PIG’S HEAD</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#VI">VI</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF FLEURETTE</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#VII">VII</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE MIRACLE</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#VIII">VIII</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF THE FICKLE GODDESS</td> </tr> +<tr> <td align='right'><a href="#IX">IX</a></td> <td align='left'>THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN’S SUMMER</td> </tr> + +</table></div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p> + +<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2> + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="7" cellspacing="0" summary=""> + +<tr> <td align='left'>At the Beginning of the Fourth Kiss Out Came Her Father</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img003"><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>I Had Knocked Him Down on Purpose. He Was Crippled<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">for Life</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img14">14</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Anything Less Congruous as the Bride-Elect of the Debonair<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Aristide Pujol it Was Impossible to Imagine</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img24">22</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Had Straightway Poured His Grievances into a Feminine Ear</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img36">32</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>I Found Both Tyres Had Been Punctured in a Hundred Places</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img46">40</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>“Madame,” said Aristide, “You Are Adorable, and I Love You to<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Distraction”</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img58">50</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>“The Villain Was a Traveller in Buttons—Buttons!”</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img70">60</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>He Burst into Shrieks of Laughter</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img76">64</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>“And You!” shouted Bocardon, Falling on Aristide; “I Must Embrace<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">You Also”</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img82">68</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Standing on the Arrival Platform of Euston Station</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img94">78</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>“Ah! the Pictures,” cried Aristide, with a Wide Sweep of His Arms</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img106">88</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>“I’ll Take Five Hundred Pounds,” said He, “to Stay in”</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img116">96</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Between the Folds of a Blanket Peeped the Face of a Sleeping Child</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img132">110</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>He Demonstrated the Proper Application of the Cure</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img144">120</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>It is a Fearsome Thing for a Man to be Left Alone in the Dead<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">of Night with a Young Baby</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img150">124</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>One of the Little Girls in Pigtails Was Holding Him, While Miss<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Anne Administered the Feeding-Bottle</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img162">134</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>He Must Have Dealt Out Paralyzing Information</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img210">180</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Fleurette Danced with Aristide, as Light as an Autumn Leaf<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tossed by the Wind</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img220">188</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Aristide Practised His Many Queer Accomplishments</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img234">200</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>He Read It, and Blinked in Amazement</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img244">208</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>He Might as Well Have Pointed Out the Marvels of Kubla Khan’s<br /> + <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pleasure-Dome to a Couple of Guinea-Pigs</span></td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img254">216</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>“I’ve Caught You! At Last, After Twenty Years, I’ve Caught You”</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img274">234</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>There He Saw a Sight Which for a Moment Paralyzed Him</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img280">238</a></td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align='left'>Mr. Ducksmith Seized Him by the Lapels of His Coat</td> + <td align='right'><a href="#img286">242</a></td> </tr> + +</table></div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p> + +<h1>THE<br /> +JOYOUS ADVENTURES<br /> +OF<br /> +ARISTIDE PUJOL</h1> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> +<h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol</h2> + +<h2>I</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE FAIR PATRONNE</strong></p> + + +<p>In narrating these few episodes in the undulatory, +not to say switchback, career of my +friend Aristide Pujol, I can pretend to no +chronological sequence. Some occurred before he +(almost literally) crossed my path for the first +time, some afterwards. They have been related to +me haphazard at odd times, together with a hundred +other incidents, just as a chance tag of association +recalled them to his swift and picturesque +memory. He would, indeed, make a show of fixing +dates by reference to his temporary profession; but +so Protean seem to have been his changes of fortune +in their number and rapidity that I could never +keep count of them or their order. Nor does it +matter. The man’s life was as disconnected as a +pack of cards.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> +My first meeting with him happened in this wise.</p> + +<p>I had been motoring in a listless, solitary fashion +about Languedoc. A friend who had stolen a few +days from anxious business in order to accompany +me from Boulogne through Touraine and Guienne +had left me at Toulouse; another friend whom I +had arranged to pick up at Avignon on his way +from Monte Carlo was unexpectedly delayed. I +was therefore condemned to a period of solitude +somewhat irksome to a man of a gregarious temperament. +At first, for company’s sake, I sat in +front by my chauffeur, McKeogh. But McKeogh, +an atheistical Scotch mechanic with his soul in his +cylinders, being as communicative as his own differential, +I soon relapsed into the equal loneliness +and greater comfort of the back.</p> + +<p>In this fashion I left Montpellier one morning on +my leisurely eastward journey, deciding to break +off from the main road, striking due south, and visit +Aigues-Mortes on the way.</p> + +<p>Aigues-Mortes was once a flourishing Mediterranean +town. St. Louis and his Crusaders sailed +thence twice for Palestine; Charles V. and Francis +I. met there and filled the place with glittering +state. But now its glory has departed. The sea +has receded three or four miles, and left it high +and dry in the middle of bleak salt marshes, useless, +dead and desolate, swept by the howling mistral +and scorched by the blazing sun. The straight +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> +white ribbon of road which stretched for miles +through the plain, between dreary vineyards—some +under water, the black shoots of the vines appearing +like symmetrical wreckage above the surface—was +at last swallowed up by the grim central +gateway of the town, surmounted by its frowning +tower. On each side spread the brown machicolated +battlements that vainly defended the death-stricken +place. A soft northern atmosphere would +have invested it in a certain mystery of romance, +but in the clear southern air, the towers and walls +standing sharply defined against the blue, wind-swept +sky, it looked naked and pitiful, like a poor +ghost caught in the daylight.</p> + +<p>At some distance from the gate appeared the +usual notice as to speed-limit. McKeogh, most +scrupulous of drivers, obeyed. As there was a knot +of idlers underneath and beyond the gate he slowed +down to a crawl, sounding a patient and monotonous +horn. We advanced; the peasant folk cleared +the way sullenly and suspiciously. Then, deliberately, +an elderly man started to cross the road, +and on the sound of the horn stood stock still, with +resentful defiance on his weather-beaten face. McKeogh +jammed on the brakes. The car halted. +But the infinitesimal fraction of a second before it +came to a dead stop the wing over the near front +wheel touched the elderly person and down he went +on the ground. I leaped from the car, to be +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> +instantly surrounded by an infuriated crowd, which +seemed to gather from all the quarters of the broad, +decaying square. The elderly man, helped to his +feet by sympathetic hands, shook his knotted fists +in my face. He was a dour and ugly peasant, of +splendid physique, as hard and discoloured as the +walls of Aigues-Mortes; his cunning eyes were as +clear as a boy’s, his lined, clean-shaven face as +rigid as a gargoyle; and the back of his neck, above +the low collar of his jersey, showed itself seamed +into glazed irregular lozenges, like the hide of a +crocodile. He cursed me and my kind healthily in +very bad French and apostrophized his friends in +Provençal, who in Provençal and bad French made +responsive clamour. I had knocked him down on +purpose. He was crippled for life. Who was +I to go tearing through peaceful towns with my +execrated locomotive and massacring innocent people? +I tried to explain that the fault was his, and +that, after all, to judge by the strength of his +lungs, no great damage had been inflicted. But no. +They would not let it go like that. There were the +gendarmes—I looked across the square and saw +two gendarmes striding portentously towards the +scene—they would see justice done. The law was +there to protect poor folk. For a certainty I would +not get off easily.</p> + +<a name="img14" id="img14"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/img014.jpg" width="600" height="454" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">i had knocked him down on purpose. he was crippled for life</span> +</div> + +<p>I knew what would happen. The gendarmes +would submit McKeogh and myself to a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> +<em>procès-verbal</em>. They would impound the car. I should +have to go to the Mairie and make endless depositions. +I should have to wait, Heaven knows how +long, before I could appear before the <em>juge de paix</em>. +I should have to find a solicitor to represent me. +In the end I should be fined for furious driving—at +the rate, when the accident happened, of a mile +an hour—and probably have to pay a heavy compensation +to the wilful and uninjured victim of +McKeogh’s impeccable driving. And all the time, +while waiting for injustice to take its course, +I should be the guest of a hostile population. I +grew angry. The crowd grew angrier. The gendarmes +approached with an air of majesty and +fate. But just before they could be acquainted with +the brutal facts of the disaster a singularly bright-eyed +man, wearing a hard felt hat and a blue serge +suit, flashed like a meteor into the midst of the +throng, glanced with an amazing swiftness at me, +the car, the crowd, the gendarmes and the victim, +ran his hands up and down the person of the last +mentioned, and then, with a frenzied action of a +figure in a bad cinematograph rather than that of a +human being, subjected the inhabitants to an infuriated +philippic in Provençal, of which I could +not understand one word. The crowd, with here +and there a murmur of remonstrance, listened to +him in silence. When he had finished they hung +their heads, the gendarmes shrugged their majestic +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> +and fateful shoulders and lit cigarettes, and the +gargoyle-visaged ancient with the neck of crocodile +hide turned grumbling away. I have never witnessed +anything so magical as the effect produced +by this electric personage. Even McKeogh, who +during the previous clamour had sat stiff behind his +wheel, keeping expressionless eyes fixed on the cap +of the radiator, turned his head two degrees of a +circle and glanced at his surroundings.</p> + +<p>The instant peace was established our rescuer +darted up to me with the directness of a dragon-fly +and shook me warmly by the hand. As he had +done me a service, I responded with a grateful +smile; besides, his aspect was peculiarly prepossessing. +I guessed him to be about five-and-thirty. He +had a clear olive complexion, black moustache and +short silky vandyke beard, and the most fascinating, +the most humorous, the most mocking, the +most astonishingly bright eyes I have ever seen in +my life. I murmured a few expressions of thanks, +while he prolonged the handshake with the fervour +of a long-lost friend.</p> + +<p>“It’s all right, my dear sir. Don’t worry any +more,” he said in excellent English, but with a +French accent curiously tinged with Cockney. “The +old gentleman’s as sound as a bell—not a bruise on +his body.” He pushed me gently to the step of the +car. “Get in and let me guide you to the only +place where you can eat in this accursed town.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> +Before I could recover from my surprise, he was +by my side in the car shouting directions to +McKeogh.</p> + +<p>“Ah! These people!” he cried, shaking his hands +with outspread fingers in front of him. “They have +no manners, no decency, no self-respect. It’s a regular +trade. They go and get knocked down by +automobiles on purpose, so that they can claim indemnity. +They breed dogs especially and train +them to commit suicide under the wheels so that +they can get compensation. There’s one now—<em>ah, +sacrée bête!</em>” He leaned over the side of the car +and exchanged violent objurgation with the dog. +“But never mind. So long as I am here you can +run over anything you like with impunity.”</p> + +<p>“I’m very much obliged to you,” said I. “You’ve +saved me from a deal of foolish unpleasantness. +From the way you handled the old gentleman I +should guess you to be a doctor.”</p> + +<p>“That’s one of the few things I’ve never been,” +he replied. “No; I’m not a doctor. One of these +days I’ll tell you all about myself.” He spoke as +if our sudden acquaintance would ripen into life-long +friendship. “There’s the hotel—the Hôtel +Saint-Louis,” he pointed to the sign a little way up +the narrow, old-world, cobble-paved street we were +entering. “Leave it to me; I’ll see that they treat +you properly.”</p> + +<p>The car drew up at the doorway. My electric +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> +friend leaped out and met the emerging landlady.</p> + +<p>“<em>Bonjour, madame.</em> I’ve brought you one of my +very good friends, an English gentleman of the +most high importance. He will have <em>déjeuner—tout +ce qu’il y a de mieux</em>. None of your cabbage-soup +and eels and <em>andouilles</em>, but a good omelette, +some fresh fish, and a bit of very tender meat. Will +that suit you?” he asked, turning to me.</p> + +<p>“Excellently,” said I, smiling. “And since +you’ve ordered me so charming a <em>déjeuner</em>, perhaps +you’ll do me the honour of helping me to eat it?”</p> + +<p>“With the very greatest pleasure,” said he, without +a second’s hesitation.</p> + +<p>We entered the small, stuffy dining-room, where +a dingy waiter, with a dingier smile, showed us to +a small table by the window. At the long table in +the middle of the room sat the half-dozen frequenters +of the house, their napkins tucked under +their chins, eating in gloomy silence a dreary meal +of the kind my new friend had deprecated.</p> + +<p>“What shall we drink?” I asked, regarding with +some disfavour the thin red and white wines in the +decanters.</p> + +<p>“Anything,” said he, “but this <em>piquette du pays</em>. +It tastes like a mixture of sea-water and vinegar. +It produces the look of patient suffering that you +see on those gentlemen’s faces. You, who are not +used to it, had better not venture. It would excoriate +your throat. It would dislocate your +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> +pancreas. It would play the very devil with you. +Adolphe”—he beckoned the waiter—“there’s a little +white wine of the Côtes du Rhone——” He +glanced at me.</p> + +<p>“I’m in your hands,” said I.</p> + +<p>As far as eating and drinking went I could not +have been in better. Nor could anyone desire a +more entertaining chance companion of travel. +That he had thrust himself upon me in the most +brazen manner and taken complete possession of +me there could be no doubt. But it had all been +done in the most irresistibly charming manner in the +world. One entirely forgot the impudence of the +fellow. I have since discovered that he did not lay +himself out to be agreeable. The flow of talk and +anecdote, the bright laughter that lit up a little +joke, making it appear a very brilliant joke indeed, +were all spontaneous. He was a man, too, of some +cultivation. He knew France thoroughly, England +pretty well; he had a discriminating taste in architecture, +and waxed poetical over the beauties of +Nature.</p> + +<p>“It strikes me as odd,” said I at last, somewhat +ironically, “that so vital a person as yourself should +find scope for your energies in this dead-and-alive +place.”</p> + +<p>He threw up his hands. “I live here? I crumble +and decay in Aigues-Mortes? For whom do you +take me?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> +I replied that, not having the pleasure of knowing +his name and quality, I could only take him for an +enigma.</p> + +<p>He selected a card from his letter-case and +handed it to me across the table. It bore the +legend:—</p> + +<p class="center"> + <span class="smcap">Aristide Pujol</span>,<br /> + Agent.<br /> + 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris.</p> + +<p>“That address will always find me,” he said.</p> + +<p>Civility bade me give him my card, which he put +carefully in his letter-case.</p> + +<p>“I owe my success in life,” said he, “to the fact +that I have never lost an opportunity or a visiting-card.”</p> + +<p>“Where did you learn your perfect English?” +I asked.</p> + +<p>“First,” said he, “among English tourists at +Marseilles. Then in England. I was Professor of +French at an academy for young ladies.”</p> + +<p>“I hope you were a success?” said I.</p> + +<p>He regarded me drolly.</p> + +<p>“Yes—and no,” said he.</p> + +<p>The meal over, we left the hotel.</p> + +<p>“Now,” said he, “you would like to visit the +towers on the ramparts. I would dearly love to +accompany you, but I have business in the town. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> +I will take you, however, to the <em>gardien</em> and put +you in his charge.”</p> + +<p>He raced me to the gate by which I had entered. +The <em>gardien des remparts</em> issued from his lodge at +Aristide Pujol’s summons and listened respectfully +to his exhortation in Provençal. Then he went for +his keys.</p> + +<p>“I’ll not say good-bye,” Aristide Pujol declared, +amiably. “I’ll get through my business long before +you’ve done your sight-seeing, and you’ll find +me waiting for you near the hotel. <em>Au revoir, cher +ami.</em>”</p> + +<p>He smiled, lifted his hat, waved his hand in a +friendly way, and darted off across the square. The +old <em>gardien</em> came out with the keys and took me +off to the Tour de Constance, where Protestants +were imprisoned pell-mell after the revocation of +the Edict of Nantes; thence to the Tour des Bourguignons, +where I forget how many hundred Burgundians +were massacred and pickled in salt; and, +after these cheery exhibitions, invited me to walk +round the ramparts and inspect the remaining +eighteen towers of the enceinte. As the mistral, +however, had sprung up and was shuddering across +the high walls, I declined, and, having paid him his +fee, descended to the comparative shelter of the +earth.</p> + +<p>There I found Aristide Pujol awaiting me at the +corner of the narrow street in which the hotel was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> +situated. He was wearing—like most of the young +bloods of Provence in winter-time—a short, shaggy, +yet natty goat-skin coat, ornamented with enormous +bone buttons, and a little cane valise stood near by +on the kerb of the square.</p> + +<p>He was not alone. Walking arm in arm with +him was a stout, elderly woman of swarthy complexion +and forbidding aspect. She was attired in +a peasant’s or small shopkeeper’s rusty Sunday +black and an old-fashioned black bonnet prodigiously +adorned with black plumes and black roses. +Beneath this bonnet her hair was tightly drawn up +from her forehead; heavy eyebrows overhung a +pair of small, crafty eyes, and a tuft of hair grew +on the corner of a prognathous jaw. She might +have been about seven-and-forty.</p> + +<p>Aristide Pujol, unlinking himself from this unattractive +female, advanced and saluted me with +considerable deference.</p> + +<p>“Monseigneur——” said he.</p> + +<p>As I am neither a duke nor an archbishop, but +a humble member of the lower automobiling classes, +the high-flown title startled me.</p> + +<p>“Monseigneur, will you permit me,” said he, in +French, “to present to you Mme. Gougasse? Madame +is the <em>patronne</em> of the Café de l’Univers, at +Carcassonne, which doubtless you have frequented, +and she is going to do me the honour of marrying +me to-morrow.”</p> + +<a name="img24" id="img24"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img24.jpg" width="500" height="424" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">anything less congruous as the bride-elect of the +debonair aristide pujol it was impossible to imagine</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> +The unexpectedness of the announcement took +my breath away.</p> + +<p>“Good heavens!” said I, in a whisper.</p> + +<p>Anyone less congruous as the bride-elect of the +debonair Aristide Pujol it was impossible to imagine. +However, it was none of my business. I +raised my hat politely to the lady.</p> + +<p>“Madame, I offer you my sincere felicitations. +As an entertaining husband I am sure you will find +M. Aristide Pujol without a rival.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Je vous remercie, monseigneur</em>,” she replied, in +what was obviously her best company manner. +“And if ever you will deign to come again to the +Café de l’Univers at Carcassonne we will esteem +it a great honour.”</p> + +<p>“And so you’re going to get married to-morrow?” +I remarked, by way of saying something. +To congratulate Aristide Pujol on his choice lay +beyond my power of hypocrisy.</p> + +<p>“To-morrow,” said he, “my dear Amélie will +make me the happiest of men.”</p> + +<p>“We start for Carcassonne by the three-thirty +train,” said Mme. Gougasse, pulling a great silver +watch from some fold of her person.</p> + +<p>“Then there is time,” said I, pointing to a little +weather-beaten café in the square, “to drink a glass +to your happiness.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Bien volontiers</em>,” said the lady.</p> + +<p>“<em>Pardon, chère amie</em>,” Aristide interposed, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> +quickly. “Unless monseigneur and I start at once +for Montpellier, I shall not have time to transact +my little affairs before your train arrives +there.”</p> + +<p>Parenthetically, I must remark that all trains +going from Aigues-Mortes to Carcassonne must +stop at Montpellier.</p> + +<p>“That’s true,” she agreed, in a hesitating manner. +“But——”</p> + +<p>“But, idol of my heart, though I am overcome +with grief at the idea of leaving you for two little +hours, it is a question of four thousand francs. +Four thousand francs are not picked up every day +in the street. It’s a lot of money.”</p> + +<p>Mme. Gougasse’s little eyes glittered.</p> + +<p>“<em>Bien sûr.</em> And it’s quite settled?”</p> + +<p>“Absolutely.”</p> + +<p>“And it will be all for me?”</p> + +<p>“Half,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“You promised all to me for the redecoration +of the ceiling of the café.”</p> + +<p>“Three thousand will be sufficient, dear angel. +What? I know these contractors and decorators. +The more you pay them, the more abominable will +they make the ceiling. Leave it to me. I, Aristide, +will guarantee you a ceiling like that of the +Sistine Chapel for two thousand francs.”</p> + +<p>She smiled and bridled, so as to appear perfectly +well-bred in my presence. The act of smiling +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> +caused the tuft of hair on her jaw to twitch horribly. +A cold shiver ran down my back.</p> + +<p>“Don’t you think, monseigneur,” she asked, +archly, “that M. Pujol should give me the four +thousand francs as a wedding-present?”</p> + +<p>“Most certainly,” said I, in my heartiest voice, +entirely mystified by the conversation.</p> + +<p>“Well, I yield,” said Aristide. “Ah, women, +women! They hold up their little rosy finger, and +the bravest of men has to lie down with his chin +on his paws like a good old watch-dog. You agree, +then, monseigneur, to my giving the whole of the +four thousand francs to Amélie?”</p> + +<p>“More than that,” said I, convinced that the +swarthy lady of the prognathous jaw was bound to +have her own way in the end where money was +concerned, and yet for the life of me not seeing +how I had anything to do with the disposal of +Aristide Pujol’s property—“More than that,” said +I; “I command you to do it.”</p> + +<p>“<em>C’est bien gentil de votre part</em>,” said madame.</p> + +<p>“And now the café,” I suggested, with chattering +teeth. We had been standing all the time at +the corner of the square, while the mistral whistled +down the narrow street. The dust was driven +stingingly into our faces, and the women of the +place who passed us by held their black scarves +over their mouths.</p> + +<p>“Alas, monseigneur,” said Mme. Gougasse, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> +“Aristide is right. You must start now for Montpellier +in the automobile. I will go by the train +for Carcassonne at three-thirty. It is the only train +from Aigues-Mortes. Aristide transacts his business +and joins me in the train at Montpellier. You +have not much time to spare.”</p> + +<p>I was bewildered. I turned to Aristide Pujol, +who stood, hands on hips, regarding his prospective +bride and myself with humorous benevolence.</p> + +<p>“My good friend,” said I in English, “I’ve not +the remotest idea of what the two of you are talking +about; but I gather you have arranged that I +should motor you to Montpellier. Now, I’m not +going to Montpellier. I’ve just come from there, +as I told you at <em>déjeuner</em>. I’m going in the opposite +direction.”</p> + +<p>He took me familiarly by the arm, and, with a +“<em>Pardon, chère amie</em>,” to the lady, led me a few +paces aside.</p> + +<p>“I beseech you,” he whispered; “it’s a matter of +four thousand francs, a hundred and sixty pounds, +eight hundred dollars, a new ceiling for the Café +de l’Univers, the dream of a woman’s life, and the +happiest omen for my wedded felicity. The fair +goddess Hymen invites you with uplifted torch. +You can’t refuse.”</p> + +<p>He hypnotized me with his bright eyes, overpowered +my will by his winning personality. He +seemed to force me to desire his companionship. I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> +weakened. After all, I reflected, I was at a loose +end, and where I went did not matter to anybody. +Aristide Pujol had also done me a considerable +service, for which I felt grateful. I yielded with +good grace.</p> + +<p>He darted back to Mme. Gougasse, alive with +gaiety.</p> + +<p>“<em>Chère amie</em>, if you were to press monseigneur, +I’m sure he would come to Carcassonne and dance +at our wedding.”</p> + +<p>“Alas! That,” said I, hastily, “is out of the question. +But,” I added, amused by a humorous idea, +“why should two lovers separate even for a few +hours? Why should not madame accompany us to +Montpellier? There is room in my auto for three, +and it would give me the opportunity of making +madame’s better acquaintance.”</p> + +<p>“There, Amélie!” cried Aristide. “What do you +say?”</p> + +<p>“Truly, it is too much honour,” murmured Mme. +Gougasse, evidently tempted.</p> + +<p>“There’s your luggage, however,” said Aristide. +“You would bring that great trunk, for which there +is no place in the automobile of monseigneur.”</p> + +<p>“That’s true—my luggage.”</p> + +<p>“Send it on by train, <em>chère amie</em>.”</p> + +<p>“When will it arrive at Carcassonne?”</p> + +<p>“Not to-morrow,” said Pujol, “but perhaps next +week or the week after. Perhaps it may never come +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> +at all. One is never certain with these railway companies. +But what does that matter?”</p> + +<p>“What do you say?” cried the lady, sharply.</p> + +<p>“It may arrive or it may not arrive; but you +are rich enough, <em>chère amie</em>, not to think of a few +camisoles and bits of jewellery.”</p> + +<p>“And my lace and my silk dress that I have +brought to show your parents. <em>Merci!</em>” she retorted, +with a dangerous spark in her little eyes. +“You think one is made of money, eh? You will +soon find yourself mistaken, my friend. I would +give you to understand——”. She checked herself +suddenly. “Monseigneur”—she turned to me with +a resumption of the gracious manner of her bottle-decked +counter at the Café de l’Univers—“you are +too amiable. I appreciate your offer infinitely; but I +am not going to entrust my luggage to the kind +care of the railway company. <em>Merci, non.</em> They +are robbers and thieves. Even if it did arrive, +half the things would be stolen. Oh, I +know them.”</p> + +<p>She shook the head of an experienced and self-reliant +woman. No doubt, distrustful of banks as +of railway companies, she kept her money hidden +in her bedroom. I pitied my poor young friend; +he would need all his gaiety to enliven the domestic +side of the Café de l’Univers.</p> + +<p>The lady having declined my invitation, I expressed +my regrets; and Aristide, more emotional, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> +voiced his sense of heart-rent desolation, and in a +resigned tone informed me that it was time to start. +I left the lovers and went to the hotel, where I +paid the bill, summoned McKeogh, and lit a companionable +pipe.</p> + +<p>The car backed down the narrow street into the +square and took up its position. We entered. McKeogh +took charge of Aristide’s valise, tucked us +up in the rug, and settled himself in his seat. The +car started and we drove off, Aristide gallantly +brandishing his hat and Mme. Gougasse waving her +lily hand, which happened to be hidden in an ill-fitting +black glove.</p> + +<p>“To Montpellier, as fast as you can!” he shouted +at the top of his lungs to McKeogh. Then he +sighed as he threw himself luxuriously back. “Ah, +this is better than a train. Amélie doesn’t know +what a mistake she has made!”</p> + +<p>The elderly victim of my furious entry was +lounging, in spite of the mistral, by the grim machicolated +gateway. Instead of scowling at me he +raised his hat respectfully as we passed. I touched +my cap, but Aristide returned the salute with the +grave politeness of royalty.</p> + +<p>“This is a place,” said he, “which I would like +never to behold again.”</p> + +<p>In a few moments we were whirling along the +straight, white road between the interminable black +vineyards, and past the dilapidated homesteads of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> +the vine-folk and wayside cafés that are scattered +about this unjoyous corner of France.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said he, suddenly, “what do you think +of my <em>fiancée</em>?”</p> + +<p>Politeness and good taste forbade expression of +my real opinion. I murmured platitudes to the +effect that she seemed to be a most sensible woman, +with a head for business.</p> + +<p>“She’s not what we in French call <em>jolie, jolie</em>; +but what of that? What’s the good of marrying +a pretty face for other men to make love to? And, +as you English say, there’s none of your confounded +sentiment about her. But she has the +most flourishing café in Carcassonne; and, when +the ceiling is newly decorated, provided she doesn’t +insist on too much gold leaf and too many naked +babies on clouds—it’s astonishing how women love +naked babies on clouds—it will be the snuggest place +in the world. May I ask for one of your excellent +cigarettes?”</p> + +<p>I handed him the case from the pocket of the +car.</p> + +<p>“It was there that I made her acquaintance,” he +resumed, after having lit the cigarette from my +pipe. “We met, we talked, we fixed it up. She is +not the woman to go by four roads to a thing. She +did me the honour of going straight for me. Ah, +but what a wonderful woman! She rules that café +like a kingdom; a Semiramis, a Queen Elizabeth, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> +a Catherine de’ Medici. She sits enthroned behind +the counter all day long and takes the money and +counts the saucers and smiles on rich clients, and +if a waiter in a far corner gives a bit of sugar to a +dog she spots it, and the waiter has a deuce of a +time. That woman is worth her weight in thousand-franc +notes. She goes to bed every night at +one, and gets up in the morning at five. And +virtuous! Didn’t Solomon say that a virtuous +woman was more precious than rubies? That’s the +kind of wife the wise man chooses when he gives +up the giddy ways of youth. Ah, my dear sir, +over and over again these last two or three days +my dear old parents—I have been on a visit to them +in Aigues-Mortes—have commended my wisdom. +Amélie, who is devoted to me, left her café in Carcassonne +to make their acquaintance and receive +their blessing before our marriage, also to show +them the lace on her <em>dessous</em> and her new silk +dress. They are too old to take the long journey +to Carcassonne. ‘My son,’ they said, ‘you are +making a marriage after our own hearts. We are +proud of you. Now we can die perfectly content.’ +I was wrong, perhaps, in saying that Amélie has +no sentiment,” he continued, after a short pause. +“She adores me. It is evident. She will not allow +me out of her sight. Ah, my dear friend, you don’t +know what a happy man I am.”</p> + +<p>For a brilliant young man of five-and-thirty, who +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> +was about to marry a horrible Megæra ten or twelve +years his senior, he looked unhealthily happy. +There was no doubt that his handsome roguery had +caught the woman’s fancy. She was at the dangerous +age, when even the most ferro-concrete-natured +of women are apt to run riot. She was +comprehensible, and pardonable. But the man baffled +me. He was obviously marrying her for her +money; but how in the name of Diogenes and all +the cynics could he manage to look so confoundedly +joyful about it?</p> + +<p>The mistral blew bitterly. I snuggled beneath +the rug and hunched up my shoulders so as to get +my ears protected by my coat-collar. Aristide, sufficiently +protected by his goat’s hide, talked like a +shepherd on a May morning. Why he took for +granted my interest in his unromantic, not to say +sordid, courtship I knew not; but he gave me the +whole history of it from its modest beginnings to +its now penultimate stage. From what I could make +out—for the mistral whirled many of his words +away over unheeding Provence—he had entered the +Café de l’Univers one evening, a human derelict +battered by buffeting waves of Fortune, and, finding +a seat immediately beneath Mme. Gougasse’s +<em>comptoir</em>, had straightway poured his grievances +into a feminine ear and, figuratively speaking, +rested his weary heart upon a feminine bosom. +And his buffetings and grievances and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> +wearinesses? Whence came they? I asked the question +point-blank.</p> + +<a name="img36" id="img36"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 429px;"> +<img src="images/img036.jpg" width="429" height="500" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">had straightway poured his grievances into a feminine ear</span> +</div> + +<p>“Ah, my dear friend,” he answered, kissing his +gloved finger-tips, “she was adorable!”</p> + +<p>“Who?” I asked, taken aback. “Mme. Gougasse?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu</em>, no!” he replied. “Not Mme. Gougasse. +Amélie is solid, she is virtuous, she is +jealous, she is capacious; but I should not call her +adorable. No; the adorable one was twenty—delicious +and English; a peach-blossom, a zephyr, a +summer night’s dream, and the most provoking +little witch you ever saw in your life. Her father +and herself and six of her compatriots were touring +through France. They had circular tickets. +So had I. In fact, I was a miniature Thomas Cook +and Son to the party. I provided them with the +discomforts of travel and supplied erroneous information. +<em>Que voulez-vous?</em> If people ask you +for the history of a pair of Louis XV. corsets, in +a museum glass case, it’s much better to stimulate +their imagination by saying that they were worn +by Joan of Arc at the Battle of Agincourt than to +dull their minds by your ignorance. <em>Eh bien</em>, we go +through the châteaux of the Loire, through Poitiers +and Angoulême, and we come to Carcassonne. +You know Carcassonne? The great grim <em>cité</em>, with +its battlements and bastions and barbicans and fifty +towers on the hill looking over the rubbishy modern +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> +town? We were there. The rest of the party were +buying picture postcards of the <em>gardien</em> at the foot +of the Tour de l’Inquisition. The man who invented +picture postcards ought to have his statue +on the top of the Eiffel Tower. The millions of +headaches he has saved! People go to places now +not to exhaust themselves by seeing them, but to +buy picture postcards of them. The rest of the +party, as I said, were deep in picture postcards. +Mademoiselle and I promenaded outside. We often +promenaded outside when the others were buying +picture postcards,” he remarked, with an extra +twinkle in his bright eyes. “And the result? Was +it my fault? We leaned over the parapet. The +wind blew a confounded <em>mèche</em>—what do you call +it——?”</p> + +<p>“Strand?”</p> + +<p>“Yes—strand of her hair across her face. She +let it blow and laughed and did not move. Didn’t +I say she was a little witch? If there’s a Provençal +ever born who would not have kissed a girl under +such provocation I should like to have his mummy. +I kissed her. She kept on laughing. I kissed her +again. I kissed her four times. At the beginning +of the fourth kiss out came her father from the +postcard shop. He waited till the end of it and then +announced himself. He announced himself in such +ungentlemanly terms that I was forced to let the +whole party, including the adorable little witch, go +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> +on to Pau by themselves, while I betook my broken +heart to the Café de l’Univers.”</p> + +<p>“And there you found consolation?”</p> + +<p>“I told my sad tale. Amélie listened and called +the manager to take charge of the <em>comptoir</em>, and +poured herself out a glass of Frontignan. Amélie +always drinks Frontignan when her heart is touched. +I came the next day and the next. It was pouring +with rain day and night—and Carcassonne in rain +is like Hades with its furnaces put out by human +tears—and the Café de l’Univers like a little warm +corner of Paradise stuck in the midst of it.”</p> + +<p>“And so that’s how it happened?”</p> + +<p>“That’s how it happened. <em>Ma foi!</em> When a lady +asks a <em>galant homme</em> to marry her, what is he to +do? Besides, did I not say that the Café de l’Univers +was the most prosperous one in Carcassonne? I’m +afraid you English, my dear friend, have such sentimental +ideas about marriage. Now, we in France—— <em>Attendez, +attendez!</em>” He suddenly broke off +his story, lurched forward, and gripped the back +of the front seat.</p> + +<p>“To the right, man, to the right!” he cried excitedly +to McKeogh.</p> + +<p>We had reached the point where the straight road +from Aigues-Mortes branches into a fork, one road +going to Montpellier, the other to Nîmes. Montpellier +being to the west, McKeogh had naturally +taken the left fork.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> +“To the right!” shouted Aristide.</p> + +<p>McKeogh pulled up and turned his head with a +look of protesting inquiry. I intervened with a +laugh.</p> + +<p>“You’re wrong in your geography, M. Pujol. +Besides, there is the signpost staring you in the +face. This is the way to Montpellier.”</p> + +<p>“But, my dear, heaven-sent friend, I no more +want to go to Montpellier than you do!” he cried. +“Montpellier is the last place on earth I desire to +visit. You want to go to Nîmes, and so do I. To +the right, chauffeur.”</p> + +<p>“What shall I do, sir?” asked McKeogh.</p> + +<p>I was utterly bewildered. I turned to the goat-skin-clad, +pointed-bearded, bright-eyed Aristide, +who, sitting bolt upright in the car, with his hands +stretched out, looked like a parody of the god Pan +in a hard felt hat.</p> + +<p>“You don’t want to go to Montpellier?” I asked, +stupidly.</p> + +<p>“No—ten thousand times no; not for a king’s +ransom.”</p> + +<p>“But your four thousand francs—your meeting +Mme. Gougasse’s train—your getting on to Carcassonne?”</p> + +<p>“If I could put twenty million continents between +myself and Carcassonne I’d do it,” he explained, +with frantic gestures. “Don’t you understand? +The good Lord who is always on my side +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> +sent you especially to deliver me out of the hands +of that unspeakable Xantippe. There are no four +thousand francs. I’m not going to meet her train +at Montpellier, and if she marries anyone to-morrow +at Carcassonne it will not be Aristide Pujol.”</p> + +<p>I shrugged my shoulders.</p> + +<p>“We’ll go to Nîmes.”</p> + +<p>“Very good, sir,” said McKeogh.</p> + +<p>“And now,” said I, as soon as we had started +on the right-hand road, “will you have the kindness +to explain?”</p> + +<p>“There’s nothing to explain,” he cried, gleefully. +“Here am I delivered. I am free. I can breathe +God’s good air again. I’m not going to marry +Yum-Yum, Yum-Yum. I feel ten years younger. +Oh, I’ve had a narrow escape. But that’s the way +with me. I always fall on my feet. Didn’t I tell +you I’ve never lost an opportunity? The moment I +saw an Englishman in difficulties, I realized my opportunity +of being delivered out of the House of +Bondage. I took it, and here I am! For two days +I had been racking my brains for a means of getting +out of Aigues-Mortes, when suddenly you—a +<em>Deus ex machina</em>—a veritable god out of the machine—come +to my aid. Don’t say there isn’t a +Providence watching over me.”</p> + +<p>I suggested that his mode of escape seemed somewhat +elaborate and fantastic. Why couldn’t he +have slipped quietly round to the railway station +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> +and taken a ticket to any haven of refuge he might +have fancied?</p> + +<p>“For the simple reason,” said he, with a gay +laugh, “that I haven’t a single penny piece in the +world.”</p> + +<p>He looked so prosperous and untroubled that I +stared incredulously.</p> + +<p>“Not one tiny bronze sou,” said he.</p> + +<p>“You seem to take it pretty philosophically,” +said I.</p> + +<p>“<em>Les gueux, les gueux, sont des gens heureux</em>,” +he quoted.</p> + +<p>“You’re the first person who has made me believe +in the happiness of beggars.”</p> + +<p>“In time I shall make you believe in lots of +things,” he retorted. “No. I hadn’t one sou to +buy a ticket, and Amélie never left me. I spent my +last franc on the journey from Carcassonne to +Aigues-Mortes. Amélie insisted on accompanying +me. She was taking no chances. Her eyes never +left me from the time we started. When I ran to +your assistance she was watching me from a house +on the other side of the <em>place</em>. She came to the +hotel while we were lunching. I thought I would +slip away unnoticed and join you after you had +made the <em>tour des remparts</em>. But no. I must present +her to my English friend. And then—<em>voyons</em>—didn’t +I tell you I never lost a visiting-card? +Look at this?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> +He dived into his pocket, produced the letter-case, +and extracted a card.</p> + +<p>“<em>Voilà.</em>”</p> + +<p>I read: “The Duke of Wiltshire.”</p> + +<p>“But, good heavens, man,” I cried, “that’s not +the card I gave you.”</p> + +<p>“I know it isn’t,” said he; “but it’s the one I +showed to Amélie.”</p> + +<p>“How on earth,” I asked, “did you come by the +Duke of Wiltshire’s visiting-card?”</p> + +<p>He looked at me roguishly.</p> + +<p>“I am—what do you call it?—a—a ‘snapper up of +unconsidered trifles.’ You see I know my Shakespeare. +I read ‘The Winter’s Tale’ with some +French pupils to whom I was teaching English. +I love Autolycus. <em>C’est un peu moi, hein?</em> Anyhow, +I showed the Duke’s card to Amélie.”</p> + +<p>I began to understand. “That was why you +called me ‘monseigneur’?”</p> + +<p>“Naturally. And I told her that you were my +English patron, and would give me four thousand +francs as a wedding present if I accompanied you +to your agent’s at Montpellier, where you could +draw the money. Ah! But she was suspicious! +Yesterday I borrowed a bicycle. A friend left it in +the courtyard. I thought, ‘I will creep out at dead +of night, when everyone’s asleep, and once on my +<em>petite bicyclette, bonsoir la compagnie</em>.’ But, +would you believe it? When I had dressed and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> +crept down, and tried to mount the bicycle, I found +both tyres had been punctured in a hundred places +with the point of a pair of scissors. What do +you think of that, eh? Ah, <em>là, là!</em> it has been a +narrow escape. When you invited her to accompany +us to Montpellier my heart was in my +mouth.”</p> + +<p>“It would have served you right,” I said, “if she +had accepted.”</p> + +<p>He laughed as though, instead of not having a +penny, he had not a care in the world. Accustomed +to the geometrical conduct of my well-fed fellow-Britons, +who map out their lives by rule and line, +I had no measure whereby to gauge this amazing +and inconsequential person. In one way he had +acted abominably. To leave an affianced bride in +the lurch in this heartless manner was a most ungentlemanly +proceeding. On the other hand, an +unscrupulous adventurer would have married the +woman for her money and chanced the consequences. +In the tussle between Perseus and the +Gorgon the odds are all in favour of Perseus. Mercury +and Minerva, the most sharp-witted of the +gods, are helping him all the time—to say nothing +of the fact that Perseus starts out by being a notoriously +handsome fellow. So a handsome rogue +can generally wheedle an elderly, ugly wife into +opening her money-bags, and, if successful, leads +the enviable life of a fighting-cock. It was very +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> +much to his credit that this kind of life was not to +the liking of Aristide Pujol.</p> + +<a name="img46" id="img46"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 303px;"> +<img src="images/img046.jpg" width="303" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“i found both tyres had been punctured in a hundred places”</span> +</div> + +<p>Indeed, speaking from affectionate knowledge of +the man, I can declare that the position in which he, +like many a better man, had placed himself was intolerable. +Other men of equal sensitiveness would +have extricated themselves in a more commonplace +fashion; but the dramatic appealed to my rascal, +and he has often plumed himself on his calculated +<em>coup de théâtre</em> at the fork of the roads. He was +delighted with it. Even now I sometimes think that +Aristide Pujol will never grow up.</p> + +<p>“There’s one thing I don’t understand,” said I, +“and that is your astonishing influence over the +populace at Aigues-Mortes. You came upon them +like a firework—a devil-among-the-tailors—and +everybody, gendarmes and victim included, became +as tame as sheep. How was it?”</p> + +<p>He laughed. “I said you were my very old and +dear friend and patron, a great English duke.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t quite see how that explanation satisfied +the pig-headed old gentleman whom I knocked +down.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, that,” said Aristide Pujol, with a look of +indescribable drollery—“that was my old father.”</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="II" id="II"></a>II</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE ARLÉSIENNE</strong></p> + + +<p>Aristide Pujol bade me a sunny farewell +at the door of the Hôtel du Luxembourg at +Nîmes, and, valise in hand, darted off, in his +impetuous fashion, across the Place de l’Esplanade. +I felt something like a pang at the sight of his retreating +figure, as, on his own confession, he had +not a penny in the world. I wondered what he +would do for food and lodging, to say nothing of +tobacco, <em>apéritifs</em>, and other such necessaries of life. +The idea of so gay a creature starving was abhorrent. +Yet an invitation to stay as my guest at the +hotel until he saw an opportunity of improving his +financial situation he had courteously declined.</p> + +<p>Early next morning I found him awaiting me in +the lounge and smoking an excellent cigar. He +explained that so dear a friend as myself ought to +be the first to hear the glad tidings. Last evening, +by the grace of Heaven, he had run across a bare +acquaintance, a manufacturer of nougat at Montélimar; +had spent several hours in his company, with +the result that he had convinced him of two things: +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> +first, that the dry, crumbling, shortbread-like nougat +of Montélimar was unknown in England, where +the population subsisted on a sickly, glutinous mess +whereto the medical faculty had ascribed the prevalent +dyspepsia of the population; and, secondly, that +the one Heaven-certified apostle who could spread +the glorious gospel of Montélimar nougat over the +length and breadth of Great Britain and Ireland +was himself, Aristide Pujol. A handsome salary +had been arranged, of which he had already drawn +something on account—<em>hinc ille Colorado</em>—and he +was to accompany his principal the next day to +Montélimar, <em>en route</em> for the conquest of Britain. +In the meantime he was as free as the winds, and +would devote the day to showing me the wonders +of the town.</p> + +<p>I congratulated him on his almost fantastic good +fortune and gladly accepted his offer.</p> + +<p>“There is one thing I should like to ask you,” +said I, “and it is this. Yesterday afternoon you +refused my cordially-offered hospitality, and went +away without a sou to bless yourself with. What +did you do? I ask out of curiosity. How does a +man set about trying to subsist on nothing at all?”</p> + +<p>“It’s very simple,” he replied. “Haven’t I told +you, and haven’t you seen for yourself, that I never +lose an opportunity? More than that. It has been +my rule in life either to make friends with the +Mammon of Unrighteousness—he’s a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> +muddle-headed ass is Mammon, and you can steer clear of +his unrighteousness if you’re sharp enough—or else +to cast my bread upon the waters in the certainty +of finding it again after many days. In the case +in question I took the latter course. I cast my +bread a year or two ago upon the waters of the +Roman baths, which I will have the pleasure of +showing you this morning, and I found it again last +night at the Hôtel de la Curatterie.”</p> + +<p>In the course of the day he related to me the +following artless history.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>Aristide Pujol arrived at Nîmes one blazing day +in July. He had money in his pocket and laughter +in his soul. He had also deposited his valise at +the Hôtel du Luxembourg, which, as all the world +knows, is the most luxurious hotel in the town. +Joyousness of heart impelled him to a course of +action which the good Nîmois regard as maniacal +in the sweltering July heat—he walked about the +baking streets for his own good pleasure.</p> + +<p>Aristide Pujol was floating a company, a process +which afforded him as much delirious joy as the +floating, for the first time, of a toy yacht affords a +child. It was a company to build an hotel in Perpignan, +where the recent demolition of the fortifications +erected by the Emperor Charles V. had set +free a vast expanse of valuable building ground on +the other side of the little river on which the old +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> +town is situated. The best hotel in Perpignan +being one to get away from as soon as possible, +owing to restriction of site, Aristide conceived the +idea of building a spacious and palatial hostelry +in the new part of the town, which should allure +all the motorists and tourists of the globe to that +Pyrenean Paradise. By sheer audacity he had contrived +to interest an eminent Paris architect in his +project. Now the man who listened to Aristide +Pujol was lost. With the glittering eye of the +Ancient Mariner he combined the winning charm +of a woman. For salvation, you either had to refuse +to see him, as all the architects to the end of +the R’s in the alphabetical list had done, or put +wax, Ulysses-like, in your ears, a precaution neglected +by the eminent M. Say. M. Say went to +Perpignan and returned in a state of subdued enthusiasm.</p> + +<p>A limited company was formed, of which Aristide +Pujol, man of vast experience in affairs, was +managing director. But money came in slowly. A +financier was needed. Aristide looked through his +collection of visiting-cards, and therein discovered +that of a deaf ironmaster at St. Étienne whose life +he had once saved at a railway station by dragging +him, as he was crossing the line, out of the way of +an express train that came thundering through. +Aristide, man of impulse, went straight to St. +Étienne, to work upon the ironmaster’s sense of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> +gratitude. Meanwhile, M. Say, man of more sober +outlook, bethought him of a client, an American +millionaire, passing through Paris, who had speculated +considerably in hotels. The millionaire, having +confidence in the eminent M. Say, thought well +of the scheme. He was just off to Japan, but would +drop down to the Pyrenees the next day and look +at the Perpignan site before boarding his steamer +at Marseilles. If his inquiries satisfied him, and he +could arrange matters with the managing director, +he would not mind putting a million dollars or so +into the concern. You must kindly remember that +I do not vouch for the literal accuracy of everything +told me by Aristide Pujol.</p> + +<p>The question of the all-important meeting between +the millionaire and the managing director +then arose. As Aristide was at St. Étienne it was +arranged that they should meet at a halfway stage +on the latter’s journey from Perpignan to Marseilles. +The Hôtel du Luxembourg at Nîmes was +the place, and two o’clock on Thursday the time +appointed.</p> + +<p>Meantime Aristide had found that the deaf ironmaster +had died months ago. This was a disappointment, +but fortune compensated him. This +part of his adventure is somewhat vague, but I +gathered that he was lured by a newly made acquaintance +into a gambling den, where he won the +prodigious sum of two thousand francs. With this +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> +wealth jingling and crinkling in his pockets he fled +the town and arrived at Nîmes on Wednesday +morning, a day before his appointment.</p> + +<p>That was why he walked joyously about the +blazing streets. The tide had turned at last. Of +the success of his interview with the millionaire he +had not the slightest doubt. He walked about +building gorgeous castles in Perpignan—which, by +the way, is not very far from Spain. Besides, as +you shall hear later, he had an account to settle +with the town of Perpignan. At last he reached +the Jardin de la Fontaine, the great, stately garden +laid out in complexity of terrace and bridge +and balustraded parapet over the waters of the +old Roman baths by the master hand to which +Louis XIV. had entrusted the Garden of Versailles.</p> + +<p>Aristide threw himself on a bench and fanned +himself with his straw hat.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em> it’s hot!” he remarked to another +occupant of the seat.</p> + +<p>This was a woman, and, as he saw when she +turned her face towards him, an exceedingly handsome +woman. Her white lawn and black silk headdress, +coming to a tiny crown just covering the +parting of her full, wavy hair, proclaimed her of the +neighboring town of Arles. She had all the +Arlésienne’s Roman beauty—the finely chiselled +features, the calm, straight brows, the ripe lips, the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> +soft oval contour, the clear olive complexion. She +had also lustrous brown eyes; but these were full of +tears. She only turned them on him for a moment; +then she resumed her apparently interrupted +occupation of sobbing. Aristide was a soft-hearted +man. He drew nearer.</p> + +<p>“Why, you’re crying, madame!” said he.</p> + +<p>“Evidently,” murmured the lady.</p> + +<p>“To cry scalding tears in this weather! It’s too +hot! Now, if you could only cry iced water there +would be something refreshing in it.”</p> + +<p>“You jest, monsieur,” said the lady, drying her +eyes.</p> + +<p>“By no means,” said he. “The sight of so beautiful +a woman in distress is painful.”</p> + +<p>“Ah!” she sighed. “I am very unhappy.”</p> + +<p>Aristide drew nearer still.</p> + +<p>“Who,” said he, “is the wretch that has dared to +make you so?”</p> + +<p>“My husband,” replied the lady, swallowing a +sob.</p> + +<p>“The scoundrel!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>The lady shrugged her shoulders and looked +down at her wedding-ring, which gleamed on a +slim, brown, perfectly kept hand. Aristide prided +himself on being a connoisseur in hands.</p> + +<p>“There never was a husband yet,” he added, +“who appreciated a beautiful wife. Husbands only +deserve harridans.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> +“That’s true,” said the Arlésienne, “for when the +wife is good-looking they are jealous.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, that is the trouble, is it?” said Aristide. +“Tell me all about it.”</p> + +<p>The beautiful Arlésienne again contemplated her +slender fingers.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know you, monsieur.”</p> + +<p>“But you soon will,” said Aristide, in his pleasant +voice and with a laughing, challenging glance in his +bright eyes. She met it swiftly and sidelong.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” she said, “I have been married to +my husband for four years, and have always been +faithful to him.”</p> + +<p>“That’s praiseworthy,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“And I love him very much.”</p> + +<p>“That’s unfortunate!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Unfortunate?”</p> + +<p>“Evidently!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>Their eyes met. They burst out laughing. The +lady quickly recovered and the tears sprang again.</p> + +<p>“One can’t jest with a heavy heart; and mine is +very heavy.” She broke down through self-pity. +“Oh, I am ashamed!” she cried.</p> + +<p>She turned away from him, burying her face in +her hands. Her dress, cut low, showed the nape +of her neck as it rose gracefully from her shoulders. +Two little curls had rebelled against being drawn +up with the rest of her hair. The back of a dainty +ear, set close to the head, was provoking in its +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> +pink loveliness. Her attitude, that of a youthful +Niobe, all tears, but at the same time all curves and +delicious contours, would have played the deuce +with an anchorite.</p> + +<p>Aristide, I would have you remember, was a child +of the South. A child of the North, regarding a +bewitching woman, thinks how nice it would be to +make love to her, and wastes his time in wondering +how he can do it. A child of the South neither +thinks nor wonders; he makes love straight away.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” said Aristide, “you are adorable, and +I love you to distraction.”</p> + +<p>She started up. “Monsieur, you forget yourself!”</p> + +<p>“If I remember anything else in the wide world +but you, it would be a poor compliment. I forget +everything. You turn my head, you ravish my +heart, and you put joy into my soul.”</p> + +<p>He meant it—intensely—for the moment.</p> + +<p>“I ought not to listen to you,” said the lady, +“especially when I am so unhappy.”</p> + +<p>“All the more reason to seek consolation,” replied +Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” she said, after a short pause, “you +look good and loyal. I will tell you what is the +matter. My husband accuses me wrongfully, although +I know that appearances are against me. +He only allows me in the house on sufferance, and +is taking measures to procure a divorce.”</p> + +<a name="img58" id="img58"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 413px;"> +<img src="images/img058.jpg" width="413" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“madame,” said aristide, “you are adorable, and i love you +to distraction”</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> +“<em>A la bonne heure!</em>” cried Aristide, excitedly casting +away his straw hat, which an unintentional +twist of the wrist caused to skim horizontally and +nearly decapitate a small and perspiring soldier +who happened to pass by. “<em>A la bonne heure!</em> +Let him divorce you. You are then free. You +can be mine without any further question.”</p> + +<p>“But I love my husband,” she smiled, sadly.</p> + +<p>“Bah!” said he, with the scepticism of the lover +and the Provençal. “And, by the way, who is your +husband?”</p> + +<p>“He is M. Émile Bocardon, proprietor of the +Hôtel de la Curatterie.”</p> + +<p>“And you?”</p> + +<p>“I am Mme. Bocardon,” she replied, with the +faintest touch of roguery.</p> + +<p>“But your Christian name? How is it possible +for me to think of you as Mme. Bocardon?”</p> + +<p>They argued the question. Eventually she confessed +to the name of Zette.</p> + +<p>Her confidence not stopping there, she told him +how she came by the name; how she was brought +up by her Aunt Léonie at Raphèle, some five miles +from Arles, and many other unexciting particulars +of her early years. Her baptismal name was +Louise. Her mother, who died when she was +young, called her Louisette. Aunt Léonie, a very +busy woman, with no time for superfluous syllables, +called her Zette.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> +“Zette!” He cast up his eyes as if she had been +canonized and he was invoking her in rapt worship. +“Zette, I adore you!”</p> + +<p>Zette was extremely sorry. She, on her side, +adored the cruel M. Bocardon. Incidentally she +learned Aristide’s name and quality. He was an +<em>agent d’affaires</em>, extremely rich—had he not two +thousand francs and an American millionaire in +his pocket?</p> + +<p>“M. Pujol,” she said, “the earth holds but one +thing that I desire, the love and trust of my husband.”</p> + +<p>“The good Bocardon is becoming tiresome,” said +Aristide.</p> + +<p>Zette’s lips parted, as she pointed to a black speck +at the iron entrance gates.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em> there he is!”</p> + +<p>“He has become tiresome,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>She rose, displaying to its full advantage her +supple and stately figure. She had a queenly poise +of the head. Aristide contemplated her with the +frankest admiration.</p> + +<p>“One would say Juno was walking the earth +again.”</p> + +<p>Although Zette had never heard of Juno, and +was as miserable and heavy hearted a woman as +dwelt in Nîmes, a flush of pleasure rose to her +cheeks. She too was a child of the South, and +female children of the South love to be admired, no +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> +matter how frankly. I have heard of Daughters of +the Snows not quite averse to it. She sighed.</p> + +<p>“I must go now, monsieur. He must not find +me here with you. I am suffering enough already +from his reproaches. Ah! it is unjust—unjust!” +she cried, clenching her hands, while the tears again +started into her eyes, and the corners of her pretty +lips twitched with pain. “Indeed,” she added, “I +know it has been wrong of me to talk to you like +this. But <em>que voulez-vous?</em> It was not my fault. +Adieu, monsieur.”</p> + +<p>At the sight of her standing before him in her +woeful beauty, Aristide’s pulses throbbed.</p> + +<p>“It is not adieu—it is <em>au revoir</em>, Mme. Zette,” he +cried.</p> + +<p>She protested tearfully. It was farewell. Aristide +darted to his rejected hat and clapped it on +the back of his head. He joined her and swore +that he would see her again. It was not Aristide +Pujol who would allow her to be rent in pieces by +the jaws of that crocodile, M. Bocardon. Faith, +he would defend her to the last drop of his blood. +He would do all manner of gasconading things.</p> + +<p>“But what can you do, my poor M. Pujol?” she +asked.</p> + +<p>“You will see,” he replied.</p> + +<p>They parted. He watched her until she became +a speck and, having joined the other speck, her +husband, passed out of sight. Then he set out +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> +through the burning gardens towards the Hôtel +du Luxembourg, at the other end of the town.</p> + +<p>Aristide had fallen in love. He had fallen in +love with Provençal fury. He had done the same +thing a hundred times before; but this, he told himself, +was the <em>coup de foudre</em>—the thunderbolt. +The beautiful Arlésienne filled his brain and his +senses. Nothing else in the wide world mattered. +Nothing else in the wide world occupied his mind. +He sped through the hot streets like a meteor in +human form. A stout man, sipping syrup and +water in the cool beneath the awning of the Café +de la Bourse, rose, looked wonderingly after him, +and resumed his seat, wiping a perspiring brow.</p> + +<p>A short while afterwards Aristide, valise in hand, +presented himself at the bureau of the Hôtel de la +Curatterie. It was a shabby little hotel, with a +shabby little oval sign outside, and was situated in +the narrow street of the same name. Within, it was +clean and well kept. On the right of the little dark +entrance-hall was the <em>salle à manger</em>, on the left the +bureau and an unenticing hole labelled <em>salon de +correspondance</em>. A very narrow passage led to the +kitchen, and the rest of the hall was blocked by the +staircase. An enormous man with a simple, woe-begone +fat face and a head of hair like a circular +machine-brush was sitting by the bureau window +in his shirt-sleeves. Aristide addressed him.</p> + +<p>“M. Bocardon?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> +“At your service, monsieur.”</p> + +<p>“Can I have a bedroom?”</p> + +<p>“Certainly.” He waved a hand towards a set of +black sample boxes studded with brass nails and +bound with straps that lay in the hall. “The omnibus +has brought your boxes. You are M. Lambert?”</p> + +<p>“M. Bocardon,” said Aristide, in a lordly way, “I +am M. Aristide Pujol, and not a commercial +traveller. I have come to see the beauties of Nîmes, +and have chosen this hotel because I have the +honour to be a distant relation of your wife, Mme. +Zette Bocardon, whom I have not seen for many +years. How is she?”</p> + +<p>“Her health is very good,” replied M. Bocardon, +shortly. He rang a bell.</p> + +<p>A dilapidated man in a green baize apron +emerged from the dining-room and took Aristide’s +valise.</p> + +<p>“No. 24,” said M. Bocardon. Then, swinging +his massive form halfway through the narrow +bureau door, he called down the passage, “Euphémie!”</p> + +<p>A woman’s voice responded, and in a moment the +woman herself appeared, a pallid, haggard, though +more youthful, replica of Zette, with the dark +rings of sleeplessness or illness beneath her eyes +which looked furtively at the world.</p> + +<p>“Tell your sister,” said M. Bocardon, “that a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> +relation of yours has come to stay in the +hotel.”</p> + +<p>He swung himself back into the bureau and took +no further notice of the guest.</p> + +<p>“A relation?” echoed Euphémie, staring at the +smiling, lustrous-eyed Aristide, whose busy brain +was wondering how he could mystify this unwelcome +and unexpected sister.</p> + +<p>“Why, yes. Aristide, cousin to your good Aunt +Léonie at Raphèle. Ah—but you are too young +to remember me.”</p> + +<p>“I will tell Zette,” she said, disappearing down +the narrow passage.</p> + +<p>Aristide went to the doorway, and stood there +looking out into the not too savoury street. On +the opposite side, which was in the shade, the +tenants of the modest little shops sat by their doors +or on chairs on the pavement. There was considerable +whispering among them and various +glances were cast at him. Presently footsteps behind +caused him to turn. There was Zette. She +had evidently been weeping since they had parted, +for her eyelids were red. She started on beholding +him.</p> + +<p>“You?”</p> + +<p>He laughed and shook her hesitating hands.</p> + +<p>“It is I, Aristide. But you have grown! <em>Pécaïre!</em> +How you have grown!” He swung her hands apart +and laughed merrily in her bewildered eyes. “To +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> +think that the little Zette in pigtails and short check +skirt should have grown into this beautiful woman! +I compliment you on your wife, M. Bocardon.”</p> + +<p>M. Bocardon did not reply, but Aristide’s swift +glance noticed a spasm of pain shoot across his +broad face.</p> + +<p>“And the good Aunt Léonie? Is she well? And +does she still make her <em>matelotes</em> of eels? Ah, +they were good, those <em>matelotes</em>.”</p> + +<p>“Aunt Léonie died two years ago,” said Zette.</p> + +<p>“The poor woman! And I who never knew. +Tell me about her.”</p> + +<p>The <em>salle à manger</em> door stood open. He drew +her thither by his curious fascination. They entered, +and he shut the door behind them.</p> + +<p>“<em>Voilà!</em>” said he. “Didn’t I tell you I should +see you again?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Vous avez un fameux toupet, vous!</em>” said Zette, +half angrily.</p> + +<p>He laughed, having been accused of confounded +impudence many times before in the course of his +adventurous life.</p> + +<p>“If I told my husband he would kill you.”</p> + +<p>“Precisely. So you’re not going to tell him. I +adore you. I have come to protect you. <em>Foi de +Provençal.</em>”</p> + +<p>“The only way to protect me is to prove my innocence.”</p> + +<p>“And then?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> +She drew herself up and looked him straight between +the eyes.</p> + +<p>“I’ll recognize that you have a loyal heart, and +will be your very good friend.”</p> + +<p>“Mme. Zette,” cried Aristide, “I will devote my +life to your service. Tell me the particulars of the +affair.”</p> + +<p>“Ask M. Bocardon.” She left him, and sailed out +of the room and past the bureau with her proud +head in the air.</p> + +<p>If Aristide Pujol had the rapturous idea of proving +the innocence of Mme. Zette, triumphing over +the fat pig of a husband, and eventually, in a fantastic +fashion, carrying off the insulted and spotless +lady to some bower of delight (the castle in Perpignan—why +not?), you must blame, not him, but +Provence, whose sons, if not devout, are frankly +pagan. Sometimes they are both.</p> + +<p>M. Bocardon sat in his bureau, pretending to do +accounts and tracing columns of figures with a +huge, trembling forefinger. He looked the picture +of woe. Aristide decided to bide his opportunity. +He went out into the streets again, now with the +object of killing time. The afternoon had advanced, +and trees and buildings cast cool shadows +in which one could walk with comfort; and Nîmes, +clear, bright city of wide avenues and broad open +spaces, instinct too with the grandeur that was +Rome’s, is an idler’s Paradise. Aristide knew it +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> +well; but he never tired of it. He wandered round +the Maison Carrée, his responsive nature delighting +in the splendour of the Temple, with its fluted Corinthian +columns, its noble entablature, its massive +pediment, its perfect proportions; reluctantly turned +down the Boulevard Victor Hugo, past the Lycée +and the Bourse, made the circuit of the mighty, +double-arched oval of the Arena, and then retraced +his steps. As he expected, M. Bocardon had left +the bureau. It was the hour of absinthe. The +porter named M. Bocardon’s habitual café. There, +in a morose corner of the terrace, Aristide found the +huge man gloomily contemplating an absurdly small +glass of the bitters known as Dubonnet. Aristide +raised his hat, asked permission to join him, and +sat down.</p> + +<p>“M. Bocardon,” said he, carefully mixing the +absinthe which he had ordered, “I learn from my +fair cousin that there is between you a regrettable +misunderstanding, for which I am sincerely sorry.”</p> + +<p>“She calls it a misunderstanding?” He laughed +mirthlessly. “Women have their own vocabulary. +Listen, my good sir. There is infamy between us. +When a wife betrays a man like me—kind, indulgent, +trustful, who has worshipped the ground she +treads on—it is not a question of misunderstanding. +It is infamy. If she had anywhere to lay her +head, I would turn her out of doors to-night. But +she has not. You, who are her relative, know I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> +married her without a dowry. You alone of her +family survive.”</p> + +<p>It was on the tip of Aristide’s impulsive tongue +to say that he would be only too willing to shelter +her, but prudently he refrained.</p> + +<p>“She has broken my heart,” continued Bocardon.</p> + +<p>Aristide asked for details of the unhappy affair. +The large man hesitated for a moment and glanced +suspiciously at his companion; but, fascinated by +the clear, luminous eyes, he launched with Southern +violence into a whirling story. The villain was a +traveller in buttons—<em>buttons!</em> To be wronged by +a traveller in diamonds might have its compensations—but +buttons! Linen buttons, bone buttons, +brass buttons, <em>trouser buttons!</em> To be a traveller +in the inanity of buttonholes was the only lower +degradation. His name was Bondon—he uttered +it scathingly, as if to decline from a Bocardon to a +Bondon was unthinkable. This Bondon was a regular +client of the hotel, and such a client!—who +never ordered a bottle of <em>vin cacheté</em> or coffee or +cognac. A contemptible creature. For a long time +he had his suspicions. Now he was certain. He +tossed off his glass of Dubonnet, ordered another, +and spoke incoherently of the opening and shutting +of doors, whisperings, of a dreadful incident, the +central fact of which was a glimpse of Zette gliding +wraith-like down a corridor. Lastly, there +was the culminating proof, a letter found that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> +morning in Zette’s room. He drew a crumpled +sheet from his pocket and handed it to Aristide.</p> + +<a name="img70" id="img70"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 427px;"> +<img src="images/img070.jpg" width="427" height="500" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“the villain was a traveller in buttons—buttons!”</span> +</div> + +<p>It was a crude, flaming, reprehensible, and entirely +damning epistle. Aristide turned cold, shivering +at the idea of the superb and dainty Zette +coming in contact with such abomination. He +hated Bondon with a murderous hate. He drank +a great gulp of absinthe and wished it were Bondon’s +blood. Great tears rolled down Bocardon’s +face, and gathering at the ends of his scrubby +moustache dripped in splashes on the marble table.</p> + +<p>“I loved her so tenderly, monsieur,” said he.</p> + +<p>The cry, so human, went straight to Aristide’s +heart. A sympathetic tear glistened in his bright +eyes. He was suddenly filled with an immense pity +for this grief-stricken, helpless giant. An odd feminine +streak ran through his nature and showed +itself in queer places. Impulsively he stretched out +his hand.</p> + +<p>“You’re going?” asked Bocardon.</p> + +<p>“No. A sign of good friendship.”</p> + +<p>They gripped hands across the table. A new +emotion thrilled through the facile Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Bocardon, I devote myself to you,” he cried, +with a flamboyant gesture. “What can I do?”</p> + +<p>“Alas, nothing,” replied the other, miserably.</p> + +<p>“And Zette? What does she say to it all?”</p> + +<p>The mountainous shoulders heaved with a shrug. +“She denies everything. She had never seen the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> +letter until I showed it to her. She did not know +how it came into her room. As if that were possible!”</p> + +<p>“It’s improbable,” said Aristide, gloomily.</p> + +<p>They talked. Bocardon, in a choking voice, told +the simple tale of their married happiness. It had +been a love-match, different from the ordinary marriages +of reason and arrangement. Not a cloud +since their wedding-day. They were called the turtle-doves +of the Rue de la Curatterie. He had not +even manifested the jealousy justifiable in the possessor +of so beautiful a wife. He had trusted her +implicitly. He was certain of her love. That was +enough. They had had one child, who died. Grief +had brought them even nearer each other. And +now this stroke had been dealt. It was a +knife being turned round in his heart. It was +agony.</p> + +<p>They walked back to the hotel together. Zette, +who was sitting by the desk in the bureau, rose and, +without a word or look, vanished down the passage. +Bocardon, with a great sigh, took her place. It +was dinner-time. The half-dozen guests and frequenters +filled for a moment the little hall, some +waiting to wash their hands at the primitive <em>lavabo</em> +by the foot of the stairs. Aristide accompanied +them into the <em>salle à manger</em>, where he dined in +solemn silence. The dinner over he went out again, +passing by the bureau where Bocardon, in its dim +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> +recesses, was eating a sad meal brought to him by +the melancholy Euphémie. Zette, he conjectured, +was dining in the kitchen. An atmosphere of desolation +impregnated the place, as though a corpse +were somewhere in the house.</p> + +<p>Aristide drank his coffee at the nearest café in +a complicated state of mind. He had fallen furiously +in love with the lady, believing her to be the +victim of a jealous husband. In an outburst of +generous emotion he had taken the husband to his +heart, seeing that he was a good man stricken to +death. Now he loved the lady, loved the husband, +and hated the villain Bondon. What Aristide felt, +he felt fiercely. He would reconcile these two +people he loved, and then go and, if not assassinate +Bondon, at least do him some bodily injury. With +this idea in his head, he paid for his coffee and went +back to the hotel.</p> + +<p>He found Zette taking her turn at the bureau, +for clients have to be attended to, even in the most +distressing circumstances. She was talking to a +new arrival, trying to smile a welcome. Aristide, +loitering near, watched her beautiful face, to which +the perfect classic features gave an air of noble +purity. His soul revolted at the idea of her mixing +herself up with a sordid wretch like Bondon. It +was unbelievable.</p> + +<p>“<em>Eh bien</em>?” she said as soon as they were +alone.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> +“Mme. Zette, to-day I called your husband a +scoundrel and a crocodile. I was wrong. I find +him a man with a beautiful nature.”</p> + +<p>“You needn’t tell me that, M. Aristide.”</p> + +<p>“You are breaking his heart, Mme. Zette.”</p> + +<p>“And is he not breaking mine? He has told you, +I suppose. Am I responsible for what I know +nothing more about than a babe unborn? You +don’t believe I am speaking the truth? Bah! And +your professions this afternoon? Wind and gas, +like the words of all men.”</p> + +<p>“Mme. Zette,” cried Aristide, “I said I would +devote my life to your service, and so I will. I’ll +go and find Bondon and kill him.”</p> + +<p>He watched her narrowly, but she did not grow +pale like a woman whose lover is threatened with +mortal peril. She said dryly:—</p> + +<p>“You had better have some conversation with +him first.”</p> + +<p>“Where is he to be found?”</p> + +<p>She shrugged her shoulders. “How do I know? +He left by the early train this morning that goes +in the direction of Tarascon.”</p> + +<p>“Then to-morrow,” said Aristide, who knew the +ways of commercial travellers, “he will be at Tarascon, +or at Avignon, or at Arles.”</p> + +<p>“I heard him say that he had just done Arles.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Tant mieux.</em> I shall find him either at Tarascon +or Avignon. And by the Tarasque of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> +Sainte-Marthe, I’ll bring you his head and you can put it +up outside as a sign and call the place the ‘Hôtel +de la Tête Bondon.’”</p> + +<a name="img76" id="img76"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 454px;"> +<img src="images/img076.jpg" width="454" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">he burst into shrieks of laughter</span> +</div> + +<p>Early the next morning Aristide started on his +quest, without informing the good Bocardon of +his intentions. He would go straight to Avignon, +as the more likely place. Inquiries at the various +hotels would soon enable him to hunt down his +quarry; and then—he did not quite know what +would happen then—but it would be something +picturesque, something entirely unforeseen by Bondon, +something to be thrillingly determined by the +inspiration of the moment. In any case he would +wipe the stain from the family escutcheon. By this +time he had convinced himself that he belonged to +the Bocardon family.</p> + +<p>The only other occupant of the first-class compartment +was an elderly Englishwoman of sour +aspect. Aristide, his head full of Zette and Bondon, +scarcely noticed her. The train started and +sped through the sunny land of vine and olive.</p> + +<p>They had almost reached Tarascon when a sudden +thought hit him between the eyes, like the blow +of a fist. He gasped for a moment, then he burst +into shrieks of laughter, kicking his legs up and +down and waving his arms in maniacal mirth. +After that he rose and danced. The sour-faced +Englishwoman, in mortal terror, fled into the corridor. +She must have reported Aristide’s behaviour +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> +to the guard, for in a minute or two that official +appeared at the doorway.</p> + +<p>“<em>Qu’est-ce qu’il y a?</em>”</p> + +<p>Aristide paused in his demonstrations of merriment. +“Monsieur,” said he, “I have just discovered +what I am going to do to M. Bondon.”</p> + +<p>Delight bubbled out of him as he walked from +the Avignon Railway Station up the Cours de +la République. The wretch Bondon lay at his +mercy. He had not proceeded far, however, when +his quick eye caught sight of an object in the ramshackle +display of a curiosity dealer’s. He paused +in front of the window, fascinated. He rubbed +his eyes.</p> + +<p>“No,” said he; “it is not a dream. The <em>bon Dieu</em> +is on my side.”</p> + +<p>He went into the shop and bought the object. +It was a pair of handcuffs.</p> + +<p>At a little after three o’clock the small and dilapidated +hotel omnibus drove up before the Hôtel de +la Curatterie, and from it descended Aristide Pujol, +radiant-eyed, and a scrubby little man with a +goatee beard, pince-nez, and a dome-like forehead, +who, pale and trembling, seemed stricken with a +great fear. It was Bondon. Together they entered +the little hall. As soon as Bocardon saw his +enemy his eyes blazed with fury, and, uttering an +inarticulate roar, he rushed out of the bureau +with clenched fists murderously uplifted. The +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> +terrified Bondon shrank into a corner, protected by +Aristide, who, smiling like an angel of peace, intercepted +the onslaught of the huge man.</p> + +<p>“Be calm, my good Bocardon, be calm.”</p> + +<p>But Bocardon would not be calm. He found +his voice.</p> + +<p>“Ah, scoundrel! Miscreant! Wretch! Traitor!” +When his vocabulary of vituperation and his breath +failed him, he paused and mopped his forehead.</p> + +<p>Bondon came a step or two forward.</p> + +<p>“I know, monsieur, I have all the wrong on my +side. Your anger is justifiable. But I never +dreamt of the disastrous effect of my acts. Let +me see her, my good M. Bocardon, I beseech you.”</p> + +<p>“Let you see her?” said Bocardon, growing purple +in the face.</p> + +<p>At this moment Zette came running up the passage.</p> + +<p>“What is all this noise about?”</p> + +<p>“Ah, madame!” cried Bondon, eagerly, “I am +heart-broken. You who are so kind—let me see +her.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Hein</em>?” exclaimed Bocardon, in stupefaction.</p> + +<p>“See whom?” asked Zette.</p> + +<p>“My dear dead one. My dear Euphémie, who +has committed suicide.”</p> + +<p>“But he’s mad!” shouted Bocardon, in his great +voice. “Euphémie! Euphémie! Come here!”</p> + +<p>At the sight of Euphémie, pale and shivering +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> +with apprehension, Bondon sank upon a bench by +the wall. He stared at her as if she were a ghost.</p> + +<p>“I don’t understand,” he murmured, faintly, +looking like a trapped hare at Aristide Pujol, who, +debonair, hands on hips, stood a little way apart.</p> + +<p>“Nor I, either,” cried Bocardon.</p> + +<p>A great light dawned on Zette’s beautiful face. +“I do understand.” She exchanged glances with +Aristide. He came forward.</p> + +<p>“It’s very simple,” said he, taking the stage with +childlike exultation. “I go to find Bondon this +morning to kill him. In the train I have a sudden +inspiration, a revelation from Heaven. It is not +Zette but Euphémie that is the <em>bonne amie</em> of Bondon. +I laugh, and frighten a long-toothed English +old maid out of her wits. Shall I get out at Tarascon +and return to Nîmes and tell you, or shall +I go on? I decide to go on. I make my plan. Ah, +but when I make a plan, it’s all in a second, a flash, +<em>pfuit!</em> At Avignon I see a pair of handcuffs. I +buy them. I spend hours tracking that animal +there. At last I find him at the station about to +start for Lyon. I tell him I am a police agent. +I let him see the handcuffs, which convince him. +I tell him Euphémie, in consequence of the discovery +of his letter, has committed suicide. There +is a <em>procès-verbal</em> at which he is wanted. I summon +him to accompany me in the name of the law—and +there he is.”</p> + +<a name="img82" id="img82"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 449px;"> +<img src="images/img082.jpg" width="449" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“and you!” shouted bocardon, falling on aristide; “i must +embrace you also”</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> +“Then that letter was not for my wife?” said +Bocardon, who was not quick-witted.</p> + +<p>“But, no, imbecile!” cried Aristide.</p> + +<p>Bocardon hugged his wife in his vast embrace. +The tears ran down his cheeks.</p> + +<p>“Ah, my little Zette, my little Zette, will you +ever pardon me?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Oui, je te pardonne, gros jaloux</em>,” said Zette.</p> + +<p>“And you!” shouted Bocardon, falling on Aristide; +“I must embrace you also.” He kissed him +on both cheeks, in his expansive way, and thrust +him towards Zette.</p> + +<p>“You can also kiss my wife. It is I, Bocardon, +who command it.”</p> + +<p>The fire of a not ignoble pride raced through +Aristide’s veins. He was a hero. He knew it. It +was a moment worth living.</p> + +<p>The embraces and other expressions of joy and +gratitude being temporarily suspended, attention +was turned to the unheroic couple who up to then +had said not one word to each other. The explanation +of their conduct, too, was simple, apparently. +They were in love. She had no dowry. He could +not marry her, as his parents would not give their +consent. She, for her part, was frightened to +death by the discovery of the letter, lest Bocardon +should turn her out of the house.</p> + +<p>“What dowry will satisfy your parents?”</p> + +<p>“Nothing less than twelve thousand francs.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> +“I give it,” said Bocardon, reckless in his newly-found +happiness. “Marry her.”</p> + +<p>The clock in the bureau struck four. Aristide +pulled out his watch.</p> + +<p>“<em>Saperlipopette!</em>” he cried, and disappeared like +a flash into the street.</p> + +<p>“But what’s the matter with him?” shouted Bocardon, +in amazement.</p> + +<p>Zette went to the door. “He’s running as if he +had the devil at his heels.”</p> + +<p>“Was he always like that?” asked her husband.</p> + +<p>“How always?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Parbleu!</em> When you used to see him at your +Aunt Léonie’s.”</p> + +<p>Zette flushed red. To repudiate the saviour of +her entire family were an act of treachery too +black for her ingenuous heart.</p> + +<p>“Ah, yes,” she replied, calmly, coming back +into the hall. “We used to call him Cousin Quicksilver.”</p> + +<p>In the big avenue Aristide hailed a passing cab.</p> + +<p>“To the Hôtel du Luxembourg—at a gallop!”</p> + +<p>In the joyous excitement of the past few hours +this child of impulse and sunshine, this dragon-fly +of a man, had entirely forgotten the appointment +at two o’clock with the American millionaire and +the fortune that depended on it. He would be +angry at being kept waiting. Aristide had met +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> +Americans before. His swift brain invented an +elaborate excuse.</p> + +<p>He leaped from the cab and entered the vestibule +of the hotel.</p> + +<p>“Can I see M. Congleton?” he asked at the bureau.</p> + +<p>“An American gentleman? He has gone, monsieur. +He left by the three-thirty train. Are you +M. Pujol? There is a letter for you.”</p> + +<p>With a sinking heart he opened it and read:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,—I was in this hotel at two o’clock, +according to arrangement. As my last train to +Japan leaves at three-thirty, I regret I cannot await +your convenience. The site of the hotel is satisfactory. +Your business methods are not. I am +sorry, therefore, not to be able to entertain the +matter further.—Faithfully,<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 20em;" class="smcap">William B. Congleton.</span></p></div> + +<p>He stared at the words for a few paralyzed moments. +Then he stuffed the letter into his pocket +and broke into a laugh.</p> + +<p>“<em>Zut!</em>” said he, using the inelegant expletive +whereby a Frenchman most adequately expresses +his scorn of circumstance. “<em>Zut!</em> If I have lost +a fortune, I have gained two devoted friends, so +I am the winner on the day’s work.”</p> + +<p>Whereupon he returned gaily to the bosom of +the Bocardon family and remained there, its Cousin +Quicksilver and its entirely happy and idolized hero, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> +until the indignation of the eminent M. Say summoned +him to Paris.</p> + +<p>And that is how Aristide Pujol could live thenceforward +on nothing at all at Nîmes, whenever it +suited him to visit that historic town.</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>III</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE KIND MR. SMITH</strong></p> + + +<p>Aristide Pujol started life on his own +account as a <em>chasseur</em> in a Nice café—one +of those luckless children tightly encased +in bottle-green cloth by means of brass buttons, +who earn a sketchy livelihood by enduring with +cherubic smiles the continuous maledictions of the +establishment. There he soothed his hours of servitude +by dreams of vast ambitions. He would become +the manager of a great hotel—not a contemptible +hostelry where commercial travellers and +seedy Germans were indifferently bedded, but one +of those white palaces where milords (English) and +millionaires (American) paid a thousand francs a +night for a bedroom and five louis for a glass of +beer. Now, in order to derive such profit from the +Anglo-Saxon a knowledge of English was indispensable. +He resolved to learn the language. How +he did so, except by sheer effrontery, taking linguistic +toll of frequenters of the café, would be a +mystery to anyone unacquainted with Aristide. But +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> +to his friends his mastery of the English tongue +in such circumstances is comprehensible. To Aristide +the impossible was ever the one thing easy of +attainment; the possible the one thing he never +could achieve. That was the paradoxical nature +of the man. Before his days of hunted-little-devildom +were over he had acquired sufficient knowledge +of English to carry him, a few years later, +through various vicissitudes in England, until, fired +by new social ambitions and self-educated in a +haphazard way, he found himself appointed Professor +of French in an academy for young ladies.</p> + +<p>One of these days, when I can pin my dragon-fly +friend down to a plain, unvarnished autobiography, +I may be able to trace some chronological +sequence in the kaleidoscopic changes in his career. +But hitherto, in his talks with me, he flits about from +any one date to any other during a couple of decades, +in a manner so confusing that for the present +I abandon such an attempt. All I know of the +date of the episode I am about to chronicle is that +it occurred immediately after the termination of +his engagement at the academy just mentioned. +Somehow, Aristide’s history is a category of terminations.</p> + +<p>If the head mistress of the academy had herself +played dragon at his classes, all would have gone +well. He would have made his pupils conjugate +irregular verbs, rendered them adepts in the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> +mysteries of the past participle and the subjunctive +mood, and turned them out quite innocent of the +idiomatic quaintnesses of the French tongue. But +<em>dis aliter visum</em>. The gods always saw wrong-headedly +otherwise in the case of Aristide. A +weak-minded governess—and in a governess a +sense of humour and of novelty is always a sign +of a weak mind—played dragon during Aristide’s +lessons. She appreciated his method, which was +colloquial. The colloquial Aristide was jocular. +His lessons therefore were a giggling joy from beginning +to end. He imparted to his pupils delicious +knowledge. <em>En avez-vous des-z-homards? +Oh, les sales bêtes, elles ont du poil aux pattes</em>, +which, being translated, is: “Have you any lobsters? +Oh, the dirty animals, they have hair on +their feet”—a catch phrase which, some years ago, +added greatly to the gaiety of Paris, but in which +I must confess to seeing no gleam of wit—became +the historic property of the school. He recited to +them, till they were word-perfect, a music-hall ditty +of the early ’eighties—<em>Sur le bi, sur le banc, sur +le bi du bout du banc</em>, and delighted them with dissertations +on Mme. Yvette Guilbert’s earlier repertoire. +But for him they would have gone to their +lives’ end without knowing that <em>pognon</em> meant +money; <em>rouspétance</em>, assaulting the police; <em>thune</em>, +a five-franc piece; and <em>bouffer</em>, to take nourishment. +He made (according to his own statement) French +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> +a living language. There was never a school in +Great Britain, the Colonies, or America on which +the Parisian accent was so electrically impressed. +The retort, <em>Eh! ta sœur</em>, was the purest Montmartre; +also <em>Fich’-moi la paix, mon petit</em>, and <em>Tu as +un toupet, toi</em>; and the delectable locution, <em>Allons +étrangler un perroquet</em> (let us strangle a parrot), +employed by Apaches when inviting each other to +drink a glass of absinthe, soon became current +French in the school for invitations to surreptitious +cocoa-parties.</p> + +<p>The progress that academy made in a real grip +of the French language was miraculous; but the +knowledge it gained in French grammar and syntax +was deplorable. A certain mid-term examination—the +paper being set by a neighbouring vicar—produced +awful results. The phrase, “How do you do, +dear?” which ought, by all the rules of Stratford-atte-Bowe, +to be translated by <em>Comment vous portez-vous, +ma chère?</em> was rendered by most of the +senior scholars <em>Eh, ma vieille, ca boulotte?</em> One +innocent and anachronistic damsel, writing on the +execution of Charles I., declared that he <em>cracha +dans le panier</em> in 1649, thereby mystifying the good +vicar, who was unaware that “to spit into the basket” +is to be guillotined. This wealth of vocabulary +was discounted by abject poverty in other +branches of the language. No one could give a list +of the words in “<em>al</em>” that took “<em>s</em>” in the plural, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> +no one knew anything at all about the defective +verb <em>échoir</em>, and the orthography of the school +would have disgraced a kindergarten. The head +mistress suspected a lack of method in the teaching +of M. Pujol, and one day paid his class a surprise +visit.</p> + +<p>The sight that met her eyes petrified her. The +class, including the governess, bubbled and gurgled +and shrieked with laughter. M. Pujol, his bright +eyes agleam with merriment and his arms moving +in frantic gestures, danced about the platform. He +was telling them a story—and when Aristide told +a story, he told it with the eloquence of his entire +frame. He bent himself double and threw out his +hands.</p> + +<p>“<em>Il était saoûl comme un porc</em>,” he shouted.</p> + +<p>And then came the hush of death. The rest of +the artless tale about the man as drunk as a pig +was never told. The head mistress, indignant majesty, +strode up the room.</p> + +<p>“M. Pujol, you have a strange way of giving +French lessons.”</p> + +<p>“I believe, madame,” said he, with a polite bow, +“in interesting my pupils in their studies.”</p> + +<p>“Pupils have to be taught, not interested,” said +the head mistress. “Will you kindly put the class +through some irregular verbs.”</p> + +<p>So for the remainder of the lesson Aristide, under +the freezing eyes of the head mistress, put his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> +sorrowful class through irregular verbs, of which +his own knowledge was singularly inexact, and at +the end received his dismissal. In vain he argued. +Outraged Minerva was implacable. Go he must.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>We find him, then, one miserable December evening, +standing on the arrival platform of Euston +Station (the academy was near Manchester), an +unwonted statue of dubiety. At his feet lay his +meagre valise; in his hand was an enormous bouquet, +a useful tribute of esteem from his disconsolate +pupils; around him luggage-laden porters +and passengers hurried; in front were drawn up the +long line of cabs, their drivers’ waterproofs glistening +with wet; and in his pocket rattled the few +paltry coins that, for Heaven knew how long, were +to keep him from starvation. Should he commit +the extravagance of taking a cab or should he go +forth, valise in hand, into the pouring rain? He +hesitated.</p> + +<p>“<em>Sacré mille cochons! Quel chien de climat!</em>” +he muttered.</p> + +<p>A smart footman standing by turned quickly +and touched his hat.</p> + +<p>“Beg pardon, sir; I’m from Mr. Smith.”</p> + +<p>“I’m glad to hear it, my friend,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“You’re the French gentleman from Manchester?”</p> + +<p>“Decidedly,” said Aristide.</p> + +<a name="img94" id="img94"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 311px;"> +<img src="images/img094.jpg" width="311" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">standing on the arrival platform of euston station</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> +“Then, sir, Mr. Smith has sent the carriage for +you.”</p> + +<p>“That’s very kind of him,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>The footman picked up the valise and darted +down the platform. Aristide followed. The footman +held invitingly open the door of a cosy +brougham. Aristide paused for the fraction of +a second. Who was this hospitable Mr. Smith?</p> + +<p>“Bah!” said he to himself, “the best way of +finding out is to go and see.”</p> + +<p>He entered the carriage, sank back luxuriously +on the soft cushions, and inhaled the warm smell +of leather. They started, and soon the pelting rain +beat harmlessly against the windows. Aristide +looked out at the streaming streets, and, hugging +himself comfortably, thanked Providence and Mr. +Smith. But who was Mr. Smith? <em>Tiens</em>, thought +he, there were two little Miss Smiths at the academy; +he had pitied them because they had chilblains, +freckles, and perpetual colds in their heads; +possibly this was their kind papa. But, after all, +what did it matter whose papa he was? He was +expecting him. He had sent the carriage for him. +Evidently a well-bred and attentive person. And +<em>tiens!</em> there was even a hot-water can on the floor +of the brougham. “He thinks of everything, that +man,” said Aristide. “I feel I am going to like +him.”</p> + +<p>The carriage stopped at a house in Hampstead, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> +standing, as far as he could see in the darkness, +in its own grounds. The footman opened the door +for him to alight and escorted him up the front +steps. A neat parlour-maid received him in a comfortably-furnished +hall and took his hat and greatcoat +and magnificent bouquet.</p> + +<p>“Mr. Smith hasn’t come back yet from the City, +sir; but Miss Christabel is in the drawing-room.”</p> + +<p>“Ah!” said Aristide. “Please give me back my +bouquet.”</p> + +<p>The maid showed him into the drawing-room. +A pretty girl of three-and-twenty rose from a fender-stool +and advanced smilingly to meet him.</p> + +<p>“Good afternoon, M. le Baron. I was wondering +whether Thomas would spot you. I’m so glad he +did. You see, neither father nor I could give him +any description, for we had never seen you.”</p> + +<p>This fitted in with his theory. But why Baron? +After all, why not? The English loved titles.</p> + +<p>“He seems to be an intelligent fellow, mademoiselle.”</p> + +<p>There was a span of silence. The girl looked +at the bouquet, then at Aristide, who looked at the +girl, then at the bouquet, then at the girl again.</p> + +<p>“Mademoiselle,” said he, “will you deign to accept +these flowers as a token of my respectful +homage?”</p> + +<p>Miss Christabel took the flowers and blushed +prettily. She had dark hair and eyes and a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> +fascinating, upturned little nose, and the kindest little +mouth in the world.</p> + +<p>“An Englishman would not have thought of +that,” she said.</p> + +<p>Aristide smiled in his roguish way and raised a +deprecating hand.</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes, he would. But he would not have +had—what you call the cheek to do it.”</p> + +<p>Miss Christabel laughed merrily, invited him +to a seat by the fire, and comforted him with +tea and hot muffins. The frank charm of his girl-hostess +captivated Aristide and drove from his +mind the riddle of his adventure. Besides, think of +the Arabian Nights’ enchantment of the change +from his lonely and shabby bed-sitting-room in the +Rusholme Road to this fragrant palace with +princess and all to keep him company! He watched +the firelight dancing through her hair, the dainty +play of laughter over her face, and decided that +the brougham had transported him to Bagdad instead +of Hampstead.</p> + +<p>“You have the air of a veritable princess,” said +he.</p> + +<p>“I once met a princess—at a charity bazaar—and +she was a most matter-of-fact, businesslike +person.”</p> + +<p>“Bah!” said Aristide. “A princess of a charity +bazaar! I was talking of the princess in a fairytale. +They are the only real ones.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> +“Do you know,” said Miss Christabel, “that +when men pay such compliments to English girls +they are apt to get laughed at?”</p> + +<p>“Englishmen, yes,” replied Aristide, “because +they think over a compliment for a week, so that +by the time they pay it, it is addled, like a bad egg. +But we of Provence pay tribute to beauty straight +out of our hearts. It is true. It is sincere. And +what comes out of the heart is not ridiculous.”</p> + +<p>Again the girl coloured and laughed. “I’ve always +heard that a Frenchman makes love to every +woman he meets.”</p> + +<p>“Naturally,” said Aristide. “If they are pretty. +What else are pretty women for? Otherwise they +might as well be hideous.”</p> + +<p>“Oh!” said the girl, to whom this Provençal +point of view had not occurred.</p> + +<p>“So, if I make love to you, it is but your due.”</p> + +<p>“I wonder what my fiancé would say if he heard +you?”</p> + +<p>“Your——?”</p> + +<p>“My fiancé! There’s his photograph on the +table beside you. He is six foot one, and so jealous!” +she laughed again.</p> + +<p>“The Turk!” cried Aristide, his swiftly-conceived +romance crumbling into dust. Then he brightened +up. “But when this six feet of muscle and egotism +is absent, surely other poor mortals can glean a +smile?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> +“You will observe that I’m not frowning,” said +Miss Christabel. “But you must not call my fiancé +a Turk, for he’s a very charming fellow whom I +hope you’ll like very much.”</p> + +<p>Aristide sighed. “And the name of this thrice-blessed +mortal?”</p> + +<p>Miss Christabel told his name—one Harry Ralston—and +not only his name, but, such was the +peculiar, childlike charm of Aristide Pujol, also +many other things about him. He was the Honourable +Harry Ralston, the heir to a great brewery +peerage, and very wealthy. He was a member +of Parliament, and but for Parliamentary duties +would have dined there that evening; but he +was to come in later, as soon as he could leave the +House. He also had a house in Hampshire, full of +the most beautiful works of art. It was through +their common hobby that her father and Harry had +first made acquaintance.</p> + +<p>“We’re supposed to have a very fine collection +here,” she said, with a motion of her hand.</p> + +<p>Aristide looked round the walls and saw them +hung with pictures in gold frames. In those days +he had not acquired an extensive culture. Besides, +who having before him the firelight gleaming +through Miss Christabel’s hair could waste his +time over painted canvas? She noted his cursory +glance.</p> + +<p>“I thought you were a connoisseur?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> +“I am,” said Aristide, his bright eyes fixed on +her in frank admiration.</p> + +<p>She blushed again; but this time she rose.</p> + +<p>“I must go and dress for dinner. Perhaps you +would like to be shown your room?”</p> + +<p>He hung his head on one side.</p> + +<p>“Have I been too bold, mademoiselle?”</p> + +<p>“I don’t know,” she said. “You see, I’ve never +met a Frenchman before.”</p> + +<p>“Then a world of undreamed-of homage is at +your feet,” said he.</p> + +<p>A servant ushered him up broad, carpeted staircases +into a bedroom such as he had never seen in +his life before. It was all curtains and hangings +and rugs and soft couches and satin quilts and +dainty writing-tables and subdued lights, and a +great fire glowed red and cheerful, and before it +hung a clean shirt. His poor little toilet apparatus +was laid on the dressing-table, and (with a +tact which he did not appreciate, for he had, sad +to tell, no dress-suit) the servant had spread his +precious frock-coat and spare pair of trousers on +the bed. On the pillow lay his night-shirt, neatly +folded.</p> + +<p>“Evidently,” said Aristide, impressed by these +preparations, “it is expected that I wash myself +now and change my clothes, and that I sleep here +for the night. And for all that the ravishing +Miss Christabel is engaged to her honourable +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> +Harry, this is none the less a corner of Paradise.”</p> + +<p>So Aristide attired himself in his best, which +included a white tie and a pair of nearly new brown +boots—a long task, as he found that his valise +had been spirited away and its contents, including +the white tie of ceremony (he had but one), hidden +in unexpected drawers and wardrobes—and eventually +went downstairs into the drawing-room. There +he found Miss Christabel and, warming himself on +the hearthrug, a bald-headed, beefy-faced Briton, +with little pig’s eyes and a hearty manner, attired +in a dinner-suit.</p> + +<p>“My dear fellow,” said this personage, with outstretched +hand, “I’m delighted to have you here. +I’ve heard so much about you; and my little girl +has been singing your praises.”</p> + +<p>“Mademoiselle is too kind,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“You must take us as you find us,” said Mr. +Smith. “We’re just ordinary folk, but I can give +you a good bottle of wine and a good cigar—it’s +only in England, you know, that you can get champagne +fit to drink and cigars fit to smoke—and I +can give you a glimpse of a modest English home. +I believe you haven’t a word for it in French.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Ma foi</em>, no,” said Aristide, who had once or +twice before heard this lunatic charge brought +against his country. “In France the men all live in +cafés, the children are all put out to nurse, and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> +the women, saving the respect of mademoiselle—well, +the less said about them the better.”</p> + +<p>“England is the only place, isn’t it?” Mr. Smith +declared, heartily. “I don’t say that Paris hasn’t +its points. But after all—the Moulin Rouge and +the Folies Bergères and that sort of thing soon +pall, you know—soon pall.”</p> + +<p>“Yet Paris has its serious side,” argued Aristide. +“There is always the tomb of Napoleon.”</p> + +<p>“Papa will never take me to Paris,” sighed the +girl.</p> + +<p>“You shall go there on your honeymoon,” said +Mr. Smith.</p> + +<p>Dinner was announced. Aristide gave his arm +to Miss Christabel, and proud not only of his partner, +but also of his frock-coat, white tie, and shiny +brown boots, strutted into the dining-room. The +host sat at the end of the beautifully set table, his +daughter on his right, Aristide on his left. The +meal began gaily. The kind Mr. Smith was in the +best of humours.</p> + +<p>“And how is our dear old friend, Jules Dancourt?” +he asked.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens!</em>” said Aristide, to himself, “we have a +dear friend Jules Dancourt. Wonderfully well,” he +replied at a venture, “but he suffers terribly at times +from the gout.”</p> + +<p>“So do I, confound it!” said Mr. Smith, drinking +sherry.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> +“You and the good Jules were always sympathetic,” +said Aristide. “Ah! he has spoken to me +so often about you, the tears in his eyes.”</p> + +<p>“Men cry, my dear, in France,” Mr. Smith explained. +“They also kiss each other.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Ah, mais c’est un beau pays, mademoiselle!</em>” +cried Aristide, and he began to talk of France and +to draw pictures of his country which set the girl’s +eyes dancing. After that he told some of the funny +little stories which had brought him disaster at the +academy. Mr. Smith, with jovial magnanimity, +declared that he was the first Frenchman he had +ever met with a sense of humour.</p> + +<p>“But I thought, Baron,” said he, “that you lived +all your life shut up in that old château of yours?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens!</em>” thought Aristide. “I am still a Baron, +and I have an old château.”</p> + +<p>“Tell us about the château. Has it a fosse and +a drawbridge and a Gothic chapel?” asked Miss +Christabel.</p> + +<p>“Which one do you mean?” inquired Aristide, +airily. “For I have two.”</p> + +<p>When relating to me this Arabian Nights’ adventure, +he drew my special attention to his astuteness.</p> + +<p>His host’s eye quivered in a wink. “The one in +Languedoc,” said he.</p> + +<p>Languedoc! Almost Pujol’s own country! With +entire lack of morality, but with picturesque +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> +imagination, Aristide plunged into a description of that +non-existent baronial hall. Fosse, drawbridge, +Gothic chapel were but insignificant features. It +had tourelles, emblazoned gateways, bastions, donjons, +barbicans; it had innumerable rooms; in the +<em>salle des chevaliers</em> two hundred men-at-arms had +his ancestors fed at a sitting. There was the room +in which François Premier had slept, and one in +which Joan of Arc had almost been assassinated. +What the name of himself or of his ancestors was +supposed to be Aristide had no ghost of an idea. +But as he proceeded with the erection of his airy +palace he gradually began to believe in it. He invested +the place with a living atmosphere; conjured +up a staff of family retainers, notably one Marie-Joseph +Loufoque, the wizened old major-domo, +with his long white whiskers and blue and silver +livery. There were also Madeline Mioulles, the +cook, and Bernadet the groom, and La Petite Fripette +the goose girl. Ah! they should see La +Petite Fripette! And he kept dogs and horses and +cows and ducks and hens—and there was a great +pond whence frogs were drawn to be fed for the +consumption of the household.</p> + +<p>Miss Christabel shivered. “I should not like +to eat frogs.”</p> + +<p>“They also eat snails,” said her father.</p> + +<p>“I have a snail farm,” said Aristide. “You never +saw such interesting little animals. They are so +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> +intelligent. If you’re kind to them they come and +eat out of your hand.”</p> + +<a name="img106" id="img106"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/img106.jpg" width="600" height="424" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“ah! the pictures,” cried aristide, with a wide sweep of his arms</span> +</div> + +<p>“You’ve forgotten the pictures,” said Mr. Smith.</p> + +<p>“Ah! the pictures,” cried Aristide, with a wide +sweep of his arms. “Galleries full of them. +Raphael, Michael Angelo, Wiertz, Reynolds——”</p> + +<p>He paused, not in order to produce the effect of +a dramatic aposiopesis, but because he could not +for the moment remember other names of painters.</p> + +<p>“It is a truly historical château,” said he.</p> + +<p>“I should love to see it,” said the girl.</p> + +<p>Aristide threw out his arms across the table. +“It is yours, mademoiselle, for your honeymoon,” +said he.</p> + +<p>Dinner came to an end. Miss Christabel left +the gentlemen to their wine, an excellent port whose +English qualities were vaunted by the host. Aristide, +full of food and drink and the mellow glories +of the castle in Languedoc, and smoking an enormous +cigar, felt at ease with all the world. He +knew he should like the kind Mr. Smith, hospitable +though somewhat insular man. He could stay with +him for a week—or a month—why not a year?</p> + +<p>After coffee and liqueurs had been served Mr. +Smith rose and switched on a powerful electric +light at the end of the large room, showing a picture +on an easel covered by a curtain. He beckoned +to Aristide to join him and, drawing the curtain, +disclosed the picture.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> +“There!” said he. “Isn’t it a stunner?”</p> + +<p>It was a picture all grey skies and grey water +and grey feathery trees, and a little man in the +foreground wore a red cap.</p> + +<p>“It is beautiful, but indeed it is magnificent!” +cried Aristide, always impressionable to things of +beauty.</p> + +<p>“Genuine Corot, isn’t it?”</p> + +<p>“Without doubt,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>His host poked him in the ribs. “I thought I’d +astonish you. You wouldn’t believe Gottschalk +could have done it. There it is—as large as life +and twice as natural. If you or anyone else can +tell it from a genuine Corot I’ll eat my hat. And +all for eight pounds.”</p> + +<p>Aristide looked at the beefy face and caught a +look of cunning in the little pig’s eyes.</p> + +<p>“Now are you satisfied?” asked Mr. Smith.</p> + +<p>“More than satisfied,” said Aristide, though what +he was to be satisfied about passed, for the moment, +his comprehension.</p> + +<p>“If it was a copy of an existing picture, you +know—one might have understood it—that, of +course, would be dangerous—but for a man to go +and get bits out of various Corots and stick them +together like this is miraculous. If it hadn’t been +for a matter of business principle I’d have given +the fellow eight guineas instead of pounds—hanged +if I wouldn’t! He deserves it.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> +“He does indeed,” said Aristide Pujol.</p> + +<p>“And now that you’ve seen it with your own +eyes, what do you think you might ask me for it? +I suggested something between two and three +thousand—shall we say three? You’re the owner, +you know.” Again the process of rib-digging. +“Came out of that historic château of yours. My +eye! you’re a holy terror when you begin to talk. +You almost persuaded me it was real.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens!</em>” said Aristide to himself. “I don’t seem +to have a château after all.”</p> + +<p>“Certainly three thousand,” said he, with a grave +face.</p> + +<p>“That young man thinks he knows a lot, but he +doesn’t,” said Mr. Smith.</p> + +<p>“Ah!” said Aristide, with singular laconicism.</p> + +<p>“Not a blooming thing,” continued his host. +“But he’ll pay three thousand, which is the principal, +isn’t it? He’s partner in the show, you know, +Ralston, Wiggins, and Wix’s Brewery”—Aristide +pricked up his ears—“and when his doddering old +father dies he’ll be Lord Ranelagh and come into +a million of money.”</p> + +<p>“Has he seen the picture?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes. Regards it as a masterpiece. Didn’t +Brauneberger tell you of the Lancret we planted +on the American?” Mr. Smith rubbed hearty hands +at the memory of the iniquity. “Same old game. +Always easy. I have nothing to do with the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> +bargaining or the sale. Just an old friend of the +ruined French nobleman with the historic château +and family treasures. He comes along and fixes +the price. I told our friend Harry——”</p> + +<p>“Good,” thought Aristide. “This is the same +Honourable Harry, M.P., who is engaged to the +ravishing Miss Christabel.”</p> + +<p>“I told him,” said Mr. Smith, “that it might +come to three or four thousand. He jibbed a bit—so +when I wrote to you I said two or three. But +you might try him with three to begin with.”</p> + +<p>Aristide went back to the table and poured himself +out a fresh glass of his kind host’s 1865 brandy +and drank it off.</p> + +<p>“Exquisite, my dear fellow,” said he. “I’ve +none finer in my historic château.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t suppose you have,” grinned the host, joining +him. He slapped him on the back. “Well,” +said he, with a shifty look in his little pig’s eyes, +“let us talk business. What do you think would +be your fair commission? You see, all the trouble +and invention have been mine. What do you say +to four hundred pounds?”</p> + +<p>“Five,” said Aristide, promptly.</p> + +<p>A sudden gleam came into the little pig’s eyes.</p> + +<p>“Done!” said Mr. Smith, who had imagined that +the other would demand a thousand and was prepared +to pay eight hundred. “Done!” said he +again.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> +They shook hands to seal the bargain and drank +another glass of old brandy. At that moment, a +servant, entering, took the host aside.</p> + +<p>“Please excuse me a moment,” said he, and went +with the servant out of the room.</p> + +<p>Aristide, left alone, lighted another of his kind +host’s fat cigars and threw himself into a great +leathern arm-chair by the fire, and surrendered himself +deliciously to the soothing charm of the moment. +Now and then he laughed, finding a certain +comicality in his position. And what a charming +father-in-law, this kind Mr. Smith!</p> + +<p>His cheerful reflections were soon disturbed by +the sudden irruption of his host and a grizzled, elderly, +foxy-faced gentleman with a white moustache, +wearing the ribbon of the Legion of Honour +in the buttonhole of his overcoat.</p> + +<p>“Here, you!” cried the kind Mr. Smith, striding +up to Aristide, with a very red face. “Will you +have the kindness to tell me who the devil you +are?”</p> + +<p>Aristide rose, and, putting his hands behind the +tails of his frock-coat, stood smiling radiantly on +the hearthrug. A wit much less alert than my irresponsible +friend’s would have instantly appreciated +the fact that the real Simon Pure had arrived +on the scene.</p> + +<p>“I, my dear friend,” said he, “am the Baron de +Je ne Sais Plus.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> +“You’re a confounded impostor,” spluttered Mr. +Smith.</p> + +<p>“And this gentleman here to whom I have not +had the pleasure of being introduced?” asked Aristide, +blandly.</p> + +<p>“I am M. Poiron, monsieur, the agent of +Messrs. Brauneberger and Compagnie, art dealers, +of the Rue Notre Dame des Petits Champs of +Paris,” said the new-comer, with an air of defiance.</p> + +<p>“Ah, I thought you were the Baron,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“There’s no blooming Baron at all about it!” +screamed Mr. Smith. “Are you Poiron, or is he?”</p> + +<p>“I would not have a name like Poiron for anything +in the world,” said Aristide. “My name is +Aristide Pujol, soldier of fortune, at your service.”</p> + +<p>“How the blazes did you get here?”</p> + +<p>“Your servant asked me if I was a French gentleman +from Manchester. I was. He said that Mr. +Smith had sent his carriage for me. I thought it +hospitable of the kind Mr. Smith. I entered the +carriage—<em>et voilà!</em>”</p> + +<p>“Then clear out of here this very minute,” said +Mr. Smith, reaching forward his hand to the bell-push.</p> + +<p>Aristide checked his impulsive action.</p> + +<p>“Pardon me, dear host,” said he. “It is raining +dogs and cats outside. I am very comfortable in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> +your luxurious home. I am here, and here I stay.”</p> + +<p>“I’m shot if you do,” said the kind Mr. Smith, +his face growing redder and uglier. “Now, will +you go out, or will you be thrown out?”</p> + +<p>Aristide, who had no desire whatever to be +ejected from this snug nest into the welter of the +wet and friendless world, puffed at his cigar, and +looked at his host with the irresistible drollery of +his eyes.</p> + +<p>“You forget, <em>mon cher ami</em>,” said he, “that neither +the beautiful Miss Christabel nor her affianced, +the Honourable Harry, M.P., would care to know +that the talented Gottschalk got only eight +pounds, not even guineas, for painting that three-thousand-pound +picture.”</p> + +<p>“So it’s blackmail, eh?”</p> + +<p>“Precisely,” said Aristide, “and I don’t blush +at it.”</p> + +<p>“You infernal little blackguard!”</p> + +<p>“I seem to be in congenial company,” said Aristide. +“I don’t think our friend M. Poiron has more +scruples than he has right to the ribbon of the Legion +of Honour which he is wearing.”</p> + +<p>“How much will you take to go out? I have a +cheque-book handy.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Smith moved a few steps from the hearthrug. +Aristide sat down in the arm-chair. An engaging, +fantastic impudence was one of the charms +of Aristide Pujol.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> +“I’ll take five hundred pounds,” said he, “to +stay in.”</p> + +<p>“Stay in?” Mr. Smith grew apoplectic.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Aristide. “You can’t do without me. +Your daughter and your servants know me as M. le +Baron—by the way, what is my name? And where +is my historic château in Languedoc?”</p> + +<p>“Mireilles,” said M. Poiron, who was sitting +grim and taciturn on one of the dining-room chairs. +“And the place is the same, near Montpellier.”</p> + +<p>“I like to meet an intelligent man,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I should like to wring your infernal neck,” said +the kind Mr. Smith. “But, by George, if we do +let you in you’ll have to sign me a receipt implicating +yourself up to the hilt. I’m not going to be +put into the cart by you, you can bet your life.”</p> + +<p>“Anything you like,” said Aristide, “so long as +we all swing together.”</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>Now, when Aristide Pujol arrived at this point +in his narrative I, his chronicler, who am nothing +if not an eminently respectable, law-abiding Briton, +took him warmly to task for his sheer absence of +moral sense. His eyes, as they sometimes did, assumed +a luminous pathos.</p> + +<a name="img116" id="img116"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 491px;"> +<img src="images/img116.jpg" width="491" height="500" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“i’ll take five hundred pounds,” said he, “to stay in”</span> +</div> + +<p>“My dear friend,” said he, “have you ever faced +the world in a foreign country in December with +no character and fifteen pounds five and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> +three-pence in your pocket? Five hundred pounds was +a fortune. It is one now. And to be gained just +by lending oneself to a good farce, which didn’t +hurt anybody. You and your British morals! Bah!” +said he, with a fine flourish.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>Aristide, after much parleying, was finally admitted +into the nefarious brotherhood. He was to +retain his rank as the Baron de Mireilles, and play +the part of the pecuniarily inconvenienced nobleman +forced to sell some of his rare collection. Mr. +Smith had heard of the Corot through their dear +old common friend, Jules Dancourt of Rheims, had +mentioned it alluringly to the Honourable Harry, +had arranged for the Baron, who was visiting England, +to bring it over and dispatch it to Mr. Smith’s +house, and on his return from Manchester to pay +a visit to Mr. Smith, so that he could meet the +Honourable Harry in person. In whatever transaction +ensued Mr. Smith, so far as his prospective +son-in-law was concerned, was to be the purely +disinterested friend. It was Aristide’s wit which +invented a part for the supplanted M. Poiron. He +should be the eminent Parisian expert who, chancing +to be in London, had been telephoned for by +the kind Mr. Smith.</p> + +<p>“It would not be wise for M. Poiron,” said Aristide, +chuckling inwardly with puckish glee, “to stay +here for the night—or for two or three days—or +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> +a week—like myself. He must go back to his hotel +when the business is concluded.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mais, pardon!</em>” cried M. Poiron, who had been +formally invited, and had arrived late solely because +he had missed his train at Manchester, and +come on by the next one. “I cannot go out into +the wet, and I have no hotel to go to.”</p> + +<p>Aristide appealed to his host. “But he is unreasonable, +<em>cher ami</em>. He must play his <em>rôle</em>. M. +Poiron has been telephoned for. He can’t possibly +stay here. Surely five hundred pounds is worth one +little night of discomfort? And there are a legion +of hotels in London.”</p> + +<p>“Five hundred pounds!” exclaimed M. Poiron. +“<em>Qu’est-ce que vous chantez là?</em> I want more than +five hundred pounds.”</p> + +<p>“Then you’re jolly well not going to get it,” +cried Mr. Smith, in a rage. “And as for you”—he +turned on Aristide—“I’ll wring your infernal +neck yet.”</p> + +<p>“Calm yourself, calm yourself!” smiled Aristide, +who was enjoying himself hugely.</p> + +<p>At this moment the door opened and Miss Christabel +appeared. On seeing the decorated stranger +she started with a little “Oh!” of surprise.</p> + +<p>“I beg your pardon.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Smith’s angry face wreathed itself in +smiles.</p> + +<p>“This, my darling, is M. Poiron, the eminent +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> +Paris expert, who has been good enough to come +and give us his opinion on the picture.”</p> + +<p>M. Poiron bowed. Aristide advanced.</p> + +<p>“Mademoiselle, your appearance is like a mirage +in a desert.”</p> + +<p>She smiled indulgently and turned to her father. +“I’ve been wondering what had become of you. +Harry has been here for the last half-hour.”</p> + +<p>“Bring him in, dear child, bring him in!” said +Mr. Smith, with all the heartiness of the fine old +English gentleman. “Our good friends are dying +to meet him.”</p> + +<p>The girl flickered out of the room like a sunbeam +(the phrase is Aristide’s), and the three precious +rascals put their heads together in a hurried +and earnest colloquy. Presently Miss Christabel +returned, and with her came the Honourable Harry +Ralston, a tall, soldierly fellow, with close-cropped +fair curly hair and a fair moustache, and frank +blue eyes that, even in Parliament, had seen no +harm in his fellow-creatures. Aristide’s magical +vision caught him wincing ever so little at Mr. +Smith’s effusive greeting and overdone introductions. +He shook Aristide warmly by the hand.</p> + +<p>“You have a beauty there, Baron, a perfect +beauty,” said he, with the insane ingenuousness of +youth. “I wonder how you can manage to part +with it.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Ma foi</em>,” said Aristide, with his back against +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> +the end of the dining-table and gazing at the masterpiece. +“I have so many at the Château de Mireilles. +When one begins to collect, you know—and +when one’s grandfather and father have had +also the divine mania——”</p> + +<p>“You were saying, M. le Baron,” said M. Poiron +of Paris, “that your respected grandfather bought +this direct from Corot himself.”</p> + +<p>“A commission,” said Aristide. “My grandfather +was a patron of Corot.”</p> + +<p>“Do you like it, dear?” asked the Honourable +Harry.</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes!” replied the girl, fervently. “It is +beautiful. I feel like Harry about it.” She turned +to Aristide. “How can you part with it? Were +you really in earnest when you said you would like +me to come and see your collection?”</p> + +<p>“For me,” said Aristide, “it would be a visit +of enchantment.”</p> + +<p>“You must take me, then,” she whispered to +Harry. “The Baron has been telling us about +his lovely old château.”</p> + +<p>“Will you come, monsieur?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Since I’m going to rob you of your picture,” +said the young man, with smiling courtesy, “the +least I can do is to pay you a visit of apology. +Lovely!” said he, going up to the Corot.</p> + +<p>Aristide took Miss Christabel, now more bewitching +than ever with the glow of young love in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> +her eyes and a flush on her cheek, a step or two +aside and whispered:—</p> + +<p>“But he is charming, your fiancé! He almost +deserves his good fortune.”</p> + +<p>“Why almost?” she laughed, shyly.</p> + +<p>“It is not a man, but a demi-god, that would +deserve you, mademoiselle.”</p> + +<p>M. Poiron’s harsh voice broke out.</p> + +<p>“You see, it is painted in the beginning of Corot’s +later manner—it is 1864. There is the mystery +which, when he was quite an old man, became +a trick. If you were to put it up to auction at +Christie’s it would fetch, I am sure, five thousand +pounds.”</p> + +<p>“That’s more than I can afford to give,” said +the young man, with a laugh. “Mr. Smith mentioned +something between three and four thousand +pounds. I don’t think I can go above +three.”</p> + +<p>“I have nothing to do with it, my dear boy, +nothing whatever,” said Mr. Smith, rubbing his +hands. “You wanted a Corot. I said I thought I +could put you on to one. It’s for the Baron here +to mention his price. I retire now and for ever.”</p> + +<p>“Well, Baron?” said the young man, cheerfully. +“What’s your idea?”</p> + +<p>Aristide came forward and resumed his place at +the end of the table. The picture was in front of +him beneath the strong electric light; on his left +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> +stood Mr. Smith and Poiron, on his right Miss +Christabel and the Honourable Harry.</p> + +<p>“I’ll not take three thousand pounds for it,” +said Aristide. “A picture like that! Never!”</p> + +<p>“I assure you it would be a fair price,” said +Poiron.</p> + +<p>“You mentioned that figure yourself only just +now,” said Mr. Smith, with an ugly glitter in his +little pig’s eyes.</p> + +<p>“I presume, gentlemen,” said Aristide, “that this +picture is my own property.” He turned engagingly +to his host. “Is it not, <em>cher ami</em>?”</p> + +<p>“Of course it is. Who said it wasn’t?”</p> + +<p>“And you, M. Poiron, acknowledge formally that +it is mine,” he asked, in French.</p> + +<p>“<em>Sans aucun doute.</em>”</p> + +<p>“<em>Eh bien</em>,” said Aristide, throwing open his arms +and gazing round sweetly. “I have changed my +mind. I do not sell the picture at all.”</p> + +<p>“Not sell it? What the—what do you mean?” +asked Mr. Smith, striving to mellow the gathering +thunder on his brow.</p> + +<p>“I do not sell,” said Aristide. “Listen, my dear +friends!” He was in the seventh heaven of happiness—the +principal man, the star, taking the centre +of the stage. “I have an announcement to make +to you. I have fallen desperately in love with +mademoiselle.”</p> + +<p>There was a general gasp. Mr. Smith looked at +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> +him, red-faced and open-mouthed. Miss Christabel +blushed furiously and emitted a sound half between +a laugh and a scream. Harry Ralston’s eyes +flashed.</p> + +<p>“My dear sir——” he began.</p> + +<p>“Pardon,” said Aristide, disarming him with the +merry splendour of his glance. “I do not wish to +take mademoiselle from you. My love is hopeless! +I know it. But it will feed me to my dying day. +In return for the joy of this hopeless passion I will +not sell you the picture—I give it to you as a wedding +present.”</p> + +<p>He stood, with the air of a hero, both arms extended +towards the amazed pair of lovers.</p> + +<p>“I give it to you,” said he. “It is mine. I have +no wish but for your happiness. In my Château +de Mireilles there are a hundred others.”</p> + +<p>“This is madness!” said Mr. Smith, bursting +with suppressed indignation, so that his bald head +grew scarlet.</p> + +<p>“My dear fellow!” said Mr. Harry Ralston. “It +is unheard-of generosity on your part. But we +can’t accept it.”</p> + +<p>“Then,” said Aristide, advancing dramatically +to the picture, “I take it under my arm, I put it in +a hansom cab, and I go with it back to Languedoc.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Smith caught him by the wrist and dragged +him out of the room.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> +“You little brute! Do you want your neck +broken?”</p> + +<p>“Do you want the marriage of your daughter +with the rich and Honourable Harry broken?” +asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Oh, damn! Oh, damn! Oh, damn!” cried Mr. +Smith, stamping about helplessly and half weeping.</p> + +<p>Aristide entered the dining-room and beamed on +the company.</p> + +<p>“The kind Mr. Smith has consented. Mr. Honourable +Harry and Miss Christabel, there is your +Corot. And now, may I be permitted?” He rang +the bell. A servant appeared.</p> + +<p>“Some champagne to drink to the health of the +fiancés,” he cried. “Lots of champagne.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Smith looked at him almost admiringly.</p> + +<p>“By Jove!” he muttered. “You <em>have</em> got a +nerve.”</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>“<em>Voilà!</em>” said Aristide, when he had finished the +story.</p> + +<p>“And did they accept the Corot?” I asked.</p> + +<p>“Of course. It is hanging now in the big house +in Hampshire. I stayed with the kind Mr. Smith +for six weeks,” he added, doubling himself up in +his chair and hugging himself with mirth, “and +we became very good friends. And I was at the +wedding.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> +“And what about their honeymoon visit to Languedoc?”</p> + +<p>“Alas!” said Aristide. “The morning before the +wedding I had a telegram—it was from my old +father at Aigues-Mortes—to tell me that the historic +Château de Mireilles, with my priceless collection +of pictures, had been burned to the ground.”</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>IV</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE FOUNDLING</strong></p> + + +<p>There was a time when Aristide Pujol, in +sole charge of an automobile, went gaily +scuttering over the roads of France. I +use the word advisedly. If you had heard the awful +thing as it passed by you would agree that it is the +only word adequate to express its hideous mode of +progression. It was a two-seated, scratched, battered, +ramshackle tin concern of hoary antiquity, +belonging to the childhood of the race. Not only +horses, but other automobiles shied at it. It was +a vehicle of derision. Yet Aristide regarded it +with glowing pride and drove it with such daredevilry +that the parts must have held together only +through sheer breathless wonder. Had it not been +for the car, he told me, he would not have undertaken +the undignified employment in which he was +then engaged—the mountebank selling of a corn-cure +in the public places of small towns and villages. +It was not a fitting pursuit for a late managing +director of a public company and an ex-Professor +of French in an English Academy for Young +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> +Ladies. He wanted to rise, <em>ma foi</em>, not descend in the +social scale. But when hunger drives—<em>que voulez-vous</em>? +Besides, there was the automobile. It is +true he had bound himself by his contract to exhibit +a board at the back bearing a flaming picture +of the success of the cure and a legend: “<em>Guérissez +vos cors</em>,” and to display a banner with the +same device, when weather permitted. But, still, +there was the automobile.</p> + +<p>It had been lying for many motor-ages in the +shed of the proprietors of the cure, the Maison +Hiéropath of Marseilles, neglected, forlorn, eaten +by rust and worm, when suddenly an idea occurred +to their business imagination. Why should they +not use the automobile to advertise and sell the cure +about the country? The apostle in charge would +pay for his own petrol, take a large percentage on +sales, and the usual traveller’s commission on orders +that he might place. But where to find an +apostle? Brave and desperate men came in high +hopes, looked at the car, and, shaking their heads +sorrowfully, went away. At last, at the loosest +of ends, came Aristide. The splendour of the idea—a +poet, in his way, was Aristide, and the Idea +was the thing that always held him captive—the +splendour of the idea of dashing up to hotels in his +own automobile dazed him. He beheld himself +doing his hundred kilometres an hour and trailing +clouds of glory whithersoever he went. To a child +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> +a moth-eaten rocking-horse is a fiery Arab of the +plains; to Aristide Pujol this cheat of the scrap-heap +was a sixty-horse-power thunderer and devourer of +space.</p> + +<p>How they managed to botch up her interior so +that she moved unpushed is a mystery which Aristide, +not divining, could not reveal; and when and +where he himself learned to drive a motor-car is +also vague. I believe the knowledge came by nature. +He was a fellow of many weird accomplishments. +He could conjure; he could model birds +and beasts out of breadcrumb; he could play the +drum—so well that he had a kettle-drum hanging +round his neck during most of his military service; +he could make omelettes and rabbit-hutches; he +could imitate any animal that ever emitted sound—a +gift that endeared him to children; he could +do almost anything you please—save stay in one +place and acquire material possessions. The fact +that he had never done a thing before was to him +no proof of his inability to do it. In his superb +self-confidence he would have undertaken to conduct +the orchestra at Covent Garden or navigate +a liner across the Atlantic. Knowing this, I cease +to bother my head about so small a matter as the +way in which he learned to drive a motor-car.</p> + +<p>Behold him, then, one raw March morning, scuttering +along the road that leads from Arles to +Salon, in Provence. He wore a goat-skin coat and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> +a goat-skin cap drawn down well over his ears. +His handsome bearded face, with its lustrous, +laughing eyes, peeped out curiously human amid the +circumambient shagginess. There was not a turn +visible in the long, straight road that lost itself in +the far distant mist; not a speck on it signifying +cart or creature. Aristide Pujol gave himself up +to the delirium of speed and urged the half-bursting +engine to twenty miles an hour. In spite of the +racing-track surface, the crazy car bumped and +jolted; the sides of the rickety bonnet clashed like +cymbals; every valve wheezed and squealed; every +nut seemed to have got loose and terrifically clattered; +rattling noises, grunting noises, screeching +noises escaped from every part; it creaked and +clanked like an over-insured tramp-steamer in a +typhoon; it lurched as though afflicted with loco-motor +ataxy; and noisome vapours belched forth +from the open exhaust-pipe as though the car were +a Tophet on wheels. But all was music in the ears +of Aristide. The car was going (it did not always +go), the road scudded under him, and the morning +air dashed stingingly into his face. For the moment +he desired nothing more of life.</p> + +<p>This road between Arles and Salon runs through +one of the most desolate parts of France: a long, +endless plain, about five miles broad, lying between +two long low ranges of hills. It is strewn like a +monstrous Golgotha, not with skulls, but with huge +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> +smooth pebbles, as massed together as the shingle +on a beach. Rank grass shoots up in what interstices +it finds; but beyond this nothing grows. +Nothing can grow. On a sunless day under a lowering +sky it is a land accursed. Mile after mile +for nearly twenty miles stretches this stony and +barren waste. No human habitation cheers the sight, +for from such a soil no human hand could wrest +a sustenance. Only the rare traffic going from +Arles to Salon and from Salon to Arles passes along +the road. The cheery passing show of the live +highway is wanting; there are no children, no dogs, +no ducks and hens, no men and women lounging to +their work; no red-trousered soldiers on bicycles, +no blue-bloused, weather-beaten farmers jogging +along in their little carts. As far as the eye can +reach nothing suggestive of man meets the view. +Nothing but the infinite barrenness of the plain, the +ridges on either side, the long, straight, endless +road cleaving through this abomination of desolation.</p> + +<p>To walk through it would be a task as depressing +as mortal could execute. But to the speed-drunken +motorist it is a realization of dim and +tremulous visions of Paradise. What need to look +to right or left when you are swallowing up +free mile after mile of dizzying road? Aristide +looked neither to right nor left, and knew this was +heaven at last.</p> + +<a name="img132" id="img132"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/img132.jpg" width="500" height="444" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">between the folds of the blanket peeped the face<br /> +of a sleeping child</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> +Suddenly, however, he became aware of a small +black spot far ahead in the very middle of the unencumbered +track. As he drew near it looked like +a great stone. He swerved as he passed it, and, +looking, saw that it was a bundle wrapped in a +striped blanket. It seemed so odd that it should +be lying there that, his curiosity being aroused, he +pulled up and walked back a few yards to examine +it. The nearer he approached the less did it resemble +an ordinary bundle. He bent down, and lo! +between the folds of the blanket peeped the face +of a sleeping child.</p> + +<p>“<em>Nom de Dieu!</em>” cried Aristide. “<em>Nom de Dieu +de nom de Dieu!</em>”</p> + +<p>He ought not to have said it, but his astonishment +was great. He stared at the baby, then up +and down the road, then swept the horizon. Not a +soul was visible. How did the baby get there? +The heavens, according to history, have rained +many things in their time: bread, quails, blood, +frogs, and what not; but there is no mention of +them ever having rained babies. It could not, +therefore, have come from the clouds. It could not +even have fallen from the tail of a cart, for then +it would have been killed, or at least have broken +its bones and generally been rendered a different +baby from the sound, chubby mite sleeping as peacefully +as though the Golgotha of Provence had been +its cradle from birth. It could not have come there +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> +accidentally. Deliberate hands had laid it down; +in the centre of the road, too. Why not by the +side, where it would have been out of the track of +thundering automobiles? When the murderous intent +became obvious Aristide shivered and felt sick. +He breathed fierce and honest anathema on the +heads of the bowelless fiends who had abandoned +the babe to its doom. Then he stooped and picked +up the bundle tenderly in his arms.</p> + +<p>The wee face puckered for a moment and the +wee limbs shot out vigorously; then the dark eyes +opened and stared Aristide solemnly and wonderingly +in the face. So must the infant Remus have +first regarded his she-wolf mother. Having ascertained, +however, that it was not going to be devoured, +it began to cry lustily, showing two little +white specks of teeth in the lower gum.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon pauvre petit</em>, you are hungry,” said Aristide, +carrying it to the car racked by the clattering +engine. “I wonder when you last tasted food? If +I only had a little biscuit and wine to give you; +but, alas! there’s nothing but petrol and corn-cure, +neither of which, I believe, is good for babies. +Wait, wait, <em>mon chèri</em>, until we get to Salon. There +I promise you proper nourishment.”</p> + +<p>He danced the baby up and down in his arms and +made half-remembered and insane noises, which +eventually had the effect of reducing it to its original +calm stare of wonderment.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> +“<em>Voilà</em>,” said Aristide, delighted. “Now we can +advance.”</p> + +<p>He deposited it on the vacant seat, clambered +up behind the wheel, and started. But not at the +break-neck speed of twenty miles an hour. He went +slowly and carefully, his heart in his mouth at every +lurch of the afflicted automobile, fearful lest the +child should be precipitated from its slippery resting-place. +But, alas! he did not proceed far. At +the end of a kilometre the engine stopped dead. +He leaped out to see what had happened, and, after +a few perplexed and exhausting moments, remembered. +He had not even petrol to offer to the baby, +having omitted—most feather-headed of mortals—to +fill up his tank before starting, and forgotten to +bring a spare tin. There was nothing to be done +save wait patiently until another motorist should +pass by from whom he might purchase the necessary +amount of essence to carry him on to Salon. +Meanwhile the baby would go breakfastless. Aristide +clambered back to his seat, took the child on +his knees, and commiserated it profoundly. Sitting +there on his apparently home-made vehicle, in +the midst of the unearthly silence of the sullen and +barren wilderness, attired in his shaggy goat-skin +cap and coat, he resembled an up-to-date Robinson +Crusoe dandling an infant Friday.</p> + +<p>The disposal of the child at Salon would be simple. +After having it fed and tended at an hotel, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> +he would make his deposition to the police, who +would take it to the Enfants Trouvés, the department +of State which provides fathers and mothers +and happy homes for foundlings at a cost to the +country of twenty-five francs a month per foundling. +It is true that the parents so provided think +more of the twenty-five francs than they do of the +foundling. But that was the affair of the State, +not of Aristide Pujol. In the meanwhile he examined +the brat curiously. It was dressed in a coarse +calico jumper, very unclean. The striped blanket +was full of holes and smelled abominably. Some +sort of toilet appeared essential. He got down and +from his valise took what seemed necessary to the +purpose. The jumper and blanket he threw far on +the pebbly waste. The baby, stark naked for a +few moments, crowed and laughed and stretched +like a young animal, revealing itself to be a sturdy +boy about nine months old. When he seemed fit to +be clad Aristide tied him up in the lower part of +a suit of pyjamas, cutting little holes in the sides +for his tiny arms; and, further, with a view to +cheating his hunger, provided him with a shoe-horn. +The defenceless little head he managed to squeeze +into the split mouth of a woollen sock. Aristide regarded +him in triumph. The boy chuckled gleefully. +Then Aristide folded him warm in his travelling-rug +and entered into an animated conversation.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> +Now it happened that, at the most interesting +point of the talk, the baby clutched Aristide’s finger +in his little brown hand. The tiny fingers +clung strong.</p> + +<p>A queer thrill ran through the impressionable +man. The tiny fingers seemed to close round his +heart.... It was a bonny, good-natured, +gurgling scrap—and the pure eyes looked truthfully +into his soul.</p> + +<p>“Poor little wretch!” said Aristide, who, peasant’s +son that he was, knew what he was talking +about. “Poor little wretch! If you go into the +Enfants Trouvés you’ll have a devil of a time +of it.”</p> + +<p>The tiny clasp tightened. As if the babe understood, +the chuckle died from his face.</p> + +<p>“You’ll be cuffed and kicked and half starved, +while your adopted mother pockets her twenty-five +francs a month, and you’ll belong to nobody, and +wonder why the deuce you’re alive, and wish you +were dead; and, if you remember to-day, you’ll +curse me for not having had the decency to run +over you.”</p> + +<p>The clasp relaxed, puckers appeared at the corners +of the dribbling mouth, and a myriad tiny +horizontal lines of care marked the sock-capped +brow.</p> + +<p>“Poor little devil!” said Aristide. “My heart +bleeds for you, especially now that you’re dressed +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> +in my sock and pyjama, and are sucking the only +shoe-horn I ever possessed.”</p> + +<p>A welcome sound caused Aristide to leap into the +middle of the road. He looked ahead, and there, +in a cloud of dust, a thing like a torpedo came +swooping down. He held up both his arms, the +signal of a motorist in distress. The torpedo approached +with slackened speed, and stopped. It was +an evil-looking, drab, high-powered racer, and two +bears with goggles sat in the midst thereof. The +bear at the wheel raised his cap and asked courteously:—</p> + +<p>“What can we do for you, monsieur?”</p> + +<p>At that moment the baby broke into heart-rending +cries. Aristide took off his goat-skin cap and, +remaining uncovered, looked at the bear, then at the +baby, then at the bear again.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” said he, “I suppose it’s useless to +ask you whether you have any milk and a feeding-bottle?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mais dites donc!</em>” shouted the bear, furiously, +his hand on the brake. “Stop an automobile like +this on such a pretext——?”</p> + +<p>Aristide held up a protesting hand, and fixed the +bear with the irresistible roguery of his eyes.</p> + +<p>“Pardon, monsieur, I am also out of petrol. +Forgive a father’s feelings. The baby wants milk +and I want petrol, and I don’t know whose need +is the more imperative. But if you could sell me +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> +enough petrol to carry me to Salon I should be +most grateful.”</p> + +<p>The request for petrol is not to be refused. To +supply it, if possible, is the written law of motordom. +The second bear slid from his seat and extracted +a tin from the recesses of the torpedo, and +stood by while Aristide filled his tank, a process +that necessitated laying the baby on the ground. +He smiled.</p> + +<p>“You seem amused,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“<em>Parbleu!</em>” said the motorist. “You have at the +back of your auto a placard telling people to cure +their corns, and in front you carry a baby.”</p> + +<p>“That,” replied Aristide, “is easily understood. +I am the agent of the Maison Hiéropath of Marseilles, +and the baby, whom I, its father, am carrying +from a dead mother to an invalid aunt, I am +using as an advertisement. As he luckily has no +corns, I can exhibit his feet as a proof of the efficacy +of the corn-cure.”</p> + +<p>The bear laughed and joined his companion, and +the torpedo thundered away. Aristide replaced the +baby, and with a complicated arrangement of string +fastened it securely to the seat. The baby, having +ceased crying, clutched his beard as he bent over, +and “goo’d” pleasantly. The tug was at his heart-strings. +How could he give so fascinating, so valiant +a mite over to the Enfants Trouvés? Besides, +it belonged to him. Had he not in jest claimed +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> +paternity? It had given him a new importance. He +could say “<em>mon fils</em>,” just as he could say (with +equal veracity) “<em>mon automobile</em>.” A generous +thrill ran through him. He burst into a loud laugh, +clapped his hands, and danced before the delighted +babe.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon petit Jean</em>,” said he, with humorous tenderness, +“for I suppose your name is Jean; I will +rend myself in pieces before I let the Administration +board you out among the wolves. You shall +not go to the Enfants Trouvés. I myself will adopt +you, <em>mon petit Jean</em>.”</p> + +<p>As Aristide had no fixed abode whatever, the +address on his visiting-card, “213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, +Paris,” being that of an old greengrocer +woman of his acquaintance, with whom he lodged +when he visited the metropolis, there was a certain +amount of rashness in the undertaking. But when +was Aristide otherwise than rash? Had prudence +been his guiding principle through life he would not +have been selling corn-cure for the Maison Hiéropath, +and consequently would not have discovered +the child at all.</p> + +<p>In great delight at this satisfactory settlement +of little Jean’s destiny, he started the ramshackle +engine and drove triumphantly on his way. Jean, +fatigued by the emotions of the last half-hour, +slumbered peacefully.</p> + +<p>“The little angel!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> +The sun was shining when they arrived at Salon, +the gayest, the most coquettish, the most laughing +little town in Provence. It is a place all trees +and open spaces, and fountains and cafés, and +sauntering people. The only thing grim about it +is the solitary machicolated tower in the main street, +the last vestige of ancient ramparts; and even that, +close cuddled on each side by prosperous houses +with shops beneath, looks like an old, old, wrinkled +grandmother smiling amid her daintier grandchildren. +Everyone seemed to be in the open air. +Those who kept shops stood at the doorways. The +prospect augured well for the Maison Hiéropath.</p> + +<p>Aristide stopped before an hotel, disentangled +Jean, to the mild interest of the passers-by, and, +carrying him in, delivered him into the arms of +the landlady.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” he said, “this is my son. I am taking +him from his mother, who is dead, to an aunt +who is an invalid. So he is alone on my hands. He +is very hungry, and I beseech you to feed him at +once.”</p> + +<p>The motherly woman received the babe instinctively +and cast aside the travelling-rug in which he +was enveloped. Then she nearly dropped him.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu! Qu’est-ce que c’est que ça?</em>”</p> + +<p>She stared in stupefaction at the stocking-cap +and at the long flannel pyjama legs that depended +from the body of the infant, around whose neck +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> +the waist was tightly drawn. Never since the world +began had babe masqueraded in such attire. Aristide +smiled his most engaging smile.</p> + +<p>“My son’s luggage has unfortunately been lost. +His portmanteau, <em>pauvre petit</em>, was so small. A +poor widower, I did what I could. I am but a +mere man, madame.”</p> + +<p>“Evidently,” said the woman, with some asperity.</p> + +<p>Aristide took a louis from his purse. “If you +will purchase him some necessary articles of costume +while I fulfil my duties towards the Maison +Hiéropath of Marseilles, which I represent, you +will be doing me a kindness.”</p> + +<p>The landlady took the louis in a bewildered fashion. +Allowing for the baby’s portmanteau to have +gone astray, what, she asked, had become of the +clothes he must have been wearing? Aristide entered +upon a picturesque and realistic explanation. +The landlady was stout, she was stupid, she could +not grasp the fantastic.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em>” she said. “To think that there are +Christians who dress their children like this!” She +sighed exhaustively, and, holding the grotesque infant +close to her breast, disappeared indignantly to +administer the very greatly needed motherment.</p> + +<a name="img144" id="img144"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 443px;"> +<img src="images/img144.jpg" width="443" height="500" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">he demonstrated the proper application of the cure</span> +</div> + +<p>Aristide breathed a sigh of relief, and after a +well-earned <em>déjeuner</em> went forth with the car into +the Place des Arbres and prepared to ply his trade. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> +First he unfurled the Hiéropath banner, which +floated proudly in the breeze. Then on a folding +table he displayed his collection of ointment-boxes +(together with pills and a toothache-killer which +he sold on his own account) and a wax model of a +human foot on which were grafted putty corns in +every stage of callosity. As soon as half-a-dozen +idlers collected he commenced his harangue. When +their numbers increased he performed prodigies +of chiropody on the putty corns, and demonstrated +the proper application of the cure. He talked incessantly +all the while. He has told me, in the +grand manner, that this phase of his career was +distasteful to him. But I scarcely believe it. If +ever a man loved to talk, it was Aristide Pujol; +and what profession, save that of an advocate, offers +more occasion for wheedling loquacity than +that of a public vendor of quack medicaments? As +a matter of fact, he revelled in it. When he offered +a free box of the cure to the first lady who +confessed the need thereof, and a blushing wench +came forward, the rascal revelled in the opportunity +for badinage which set the good-humoured +crowd in a roar. He loved to exert his half-mesmeric +power. He had not the soul of a mountebank, +for Aristide’s soul had its high and generous dwelling-place; +but he had the puckish swiftness and +mischief of which the successful mountebank is +made. And he was a success because he treated +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> +it as an art, thinking nothing during its practice +of the material gain, laughing whole-heartedly, +like his great predecessor Tabarin of imperishable +memory, and satisfying to the full his instinct for +the dramatic. On the other hand, ever since he +started life in the brass-buttoned shell-jacket of a +<em>chasseur</em> in a Marseilles café, and dreamed dreams +of the fairytale lives of the clients who came in +accompanied by beautifully dressed ladies, he had +social ambitions—and the social status of the mountebank +is, to say the least of it, ambiguous. Ah +me! What would man be without the unattainable?</p> + +<p>Aristide pocketed his takings, struck his flag, dismantled +his table, and visited the shops of Salon +in the interests of the Maison Hiéropath. The day’s +work over, he returned to inquire for his supposititious +offspring. The landlady, all smiles, presented +him with a transmogrified Jean, cleansed +and powdered, arrayed in the smug panoply of +bourgeois babyhood. Shoes with a pompon adorned +his feet, and a rakish cap decorated with white +satin ribbons crowned his head. He also wore +an embroidered frock and a pelisse trimmed +with rabbit-fur. Jean grinned and dribbled +self-consciously, and showed his two little teeth +to the proudest father in the world. The +landlady invited the happy parent into her little +dark parlour beyond the office, and there exhibited +a parcel containing garments and implements whose +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> +use was a mystery to Aristide. She also demanded +the greater part of another louis. Aristide began +to learn that fatherhood is expensive. But what +did it matter?</p> + +<p>After all, here was a babe equipped to face the +exigencies of a censorious world; in looks and apparel +a credit to any father. As the afternoon was +fine, and as it seemed a pity to waste satin and +rabbit-fur on the murky interior of the hotel, Aristide +borrowed a perambulator from the landlady, +and, joyous as a schoolboy, wheeled the splendid +infant through the sunny avenues of Salon.</p> + +<p>That evening a bed was made up for the child +in Aristide’s room, which, until its master retired +for the night, was haunted by the landlady, the +chambermaids and all the kitchen wenches in the +hotel. Aristide had to turn them out and lock his +door.</p> + +<p>“This is excellent,” said he, apostrophizing the +thoroughly fed, washed, and now sleeping child. +“This is superb. As in every hotel there are women, +and as every woman thinks she can be a much better +mother than I, so in every hotel we visit we +shall find a staff of trained and enthusiastic nurses. +Jean, you will live like a little <em>coq en pâté</em>.”</p> + +<p>The night passed amid various excursions on +the part of Aristide and alarms on the part of Jean. +Sometimes the child lay so still that Aristide arose +to see whether he was alive. Sometimes he gave +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> +such proofs of vitality that Aristide, in terror lest +he should awaken the whole hotel, walked him about +the room chanting lullabies. This was in accordance +with Jean’s views on luxury. He “goo’d” +with joy. When Aristide put him back to bed he +howled. Aristide snatched him up and he “goo’d” +again. At last Aristide fed him desperately, dandled +him eventually to sleep, and returned to an +excited pillow. It is a fearsome thing for a man +to be left alone in the dead of night with a young +baby.</p> + +<p>“I’ll get used to it,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>The next morning he purchased a basket, which +he lashed ingeniously on the left-hand seat of the +car, and a cushion, which he fitted into the basket. +The berth prepared, he deposited the sumptuously-apparelled +Jean therein and drove away, amid the +perplexed benisons of the landlady and her satellites.</p> + +<p>Thus began the oddest Odyssey on which ever +mortals embarked. The man with the automobile, +the corn-cure, and the baby grew to be legendary in +the villages of Provence. When the days were +fine, Jean in his basket assisted at the dramatic +performance in the market-place. Becoming a magnet +for the women, and being of a good-humoured +and rollicking nature, he helped on the sale of the +cure prodigiously. He earned his keep, as Aristide +declared in exultation. Soon Aristide formed +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> +a collection of his tricks and doings wherewith he +would entertain the chance acquaintances of his +vagabondage. To a permanent companion he +would have grown insufferable. He invented him +a career from the day of his birth, chronicled the +coming of the first tooth, wept over the demise of +the fictitious mother, and, in his imaginative way, +convinced himself of his fatherhood. And every +day the child crept deeper into the man’s sunny +heart.</p> + +<a name="img150" id="img150"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 355px;"> +<img src="images/img150.jpg" width="355" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">it is a fearsome thing for a man to be left alone in the +dead of night with a young baby</span> +</div> + +<p>Together they had many wanderings and many +adventures. The wheezy, crazy mechanism of the +car went to bits in unexpected places. They tobogganed +down hills without a brake at the imminent +peril of their lives. They suffered the indignity +of being towed by wine-wagons. They spent hours +by the wayside while Aristide took her to pieces +and, sometimes with the help of a passing motorist, +put her together again. Sometimes, too, an +inn boasted no landlady, only a dishevelled and +over-driven chambermaid, who refused to wash +Jean. Aristide washed and powdered Jean himself, +the landlord lounging by, pipe in mouth, administering +suggestions. Once Jean grew ill, and +Aristide in terror summoned the doctor, who told +him that he had filled the child up with milk to +bursting-point. Yet, in spite of heterogeneous +nursing and exposure to sun and rain and piercing +mistral, Jean throve exceedingly, and, to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> +Aristide’s delight, began to cut another tooth. The vain +man began to regard himself as an expert in denticulture.</p> + +<p>At the end of a fairly-wide circuit, Aristide, with +empty store-boxes and pleasantly-full pockets, arrived +at the little town of Aix-en-Provence. He +had arrived there not without difficulty. On the +outskirts the car, which had been coaxed reluctantly +along for many weary kilometres, had +groaned, rattled, whirred, given a couple of convulsive +leaps, and stood stock-still. This was one of +her pretty ways. He was used to them, and hitherto +he had been able to wheedle her into resumed +motion. But this time, with all his cunning and +perspiration, he could not induce another throb in +the tired engines. A friendly motorist towed them +to the Hôtel de Paris in the Cours Mirabeau. Having +arranged for his room and given Jean in charge +of the landlady, he procured some helping hands, +and pushed the car to the nearest garage. There he +gave orders for the car to be put into running condition +for the following morning, and returned to +the hotel.</p> + +<p>He found Jean in the vestibule, sprawling sultanesquely +on the landlady’s lap, the centre of an +admiring circle which consisted of two little girls in +pigtails, an ancient peasant-woman, and two English +ladies of obvious but graceful spinsterhood.</p> + +<p>“Here is the father,” said the landlady.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> +He had already explained Jean to the startled +woman—landladies were always startled at Jean’s +unconventional advent. “Madame,” he had said, +according to rigid formula, “this is my son. I am +taking him from his mother, who is dead, to an +aunt who is an invalid, so he is alone on my hands. +I beseech you to let some kind woman attend to +his necessities.”</p> + +<p>There was no need for further explanation. +Aristide, thus introduced, bowed politely, removed +his Crusoe cap, and smiled luminously at the assembled +women. They resumed their antiphonal +chorus of worship. The brown, merry, friendly +brat had something of Aristide’s personal charm. +He had a bubble and a “goo” for everyone. Aristide +looked on in great delight. Jean was a son to +be proud of.</p> + +<p>“<em>Ah! qu’il est fort—fort comme un Turc.</em>”</p> + +<p>“<em>Regardez ses dents.</em>”</p> + +<p>“The darling thing!”</p> + +<p>“<em>Il est</em>—oh, dear!—<em>il est ravissante!</em>”—with a +disastrous plunge into gender.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens! il rit. C’est moi qui le fais rire.</em>”</p> + +<p>“To think,” said the younger Englishwoman to +her sister, “of this wee mite travelling about in an +open motor!”</p> + +<p>“He’s having the time of his life. He enjoys +it as much as I do,” said Aristide, in his excellent +English.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> +The lady started. She was a well-bred, good-humoured +woman in the early thirties, stout, with +reddish hair, and irregular though comely features. +Her sister was thin, faded, sandy, and kind-looking.</p> + +<p>“I thought you were French,” she said, apologetically.</p> + +<p>“So I am,” replied Aristide. “Provençal of +Provence, Méridional of the Midi, Marseillais of +Marseilles.”</p> + +<p>“But you talk English perfectly.”</p> + +<p>“I’ve lived in your beautiful country,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“You have the bonniest boy,” said the elder lady. +“How old is he?”</p> + +<p>“Nine months, three weeks and a day,” said +Aristide, promptly.</p> + +<p>The younger lady bent over the miraculous infant.</p> + +<p>“Can I take him? <em>Est-ce que je puis</em>—oh, dear!” +She turned a whimsical face to Aristide.</p> + +<p>He translated. The landlady surrendered the +babe. The lady danced him with the spinster’s +charming awkwardness, yet with instinctive feminine +security, about the hall, while the little girls in +pigtails, daughters of the house, followed like adoratory +angels in an altar-piece, and the old peasant-woman +looked benignly on, a myriad-wrinkled St. +Elizabeth. Aristide had seen Jean dandled by +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> +dozens of women during their brief comradeship; he +had thought little of it, as it was the natural thing +for women to do; but when this sweet English lady +mothered Jean it seemed to matter a great deal. +She lifted Jean and himself to a higher plane. Her +touch was a consecration.</p> + +<p>It was the hour of the day when infants of nine +months should be washed and put to bed. The +landlady, announcing the fact, held out her arms. +Jean clung to his English nurse, who played the +fascinating game of pretending to eat his hand. +The landlady had not that accomplishment. She +was dull and practical.</p> + +<p>“Come and be washed,” she said.</p> + +<p>“Oh, do let me come, too,” cried the English +lady.</p> + +<p>“<em>Bien volontiers, mademoiselle</em>,” said the other. +“<em>C’est par ici.</em>”</p> + +<p>The English lady held Jean out for the paternal +good-night. Aristide kissed the child in her arms. +The action brought about, for the moment, a curious +and sweet intimacy.</p> + +<p>“My sister is passionately fond of children,” said +the elder lady, in smiling apology.</p> + +<p>“And you?”</p> + +<p>“I, too. But Anne—my sister—will not let me +have a chance when she is by.”</p> + +<p>After dinner Aristide went up, as usual, to his +room to see that Jean was alive, painless, and asleep. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> +Finding him awake, he sat by his side and, with +the earnestness of a nursery-maid, patted him off +to slumber. Then he crept out on tiptoe and went +downstairs. Outside the hotel he came upon the +two sisters sitting on a bench and drinking coffee. +The night was fine, the terraces of the neighbouring +cafés were filled with people, and all the +life of Aix not at the cafés promenaded up and +down the wide and pleasant avenue. The ladies +smiled. How was the boy? He gave the latest +news. Permission to join them at their coffee was +graciously given. A waiter brought a chair and +he sat down. Conversation drifted from the baby +to general topics. The ladies told the simple story +of their tour. They had been to Nice and Marseilles, +and they were going on the next day to +Avignon. They also told their name—Honeywood. +He gathered that the elder was Janet, the younger +Anne. They lived at Chislehurst when they were +in England, and often came up to London to attend +the Queen’s Hall concerts and the dramatic performances +at His Majesty’s Theatre. As guileless, +though as self-reliant, gentlewomen as sequestered +England could produce. Aristide, impressionable +and responsive, fell at once into the key of their +talk. He has told me that their society produced +on him the effect of the cool hands of saints against +his cheek.</p> + +<p>At last the conversation inevitably returned to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> +Jean. The landlady had related the tragic history +of the dead mother and the invalid aunt. They +deplored the orphaned state of the precious babe. +For he was precious, they declared. Miss Anne +had taken him to her heart.</p> + +<p>“If only you had seen him in his bath, Janet!”</p> + +<p>She turned to Aristide. “I’m afraid,” she said, +very softly, hesitating a little—“I’m afraid this +must be a sad journey for you.”</p> + +<p>He made a wry mouth. The sympathy was so +sincere, so womanly. That which was generous +in him revolted against acceptance.</p> + +<p>“Mademoiselle,” said he, “I can play a farce +with landladies—it happens to be convenient—in +fact, necessary. But with you—no. You are different. +Jean is not my child, and who his parents +are I’ve not the remotest idea.”</p> + +<p>“Not your child?” They looked at him incredulously.</p> + +<p>“I will tell you—in confidence,” said he.</p> + +<p>Jean’s history was related in all its picturesque +details; the horrors of the life of an <em>enfant trouvé</em> +luridly depicted. The sisters listened with tears +in their foolish eyes. Behind the tears Anne’s grew +bright. When he had finished she stretched out her +hand impulsively.</p> + +<p>“Oh, I call it splendid of you!”</p> + +<p>He took the hand and, in his graceful French +fashion, touched it with his lips. She flushed, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> +having expected, in her English way, that he would +grasp it.</p> + +<p>“Your commendation, mademoiselle, is sweet to +hear,” said he.</p> + +<p>“I hope he will grow up to be a true comfort to +you, M. Pujol,” said Miss Janet.</p> + +<p>“I can understand a woman doing what you’ve +done, but scarcely a man,” said Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>“But, dear mademoiselle,” cried Aristide, with a +large gesture, “cannot a man have his heart touched, +his—his—<em>ses entrailles, enfin</em>—stirred by baby fingers? +Why should love of the helpless and the +innocent be denied him?”</p> + +<p>“Why, indeed?” said Miss Janet.</p> + +<p>Miss Anne said, humbly: “I only meant that +your devotion to Jean was all the more beautiful, +M. Pujol.”</p> + +<p>Soon after this they parted, the night air having +grown chill. Both ladies shook hands with +him warmly.</p> + +<p>Anne’s hand lingered the fraction of a second +longer in his than Janet’s. She had seen Jean in +his bath.</p> + +<p>Aristide wandered down the gay avenue into the +open road and looked at the stars, reading in their +splendour a brilliant destiny for Jean. He felt, in +his sensitive way, that the two sweet-souled Englishwomen +had deepened and sanctified his love for +Jean. When he returned to the hotel he kissed his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> +incongruous room-mate with the gentleness of a +woman.</p> + +<p>In the morning he went round to the garage. The +foreman mechanician advanced to meet him.</p> + +<p>“Well?”</p> + +<p>“There is nothing to be done, monsieur.”</p> + +<p>“What do you mean by ‘nothing to be done’?” +asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>The other shrugged his sturdy shoulders.</p> + +<p>“She is worn out. She needs new carburation, +new cylinders, new water-circulation, new lubrication, +new valves, new brakes, new ignition, new +gears, new bolts, new nuts, new everything. In +short, she is not repairable.”</p> + +<p>Aristide listened in incredulous amazement. His +automobile, his wonderful, beautiful, clashing, +dashing automobile unrepairable! It was impossible. +But a quarter of an hour’s demonstration by +the foreman convinced him. The car was dead. +The engine would never whir again. All the petrol +in the world would not stimulate her into life. +Never again would he sit behind that wheel rejoicing +in the insolence of speed. The car, which, +in spite of her manifold infirmities, he had fondly +imagined to be immortal, had run her last course. +Aristide felt faint.</p> + +<p>“And there is nothing to be done?”</p> + +<p>“Nothing, monsieur. Fifty francs is all that she +is worth.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> +“At any rate,” said Aristide, “send the basket to +the Hôtel de Paris.”</p> + +<p>He went out of the garage like a man in a dream. +At the door he turned to take a last look at the +Pride of his Life. Her stern was towards him, +and all he saw of her was the ironical legend, “Cure +your Corns.”</p> + +<p>At the hotel he found the bench outside occupied +chiefly by Jean. One of the little girls in pigtails +was holding him, while Miss Anne administered +the feeding-bottle. Provincial France is the happiest +country in the world—in that you can live +your intimate, domestic life in public, and nobody +heeds.</p> + +<p>“I hope you’ve not come to tell Jean to boot +and saddle,” said Miss Anne, a smile on her +roughly-hewn, comely face.</p> + +<p>“Alas!” said Aristide, cheered by the charming +spectacle before him. “I don’t know when we can +get away. My auto has broken down hopelessly. +I ought to go at once to my firm in Marseilles”—he +spoke as if he were a partner in the Maison +Hiéropath—“but I don’t quite know what to do +with Jean.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, I’ll look after Jean.”</p> + +<p>“But you said you were leaving for Avignon +to-day.”</p> + +<a name="img162" id="img162"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 463px;"> +<img src="images/img162.jpg" width="463" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">one of the little girls in pigtails was holding him, while +miss anne administered the feeding-bottle</span> +</div> + +<p>She laughed, holding the feeding-bottle. “The +Palace of the Popes has been standing for six +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span> +centuries, and it will be still standing to-morrow; +whereas Jean——” Here Jean, for some reason +known to himself, grinned wet and wide. “Isn’t +he the most fascinating thing of the twentieth century?” +she cried, logically inconsequential, like +most of her sex. “You go to Marseilles, M. +Pujol.”</p> + +<p>So Aristide took the train to Marseilles—a half-hour’s +journey—and in a quarter of the city resembling +a fusion of Jarrow, an unfashionable +part of St. Louis, and a brimstone-manufacturing +suburb of Gehenna, he interviewed the high authorities +of the Maison Hiéropath. His cajolery could +lead men into diverse lunacies, but it could not +induce the hard-bitten manufacturer of quack remedies +to provide a brand-new automobile for his +personal convenience. The old auto had broken +down. The manufacturer shrugged his shoulders. +The mystery was that it had lasted as long as it +did. He had expected it to explode the first day. +The idea had originally been that of the junior +partner, a scatter-brained youth whom at times they +humoured. Meanwhile, there being no beplacarded +and beflagged automobile, there could be no advertisement; +therefore they had no further use for +M. Pujol’s services.</p> + +<p>“Good,” said Aristide, when he reached the evil +thoroughfare. “It was a degraded occupation, and +I am glad I am out of it. Meanwhile, here is +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> +Marseilles before me, and it will be astonishing +if I do not find some fresh road to fortune before +the day is out.”</p> + +<p>Aristide tramped and tramped all day through +the streets of Marseilles, but the road he sought +he did not find. He returned to Aix in dire perplexity. +He was used to finding himself suddenly +cut off from the means of livelihood. It was his +chronic state of being. His gay resourcefulness +had always carried him through. But then there +had been only himself to think of. Now there +was Jean. For the first time for many years the +dragon-fly’s wings grew limp. Jean—what could +he do with Jean?</p> + +<p>Jean had already gone to sleep when he arrived. +All day he had been as good as gold, so Miss Anne +declared. For herself, she had spent the happiest +day of her life.</p> + +<p>“I don’t wonder at your being devoted to him, M. +Pujol,” she said. “He has the most loving ways +of any baby I ever met.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, mademoiselle,” replied Aristide, with an +unaccustomed huskiness in his voice, “I am devoted +to him. It may seem odd for a man to be wrapped +up in a baby of nine months old—but—it’s like +that. It’s true. <em>Je l’adore de tout mon cœur, de +tout mon être</em>,” he cried, in a sudden gust of passion.</p> + +<p>Miss Anne smiled kindly, not dreaming of his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> +perplexity, amused by his Southern warmth. Miss +Janet joined them in the hall. They went in to +dinner, Aristide sitting at the central <em>table d’hôte</em>, +the ladies at a little table by themselves. After +dinner they met again outside the hotel, and drank +coffee and talked the evening away. He was not +as bright a companion as on the night before. His +gaiety was forced. He talked about everything else +in the world but Jean. The temptation to pour his +financial troubles into the sympathetic ears of these +two dear women he resisted. They regarded him +as on a social equality, as a man of means engaged +in some sort of business at Marseilles; they +had invited him to bring Jean to see them at Chislehurst +when he should happen to be in England +again. Pride forbade him to confess himself a +homeless, penniless vagabond. The exquisite +charm of their frank intimacy would be broken. +Besides, what could they do?</p> + +<p>They retired early. Aristide again sought the +message of the stars; but the sky was clouded over, +and soon a fine rain began to fall. A bock at a +café brought him neither comfort nor inspiration. +He returned to the hotel, and, eluding a gossip-seeking +landlady, went up to his room.</p> + +<p>What could be done? Neither the sleeping babe +nor himself could offer any suggestion. One thing +was grimly inevitable. He and Jean must part. +To carry him about like an infant prince in an +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> +automobile had, after all, been a simple matter; to +drag him through Heaven knew what hardships in +his makeshift existence was impossible. In his +childlike, impulsive fashion he had not thought of +the future when he adopted Jean. Aristide always +regarded the fortune of the moment as if it would +last forever. Past deceptions never affected his +incurable optimism. Now Jean and he must part. +Aristide felt that the end of the world had come. +His pacing to and fro awoke the child, who demanded, +in his own way, the soothing rocking of +his father’s arms. There he bubbled and “goo’d” +till Aristide’s heart nearly broke.</p> + +<p>“What can I do with you, <em>mon petit Jean</em>?”</p> + +<p>The Enfants Trouvés, after all? He thought of +it with a shudder.</p> + +<p>The child asleep again, he laid it on its bed, and +then sat far into the night thinking barrenly. At +last one of his sudden gleams of inspiration illuminated +his mind. It was the only way. He took out +his watch. It was four o’clock. What had to be +done must be done swiftly.</p> + +<p>In the travelling-basket, which had been sent +from the garage, he placed a pillow, and on to the +pillow he transferred with breathless care the sleeping +Jean, and wrapped him up snug and warm in +bedclothes. Then he folded the tiny day-garments +that lay on a chair, collected the little odds and ends +belonging to the child, took from his valise the rest +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> +of Jean’s little wardrobe, and laid them at the +foot of the basket. The most miserable man +in France then counted up his money, divided +it into two parts, and wrote a hasty letter, +which, with the bundle of notes, he enclosed +in an envelope.</p> + +<p>“My little Jean,” said he, laying the envelope on +the child’s breast. “Here is a little more than half +my fortune. Half is for yourself and the little +more to pay your wretched father’s hotel bill. +Good-bye, my little Jean. <em>Je t’aime bien, tu sais</em>—and +don’t reproach me.”</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>About an hour afterwards Miss Anne awoke and +listened, and in a moment or two Miss Janet awoke +also.</p> + +<p>“Janet, do you hear that?”</p> + +<p>“It’s a child crying. It’s just outside the door.”</p> + +<p>“It sounds like Jean.”</p> + +<p>“Nonsense, my dear!”</p> + +<p>But Anne switched on the light and went to see +for herself; and there, in the tiny anteroom that +separated the bedroom from the corridor, she found +the basket—a new Pharoah’s daughter before a +new little Moses in the bulrushes. In bewilderment +she brought the ark into the room, and read the +letter addressed to Janet and herself. She burst +into tears. All she said was:—</p> + +<p>“Oh, Janet, why couldn’t he have told us?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> +And then she fell to hugging the child to her +bosom.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile Aristide Pujol, clad in his goat-skin +cap and coat, valise in hand, was plodding through +the rain in search of the elusive phantom, Fortune; +gloriously certain that he had assured Jean’s future, +yet with such a heartache as he had never had +in his life before.</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="V" id="V"></a>V</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE PIG’S HEAD</strong></p> + + +<p>Once upon a time Aristide Pujol found himself +standing outside his Paris residence, +No. 213 <em>bis</em>, Rue Saint Honoré, without a +penny in the world. His last sou had gone to +Madame Bidoux, who kept a small green grocer’s +shop at No. 213 <em>bis</em> and rented a ridiculously small +back room for a ridiculously small weekly sum to +Aristide whenever he honoured the French capital +with his presence. During his absence she forwarded +him such letters as might arrive for him; +and as this was his only permanent address, and as +he let Madame Bidoux know his whereabouts only +at vague intervals of time, the transaction of business +with Aristide Pujol, “Agent, No. 213 <em>bis</em>, Rue +Saint Honoré, Paris,” by correspondence was peculiarly +difficult.</p> + +<p>He had made Madame Bidoux’s acquaintance in +the dim past; and he had made it in his usual direct +and electric manner. Happening to walk down the +Rue Saint Honoré, he had come upon tragedy. +Madame Bidoux, fat, red of face, tearful of eye +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> +and strident of voice, held in her arms a little +mongrel dog—her own precious possession—which +had just been run over in the street, and the two +of them filled the air with wailings and vociferation. +Aristide uncovered his head, as though he were +about to address a duchess, and smiled at her +engagingly.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” said he, “I perceive that your little +dog has a broken leg. As I know all about dogs, +I will, with your permission, set the limb, put it +into splints and guarantee a perfect cure. Needless +to say, I make no charge for my services.”</p> + +<p>Snatching the dog from the arms of the fascinated +woman, he darted in his dragon-fly fashion +into the shop, gave a hundred orders to a stupefied +assistant, and—to cut short a story which Aristide +told me with great wealth of detail—mended the +precious dog and gained Madame Bidoux’s eternal +gratitude. For Madame Bidoux the world held no +more remarkable man than Aristide Pujol; and for +Aristide the world held no more devoted friend +than Madame Bidoux. Many a succulent meal, at +the widow’s expense—never more enjoyable than +in summer time when she set a little iron table and +a couple of iron chairs on the pavement outside the +shop—had saved him from starvation; and many a +gewgaw sent from London or Marseilles or other +such remote latitudes filled her heart with pride. +Since my acquaintance with Aristide I myself have +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> +called on this excellent woman, and I hope I have +won her esteem, though I have never had the +honour of eating pig’s trotters and chou-croûte with +her on the pavement of the Rue Saint Honoré. +It is an honour from which, being an unassuming +man, I shrink.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately Madame Bidoux has nothing +further to do with the story I am about to relate, +save in one respect:—</p> + +<p>There came a day—it was a bleak day in November, +when Madame Bidoux’s temporary financial +difficulties happened to coincide with Aristide’s. +To him, unsuspicious of coincidence, she confided +her troubles. He emptied the meagre contents of +his purse into her hand.</p> + +<p>“Madame Bidoux,” said he with a flourish, and +the air of a prince, “why didn’t you tell me before?” +and without waiting for her blessing he went out +penniless into the street.</p> + +<p>Aristide was never happier than when he had +not a penny piece in the world. He believed, I +fancy, in a dim sort of way, in God and the Virgin +and Holy Water and the Pope; but the faith that +thrilled him to exaltation was his faith in the inevitable +happening of the unexpected. He marched +to meet it with the throbbing pulses of a soldier +rushing to victory or a saint to martyrdom. He +walked up the Rue Saint Honoré, the Rue de la +Paix, along the Grands Boulevards, smiling on a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span> +world which teemed with unexpectednesses, until +he reached a café on the Boulevard des Bonnes +Filles de Calvaire. Here he was arrested by Fate, +in the form of a battered man in black, who, springing +from the solitary frostiness of the terrace, threw +his arms about him and kissed him on both cheeks.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mais, c’est toi, Pujol!</em>”</p> + +<p>“<em>C’est toi, Roulard!</em>”</p> + +<p>Roulard dragged Aristide to his frosty table and +ordered drinks. Roulard had played the trumpet +in the regimental band in which Aristide had played +the kettle drum. During their military service they +had been inseparables. Since those happy and ear-splitting +days they had not met. They looked at +each other and laughed and thumped each other’s +shoulders.</p> + +<p>“<em>Ce vieux Roulard!</em>”</p> + +<p>“<em>Ce sacré Pujol.</em>”</p> + +<p>“And what are you doing?” asked Aristide, after +the first explosions of astonishment and reminiscence.</p> + +<p>A cloud overspread the battered man’s features. +He had a wife and five children and played in +theatre orchestras. At the present time he was +trombone in the “Tournée Gulland,” a touring opera +company. It was not gay for a sensitive artist +like him, and the trombone gave one a thirst which +it took half a week’s salary to satisfy. <em>Mais enfin, +que veux-tu?</em> It was life, a dog’s life, but life was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> +like that. Aristide, he supposed, was making a +fortune. Aristide threw back his head, and laughed +at the exquisite humour of the hypothesis, and gaily +disclosed his Micawberish situation. Roulard sat +for a while thoughtful and silent. Presently a ray +of inspiration dispelled the cloud from the features +of the battered man.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens, mon vieux</em>,” said he, “I have an idea.”</p> + +<p>It was an idea worthy of Aristide’s consideration. +The drum of the Tournée Gulland had been dismissed +for drunkenness. The vacancy had not been +filled. Various executants who had drummed on +approval—this being an out-week of the tour—had +driven the chef d’orchestre to the verge of homicidal +mania. Why should not Aristide, past master +in drumming, find an honourable position in the +orchestra of the Tournée Gulland?</p> + +<p>Aristide’s eyes sparkled, his fingers itched for +the drumsticks, he started to his feet.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon vieux Roulard!</em>” he cried, “you have saved +my life. More than that, you have resuscitated an +artist. Yes, an artist. <em>Sacré nom de Dieu!</em> Take +me to this chef d’orchestre.”</p> + +<p>So Roulard, when the hour of rehearsal drew +nigh, conducted Aristide to the murky recesses of +a dirty little theatre in the Batignolles, where Aristide +performed such prodigies of repercussion that +he was forthwith engaged to play the drum, the +kettle-drum, the triangle, the cymbals, the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> +castagnettes and the tambourine, in the orchestra of the +Tournée Gulland at the dazzling salary of thirty +francs a week.</p> + +<p>To tell how Aristide drummed and cymballed +the progress of Les Huguenots, Carmen, La Juive, +La Fille de Madame Angot and L’Arlésienne +through France would mean the rewriting of a +“Capitaine Fracasse.” To hear the creature talk +about it makes my mouth as a brick kiln and +my flesh as that of a goose. He was the +Adonis, the Apollo, the Don Juan, the Irresistible +of the Tournée. Fled truculent bass and haughty +tenor before him; from diva to moustachioed contralto +in the chorus, all the ladies breathlessly +watched for the fall of his handkerchief; he was +recognized, in fact, as a devil of a fellow. But in +spite of these triumphs, the manipulation of the +drum, kettle-drum, triangle, cymbals, castagnettes +and tambourine, which at first had given him intense +and childish delight, at last became invested +with a mechanical monotony that almost drove him +mad. All day long the thought of the ill-lit corner, +on the extreme right of the orchestra, garnished +with the accursed instruments of noise to which +duty would compel him at eight o’clock in the evening +hung over him like a hideous doom. Sweet +singers of the female sex were powerless to console. +He passed them by, and haughty tenor and +swaggering basso again took heart of grace.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> +“<em>Mais, mon Dieu, c’est le métier!</em>” expostulated +Roulard.</p> + +<p>“<em>Sale métier!</em>” cried Aristide, who was as much +fitted for the merciless routine of a theatre orchestra +as a quagga for the shafts of an omnibus. +“A beast of a trade! One is no longer a man. +One is just an automatic system of fog-signals!”</p> + +<p>In this depraved state of mind he arrived at +Perpignan, where that befell him which I am about +to relate.</p> + +<p>Now, Perpignan is the last town of France on +the Gulf of Lions, a few miles from the Spanish +border. From it you can see the great white +monster of Le Canigou, the pride of the Eastern +Pyrenees, far, far away, blocking up the valley +of the Tet, which flows sluggishly past the little +town. The Quai Sadi-Carnot (is there a provincial +town in France which has not a <em>something</em> Sadi-Carnot +in it?) is on the left bank of the Tet; at +one end is the modern Place Arago, at the other +Le Castillet, a round, castellated red-brick fortress +with curiously long and deep machicolations of +the 14th century with some modern additions of +Louis XI, who also built the adjoining Porte Notre +Dame which gives access to the city. Between the +Castillet and the Place Arago, the Quai Sadi-Carnot +is the site of the Prefecture, the Grand Hôtel, +various villas and other resorts of the aristocracy. +Any little street off it will lead you into the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> +seething centre of Perpignan life—the Place de la Loge, +which is a great block of old buildings surrounded +on its four sides by narrow streets of shops, cafés, +private houses, all with balconies and jalousies, all +cramped, crumbling, Spanish, picturesque. The +oldest of this conglomerate block is a corner building, +the Loge de Mer, a thirteenth century palace, +the cloth exchange in the glorious days when +Perpignan was a seaport and its merchant princes +traded with Sultans and Doges and such-like magnificoes +of the Mediterranean. But nowadays its +glory has departed. Below the great gothic windows +spreads the awning of a café, which takes up +all the ground floor. Hugging it tight is the +Mairie, and hugging that, the Hôtel de Ville. +Hither does every soul in the place, at some hour +or other of the day, inevitably gravitate. Lawyers +and clients, doctors and patients, merchants, lovers, +soldiers, market-women, loafers, horses, dogs, +wagons, all crowd in a noisy medley the narrow +cobble-paved streets around the Loge. Of course +there are other streets, tortuous, odorous and cool, +intersecting the old town, and there are various +open spaces, one of which is the broad market +square on one side flanked by the Théâtre Municipal.</p> + +<p>From the theatre Aristide Pujol issued one morning +after rehearsal, and, leaving his colleagues, including +the ever-thirsty Roulard, to refresh +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> +themselves at a humble café hard by, went forth in +search of distraction. He idled about the Place de +la Loge, passed the time of day with a café waiter +until the latter, with a disconcerting “<em>Voilà! Voilà!</em>” +darted off to attend to a customer, and then strolled +through the Porte Notre Dame onto the Quai Sadi-Carnot. +There a familiar sound met his ears—the +roll of a drum followed by an incantation in a +quavering, high-pitched voice. It was the Town +Crier, with whom, as with a brother artist, he had +picked acquaintance the day before.</p> + +<p>They met by the parapet of the Quai, just as +Père Bracasse had come to the end of his incantation. +The old man, grizzled, tanned and seamed, +leant weakly against the parapet.</p> + +<p>“How goes it, Père Bracasse?”</p> + +<p>“Alas, mon bon Monsieur, it goes from bad to +worse,” sighed the old man. “I am at the end +of my strength. My voice has gone and the accursed +rheumatism in my shoulder gives me +atrocious pain whenever I beat the drum.”</p> + +<p>“How much more of your round have you to +go?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I have only just begun,” said Père Bracasse.</p> + +<p>The Southern sun shone from a cloudless sky; a +light, keen wind blowing from the distant snow-clad +Canigou set the blood tingling. A lunatic idea +flashed through Aristide’s mind. He whipped the +drum strap over the old man’s head.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> +“Père Bracasse,” said he, “you are suffering from +rheumatism, bronchitis, fever and corns, and you +must go home to bed. I will finish your round for +you. Listen,” and he beat such a tattoo as Père +Bracasse had never accomplished in his life. +“Where are your words?”</p> + +<p>The old man, too weary to resist and fascinated +by Aristide’s laughing eyes, handed him a dirty +piece of paper. Aristide read, played a magnificent +roll and proclaimed in a clarion voice that a gold +bracelet having been lost on Sunday afternoon in +the Avenue des Platanes, whoever would deposit it +at the Mairie would receive a reward.</p> + +<p>“That’s all?” he enquired.</p> + +<p>“That’s all,” said Père Bracasse. “I live in the +Rue Petite-de-la-Réal, No. 4, and you will +bring me back the drum when you have +finished.”</p> + +<p>Aristide darted off like a dragon-fly in the sunshine, +as happy as a child with a new toy. Here he +could play the drum to his heart’s content with no +score or conductor’s bâton to worry him. He was +also the one and only personage in the drama, concentrating +on himself the attention of the audience. +He pitied poor Roulard, who could never have such +an opportunity with his trombone....</p> + +<p>The effect of his drumming before the Café de +la Loge was electric. Shopkeepers ran out of their +shops, housewives craned over their balconies to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> +listen to him. By the time he had threaded the busy +strip of the town and emerged on to the Place +Arago he had collected an admiring train of +urchins. On the Place Arago he halted on the +fringe of a crowd surrounding a cheap-jack whose +vociferations he drowned in a roll of thunder. He +drummed and drummed till he became the centre +of the throng. Then he proclaimed the bracelet. +He had not enjoyed himself so much since he left +Paris.</p> + +<p>He was striding away, merry-eyed and happy, +followed by his satellites when a prosperous-looking +gentleman with a very red face, a prosperous +roll of fat above the back of his collar, and +the ribbon of the Legion of Honour in his buttonhole, +descending the steps of the great glass-covered +café commanding the Place, hurried up and laid +his finger on his arm.</p> + +<p>“Pardon, my friend,” said he, “what are you +doing there?”</p> + +<p>“You shall hear, monsieur,” replied Aristide, +clutching the drumsticks.</p> + +<p>“For the love of Heaven!” cried the other hastily +interrupting. “Tell me what are you doing?”</p> + +<p>“I am crying the loss of a bracelet, monsieur!”</p> + +<p>“But who are you?”</p> + +<p>“I am Aristide Pujol, and I play the drum, +kettle-drum, triangle, cymbals, castagnettes and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> +tambourine in the orchestra of the Tournée Gulland. +And now, in my turn, may I ask to whom +I have the honour of speaking?”</p> + +<p>“I am the Mayor of Perpignan.”</p> + +<p>Aristide raised his hat politely. “I hope to have +the pleasure,” said he, “of Monsieur le Maire’s better +acquaintance.”</p> + +<p>The Mayor, attracted by the rascal’s guileless +mockery, laughed.</p> + +<p>“You will, my friend, if you go on playing that +drum. You are not the Town Crier.”</p> + +<p>Aristide explained. Père Bracasse was ill, suffering +from rheumatism, bronchitis, fever and +corns. He was replacing him. The Mayor retorted +that Père Bracasse being a municipal functionary +could not transmit his functions except +through the Administration. Monsieur Pujol must +desist from drumming and crying. Aristide bowed +to authority and unstrung his drum.</p> + +<p>“But I was enjoying myself so much, Monsieur +le Maire. You have spoiled my day,” said he.</p> + +<p>The Mayor laughed again. There was an irresistible +charm and roguishness about the fellow, with +his intelligent oval face, black Vandyke beard and +magically luminous eyes.</p> + +<p>“I should have thought you had enough of drums +in your orchestra.”</p> + +<p>“Ah! there I am cramped!” cried Aristide. “I +have it in horror, in detestation. Here I am free. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> +I can give vent to all the aspirations of my +soul!”</p> + +<p>The Mayor mechanically moved from the spot +where they had been standing. Aristide, embroidering +his theme, mechanically accompanied him; +and, such is democratic France, and also such was +the magnetic, Ancient Mariner-like power of Aristide—did +not I, myself, on my first meeting with +him at Aigues-Mortes fall helplessly under the spell—that, +in a few moments, the amateur Town Crier +and the Mayor were walking together, side by side, +along the Quai Sadi-Carnot, engaged in amiable +converse. Aristide told the Mayor the story of his +life—or such incidents of it as were meet for +Mayoral ears—and when they parted—the Mayor +to lunch, Aristide to yield up the interdicted drum +to Père Bracasse—they shook hands warmly and +mutually expressed the wish that they would soon +meet again.</p> + +<p>They met again; Aristide saw to that. They met +again that very afternoon in the café on the Place +Arago. When Aristide entered he saw the Mayor +seated at a table in the company of another prosperous, +red-ribboned gentleman. Aristide saluted +politely and addressed the Mayor. The Mayor saluted +and presented him to Monsieur Quérin, the +President of the Syndicat d’Initiative of the town +of Perpignan. Monsieur Quérin saluted and declared +himself enchanted at the encounter. Aristide +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> +stood gossiping until the Mayor invited him +to take a place at the table and consume liquid refreshment. +Aristide glowingly accepted the invitation +and cast a look of triumph around the café. +Not to all mortals is it given to be the boon companion +of a Mayor and a President of the Syndicat +d’Initiative!</p> + +<p>Then ensued a conversation momentous in its +consequences.</p> + +<p>The Syndicat d’Initiative is a semi-official body +existing in most provincial towns in France for the +purpose of organising public festivals for the +citizens and developing the resources and possibilities +of the town for the general amenity of +visitors. Now Perpignan is as picturesque, as sun-smitten +and, in spite of the icy tramontana, even as +joyous a place as tourist could desire; and the Carnival +of Perpignan, as a spontaneous outburst of +gaiety and pageantry, is unique in France. But +Perpignan being at the end of everywhere and leading +nowhere attracts very few visitors. Biarritz +is on the Atlantic coast at the other end of the +Pyrenees; Hyères, Cannes and Monte Carlo on the +other side of the Gulf of Lions. No English or +Americans—the only visitors of any account in the +philosophy of provincial France—flock to Perpignan. +This was a melancholy fact bewailed by +Monsieur Quérin. The town was perishing from +lack of Anglo-Saxon support. Monsieur Coquereau, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> +the Mayor, agreed. If the English and Americans +came in their hordes to this paradise of mimosa, +fourteenth century architecture, sunshine and +unique Carnival, the fortunes of all the citizens +would be assured. Perpignan would out-rival Nice. +But what could be done?</p> + +<p>“Advertise it,” said Aristide. “Flood the English-speaking +world with poetical descriptions of +the place. Build a row of palatial hotels in the +new part of the town. It is not known to the +Anglo-Saxons.”</p> + +<p>“How can you be certain of that?” asked Monsieur +Quérin.</p> + +<p>“<em>Parbleu!</em>” he cried, with a wide gesture. “I +have known the English all my life. I speak their +language as I speak French or my native Provençal. +I have taught in schools in England. I know the +country and the people like my pocket. They have +never heard of Perpignan.”</p> + +<p>His companions acquiesced sadly. Aristide, aglow +with a sudden impudent inspiration, leant across the +marble table.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur le Maire and Monsieur le Président +du Syndicat d’Initiative, I am sick to death of playing +the drum, the kettle-drum, the triangle, the +cymbals, the castagnettes and the tambourine in the +Tournée Gulland. I was born to higher things. +Entrust to me”—he converged the finger-tips of +both hands to his bosom—“to me, Aristide Pujol, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span> +the organisation of Perpignan-Ville de Plaisir, and +you will not regret it.”</p> + +<p>The Mayor and the President laughed.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>But my astonishing friend prevailed—not indeed +to the extent of being appointed a Petronius, <em>arbiter +élegantiarum</em>, of the town of Perpignan; but to +the extent of being employed, I fear in a subordinate +capacity, by the Mayor and the Syndicat +in the work of propagandism. The Tournée Gulland +found another drum and went its tuneful but +weary way; and Aristide remained gloriously behind +and rubbed his hands with glee. At last he +had found permanence in a life where heretofore +had been naught but transience. At last he had +found a sphere worthy of his genius. He began +to nourish insensate ambitions. He would be the +Great Benefactor of Perpignan. All Roussillon +should bless his name. Already he saw his statue +on the Quai Sadi-Carnot.</p> + +<p>His rise in the social scale of the town was +meteoric, chiefly owing to the goodwill of Madame +Coquereau, the widowed mother of the Mayor. She +was a hard-featured old lady, with a face that might +have been made of corrugated iron painted yellow +and with the eyes of an old hawk. She dressed +always in black, was very devout and rich and +narrow and iron-willed. Aristide was presented +to her one Sunday afternoon at the Café on the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> +Place Arago—where on Sunday afternoons all the +fashion of Perpignan assembles—and—need I say +it?—she fell at once a helpless victim to his fascination. +Accompanying her grandmother was +Mademoiselle Stéphanie Coquereau, the Mayor’s +niece (a wealthy orphan, as Aristide soon learned), +nineteen, pretty, demure, perfectly brought up, who +said “<em>Oui, Monsieur</em>” and “<em>Non, Monsieur</em>” with +that quintessence of modest grace which only a provincial +French Convent can cultivate.</p> + +<p>Aristide’s heart left his body and rolled at the +feet of Mademoiselle Stéphanie. It was a way with +Aristide’s heart. It was always doing that. He +was of Provence and not of Peckham Rye or Hoboken, +and he could not help it.</p> + +<p>Aristide called on Madame Coquereau, who entertained +him with sweet Frontignan wine, dry +sponge cakes and conversation. After a while he +was invited to dinner. In a short space of time +he became the intimate friend of the house, and +played piquet with Madame Coquereau, and grew +familiar with the family secrets. First he learned +that Mademoiselle Stéphanie would go to a husband +with two hundred and fifty thousand francs. Aristide’s +heart panted at the feet of Mademoiselle Stéphanie. +Further he gathered that, though Monsieur +Coquereau was a personage of great dignity and +importance in civic affairs, he was as but a little +child in his own house. Madame Coquereau held +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> +the money-bags. Her son had but little personal +fortune. He had reached the age of forty-five without +being able to marry. Marriage unauthorized +by Madame Coquereau meant immediate poverty +and the testamentary assignment of Madame Coquereau’s +fortune to various religious establishments. +None of the objects of Monsieur Coquereau’s +matrimonial desire had pleased Madame +Coquereau, and none of Madame Coquereau’s +blushing candidates had caused a pulse in Monsieur +Coquereau’s being to beat the faster. The Mayor +held his mother in professed adoration and holy +terror. She held him in abject subjection. Aristide +became the confidant, in turn, of Madame’s +sour philosophy of life and of Monsieur’s impotence +and despair. As for Mademoiselle Stéphanie, +she kept on saying “<em>Oui, Monsieur</em>” and “<em>Non, +Monsieur</em>,” in a crescendo of maddening demureness.</p> + +<p>So passed the halcyon hours. During the day +time Aristide in a corner of the Mayor’s office, +drew up flamboyant circulars in English which +would have put a pushing Land and Estate Agent +in the New Jerusalem to the blush, and in the evening +played piquet with Madame Coquereau, while +Mademoiselle Stéphanie, model of modest piety, +worked pure but nameless birds and flowers on her +embroidery frame. Monsieur le Maire, of course, +played his game of manilla at the café, after dinner, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span> +and generally came home just before Aristide +took his leave. If it had not been for the presence +of Mademoiselle Stéphanie, it would not have +been gay for Aristide. But love gilded the moments.</p> + +<p>On the first evening of the Carnival, which lasts +nearly a fortnight in Perpignan, Aristide, in spite +of a sweeter “<em>Oui, Monsieur</em>” than ever from +Mademoiselle Stéphanie, made an excuse to slip +away rather earlier than usual, and, front door having +closed behind him, crossed the strip of gravel +with a quick step and flung out of the iron gates. +Now the house had an isolated position in the new +quarter of the town. It was perky and modern and +defaced by all sorts of oriel windows and tourelles +and pinnacles which gave it a top-heavy appearance, +and it was surrounded by a low brick wall. +Aristide, on emerging through the iron gates, heard +the sound of scurrying footsteps on the side of the +wall nearest to the town, and reached the corner, +just in time to see a masquer, attired in a Pierrot +costume and wearing what seemed to be a pig’s +head, disappear round the further angle. Paying no +heed to this phenomenon, Aristide lit a cigarette +and walked, in anticipation of enjoyment, to the +great Avenue des Plantanes where the revelry of +the Carnival was being held. Aristide was young, +he loved flirtation, and flirtation flourished in the +Avenue des Plantanes.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> +The next morning the Mayor entered his office +with a very grave face.</p> + +<p>“Do you know what has happened? My house +was broken into last night. The safe in my study +was forced open, and three thousand francs and +some valuable jewelry were stolen. <em>Quel malheur!</em>” +he cried, throwing himself into a chair, and +wiping his forehead. “It is not I who can afford +to lose three thousand francs at once. If they had +robbed <em>maman</em> it would have been a different matter.”</p> + +<p>Aristide expressed his sympathy.</p> + +<p>“Whom do you suspect?” he asked.</p> + +<p>“A robber, <em>parbleu!</em>” said the Mayor. “The +police are even now making their investigations.”</p> + +<p>The door opened and a plain clothes detective +entered the office.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur le Maire,” said he, with an air of triumph, +“I know a burglar.”</p> + +<p>Both men leapt to their feet.</p> + +<p>“Ah!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“<em>A la bonne heure!</em>” cried the Mayor.</p> + +<p>“Arrest him at once,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Alas, Monsieur,” said the detective, “that I +cannot do. I have called on him this morning and +his wife tells me that he left for the North yesterday +afternoon. But it is José Puégas that did it. +I know his ways.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> +“<em>Tiens!</em>” said the Mayor, reflectively. “I know +him also, an evil fellow.”</p> + +<p>“But why are you not looking for him?” exclaimed +Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Arrangements have been made,” replied the detective +coldly.</p> + +<p>Aristide suddenly bethought him of the furtive +masquer of the night before.</p> + +<p>“I can put you on his track,” said he, and related +what he knew.</p> + +<p>The Mayor looked dubious. “It wasn’t he,” he +remarked.</p> + +<p>“José Puégas, Monsieur, would not commit a +burglary in a pig’s head,” said the policeman, with +the cutting contempt of the expert.</p> + +<p>“It was a vow, I suppose,” said Aristide, stung +to irony. “I’ve always heard he was a religious +man.”</p> + +<p>The detective did not condescend to reply.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur le Maire,” said he, “I should like to +examine the premises, and beg that you will have +the kindness to accompany me.”</p> + +<p>“With the permission of Monsieur le Maire,” +said Aristide. “I too will come.”</p> + +<p>“Certainly,” said the Mayor. “The more intelligences +concentrated on the affair the better.”</p> + +<p>“I am not of that opinion,” said the detective.</p> + +<p>“It is the opinion of Monsieur le Maire,” said +Aristide rebukingly, “and that is enough.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> +When they reached the house—distances are +short in Perpignan—they found policemen busily +engaged with tape measures around the premises. +Old Madame Coquereau in a clean white linen +dressing jacket, bare-headed, defying the keen air, +stood grim and eager in the midst of them.</p> + +<p>“Good morning, Monsieur Pujol, what do you +think of this?”</p> + +<p>“A veritable catastrophe,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>She shrugged her iron shoulders. “I tell him it +serves him right,” she said, cuttingly. “A sensible +person keeps his money under his mattress and +not in a tin machine by a window which anyone +can get at. I wonder we’ve not been murdered in +our beds before.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Ah, Maman!</em>” expostulated the Mayor of Perpignan.</p> + +<p>But she turned her back on him and worried the +policemen. They, having probed, and measured, +and consulted with the detective, came to an exact +conclusion. The thief had climbed over the back +wall—there were his footsteps. He had entered +by the kitchen door—there were the marks of infraction. +He had broken open the safe—there was +the helpless condition of the lock. No one in Perpignan, +but José Puégas, with his bad, socialistic, +Barcelona blood, could have done it. These brilliant +results were arrived at after much clamour +and argument and imposing <em>procès verbal</em>. Aristide +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> +felt strangely depressed. He had narrated his +story of the pig-headed masquer to unresponsive +ears. Here was a melodramatic scene in which he +not only was not playing a leading part, but did not +even carry a banner. To be less than a super in +life’s pageant was abhorrent to the nature of Aristide +Pujol.</p> + +<p>Moodily he wandered away from the little crowd. +He hated the police and their airs of gods for whom +exists no mystery. He did not believe in the +kitchen-door theory. Why should not the thief +have simply entered by the window of the study, +which like the kitchen, was on the ground floor? +He went round the house and examined the window +by himself. No; there were no traces of burglary. +The fastenings of the outside shutters and +the high window were intact. The police were +right.</p> + +<p>Suddenly his quick eye lit on something in the +gravel path and his heart gave a great leap. It was +a little round pink disc of confetti.</p> + +<p>Aristide picked it up and began to dance and +shake his fist at the invisible police.</p> + +<p>“Aha!” he cried, “now we shall see who is right +and who is wrong!”</p> + +<p>He began to search and soon found another bit +of confetti. A little further along he discovered +a third and a fourth. By using his walking stick +he discovered that they formed a trail to a point in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> +the wall. He examined the wall. There, if his eyes +did not deceive him, were evidences of mortar dislodged +by nefarious toes. And there, <em>mirabile visu!</em> +at the very bottom of the wall lay a little woollen +pompon or tassel, just the kind of pompon that +gives a finish to a pierrot’s shoes. Evidently the +scoundrel had scraped it off against the bricks +while clambering over.</p> + +<p>The pig-headed masquer stood confessed.</p> + +<p>A less imaginative man than Aristide would +have immediately acquainted the police with his +discovery. But Aristide had been insulted. A dull, +mechanical bureaucrat who tried to discover crime +with a tape-measure had dared to talk contemptuously +of his intelligence! On his wooden head +should be poured the vials of his contempt.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tron de l’air!</em>” cried Aristide—a Provençal +oath which he only used on sublime occasions—“It +is I who will discover the thief and make the +whole lot of you the laughing-stock of Perpignan.”</p> + +<p>So did my versatile friend, joyously confident in +his powers, start on his glorious career as a private +detective.</p> + +<p>“Madame Coquereau,” said he, that evening, +while she was dealing a hand at piquet, “what +would you say if I solved this mystery and brought +the scoundrel to justice?”</p> + +<p>“To say that you would have more sense than +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> +the police, would be a poor compliment,” said the +old lady.</p> + +<p>Stéphanie raised cloistral eyes from her embroidery +frame. She sat in a distant corner +of the formal room discreetly lit by a shaded +lamp.</p> + +<p>“You have a clue, Monsieur?” she asked with +adorable timidity.</p> + +<p>Aristide tapped his forehead with his forefinger. +“All is there, Mademoiselle.”</p> + +<p>They exchanged a glance—the first they had exchanged—while +Madame Coquereau was frowning +at her cards; and Aristide interpreted the glance +as the promise of supreme reward for great deeds +accomplished.</p> + +<p>The mayor returned early from the café, a dejected +man. The loss of his hundred and twenty +pounds weighed heavily on his mind. He kissed +his mother sorrowfully on the cheek, his niece on +the brow, held out a drooping hand to Aristide, +and, subsiding into a stiff imitation Louis XVI +chair, rested his elbows on its unconsoling arms and +hid his face in his hands.</p> + +<p>“My poor uncle! You suffer so much?” breathed +Stéphanie, in divine compassion.</p> + +<p>“Little Saint!” murmured Aristide devoutly, as +he declared four aces and three queens.</p> + +<p>The Mayor moved his head sympathetically. He +was suffering from the sharpest pain in his pocket +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> +he had felt for many a day. Madame Coquereau’s +attention wandered from the cards.</p> + +<p>“<em>Dis donc</em>, Fernand,” she said sharply. “Why +are you not wearing your ring?”</p> + +<p>The Mayor looked up.</p> + +<p>“<em>Maman</em>,” said he, “it is stolen.”</p> + +<p>“Your beautiful ring?” cried Aristide.</p> + +<p>The Mayor’s ring, which he usually wore, was +a remarkable personal adornment. It consisted in +a couple of snakes in old gold clenching an enormous +topaz between their heads. Only a Mayor +could have worn it with decency.</p> + +<p>“You did not tell me, Fernand,” rasped the old +lady. “You did not mention it to me as being one +of the stolen objects.”</p> + +<p>The Mayor rose wearily. “It was to avoid giving +you pain, <em>maman</em>. I know what a value you +set upon the ring of my good Aunt Philomène.”</p> + +<p>“And now it is lost,” said Madame Coquereau, +throwing down her cards. “A ring that belonged +to a saint. Yes, Monsieur Pujol, a saint, though +she was my sister. A ring that had been blessed +by His Holiness the Pope——”</p> + +<p>“But, <em>maman</em>,” expostulated the Mayor, “that +was an imagination of Aunt Philomène. Just because +she went to Rome and had an audience like +anyone else——”</p> + +<p>“Silence, impious atheist that you are!” cried the +old lady. “I tell you it was blessed by His +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> +Holiness—and when I tell you a thing it is true. That +is the son of to-day. He will call his mother a +liar as soon as look at her. It was a ring beyond +price. A ring such as there are few in the world. +And instead of taking care of this precious heirloom, +he goes and locks it away in a safe. Ah! +you fill me with shame. Monsieur Pujol, I am +sorry I can play no more, I must retire. Stéphanie, +will you accompany me?”</p> + +<p>And gathering up Stéphanie like a bunch of +snowdrops, the yellow, galvanized iron old lady +swept out of the room.</p> + +<p>The Mayor looked at Aristide and moved his +arms dejectedly.</p> + +<p>“Such are women,” said he.</p> + +<p>“My own mother nearly broke her heart because +I would not become a priest,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I wish I were a Turk,” said the Mayor.</p> + +<p>“I, too,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>He took pouch and papers and rolled a cigarette.</p> + +<p>“If there is a man living who can say he has +not felt like that at least once in his life he ought +to be exhibited at a fair.”</p> + +<p>“How well you understand me, my good Pujol,” +said Monsieur Coquereau.</p> + +<p>The next few days passed busily for Aristide. +He devoted every spare hour to his new task. He +scrutinized every inch of ground between the study +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> +window and the wall; he drew radiating lines from +the point of the wall whence the miscreant had +started homeward and succeeded in finding more +confetti. He cross-examined every purveyor of +pierrot shoes and pig’s heads in Perpignan. His +researches soon came to the ears of the police, still +tracing the mysterious José Puégas. A certain +good-humoured brigadier whose Catalan French +Aristide found difficult to understand, but with +whom he had formed a derisory kind of friendship, +urged him to desist from the hopeless task.</p> + +<p>“<em>Jamais de la vie!</em>” he cried—“The honour of +Aristide Pujol is at stake.”</p> + +<p>The thing became an obsession. Not only his +honour but his future was at stake. If he discovered +the thief, he would be the most talked of person +in Perpignan. He would know how to improve +his position. He would rise to dizzy heights. Perpignan-Ville +de Plaisir would acclaim him as its +saviour. The Government would decorate him. +And finally, both the Mayor and Madame Coquereau +would place the blushing and adorable Mademoiselle +Stéphanie in his arms and her two hundred +and fifty thousand francs dowry in his pocket. +Never before had so dazzling a prize shimmered +before him in the near distance.</p> + +<p>On the last Saturday night of the Carnival, there +was a special <em>corso</em> for the populace in the Avenue +des Plantanes, the long splendid Avenue of plane +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> +trees just outside the Porte Notre Dame, which is +the special glory of Perpignan. The masquers +danced to three or four bands. They threw confetti +and <em>serpentins</em>. They rode hobby-horses and +beat each other with bladders. They joined in +bands of youths and maidens and whirled down +the Avenue in Bacchic madness. It was a <em>corso +blanc</em>, and everyone wore white—chiefly modifications +of Pierrot costume—and everyone was +masked. Chinese lanterns hung from the trees and +in festoons around the bandstands and darted about +in the hands of the revellers. Above, great standard +electric lamps shed their white glare upon the +eddying throng casting a myriad of grotesque +shadows. Shouts and laughter and music filled +the air.</p> + +<p>Aristide in a hideous red mask and with a bag +of confetti under his arm, plunged with enthusiasm +into the revelry. To enjoy yourself you only had +to throw your arm round a girl’s waist and swing +her off wildly to the beat of the music. If you +wanted to let her go you did so; if not, you talked +in the squeaky voice that is the recognized etiquette +of the carnival. On the other hand any +girl could catch you in her grip and sweep you +along with her. Your mad career generally ended +in a crowd and a free fight of confetti. There +was one fair masquer, however, to whom Aristide +became peculiarly attracted. Her movements were +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> +free, her figure dainty and her repartee, below her +mask, more than usually piquant.</p> + +<p>“This hurly-burly,” said he, drawing her into a +quiet eddy of the stream, “is no place for the communion +of two twin souls.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Beau masque</em>,” said she, “I perceive that you +are a man of much sensibility.”</p> + +<p>“Shall we find a spot where we can mingle the +overflow of our exquisite natures?”</p> + +<p>“As you like.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Allons! Hop!</em>” cried he, and seizing her round +the waist danced through the masquers to the very +far end of the Avenue.</p> + +<p>“There is a sequestered spot round here,” he +said.</p> + +<p>They turned. The sequestered spot, a seat beneath +a plane tree, with a lonesome arc-lamp shining +full upon it, was occupied.</p> + +<p>“It’s a pity!” said the fair unknown.</p> + +<p>But Aristide said nothing. He stared. On the +seat reposed an amorous couple. The lady wore a +white domino and a black mask. The cavalier, +whose arm was around the lady’s waist, wore a +pig’s head, and a clown or Pierrot’s dress.</p> + +<p>Aristide’s eyes fell upon the shoes. On one of +them the pompon was missing.</p> + +<p>The lady’s left hand tenderly patted the cardboard +snout of her lover. The fierce light of the +arc lamp caught the hand and revealed, on the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> +fourth finger, a topaz ring, the topaz held in its +place by two snakes’ heads.</p> + +<p>Aristide stared for two seconds; it seemed to +him two centuries. Then he turned simply, caught +his partner again, and with a “<em>Allons, Hop!</em>” raced +back to the middle of the throng. There, in the +crush, he unceremoniously lost her, and sped like +a maniac to the entrance gates. His friend the +brigadier happened to be on duty. He unmasked +himself, dragged the police agent aside, and +breathless, half-hysterical, acquainted him with the +astounding discovery.</p> + +<p>“I was right, <em>mon vieux!</em> There at the end of +the Avenue you will find them. The pig-headed +prowler I saw, with <em>my</em> pompon missing from his +shoe, and his <em>bonne amie</em> wearing the stolen ring. +Ah! you police people with your tape-measures and +your José Puégas! It is I, Aristide Pujol, who +have to come to Perpignan to teach you your business!”</p> + +<p>“What do you want me to do?” asked the brigadier +stolidly.</p> + +<p>“Do?” cried Aristide. “Do you think I want +you to kiss them and cover them with roses? What +do you generally do with thieves in Perpignan?”</p> + +<p>“Arrest them,” said the brigadier.</p> + +<p>“<em>Eh bien!</em>” said Aristide. Then he paused—possibly +the drama of the situation striking him. +“No, wait. Go and find them. Don’t take your +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> +eyes off them. I will run and fetch Monsieur le +Maire and he will identify his property—<em>et puis +nous aurons la scène à faire</em>.”</p> + +<p>The stout brigadier grunted an assent and rolled +monumentally down the Avenue. Aristide, his +pulses throbbing, his heart exulting, ran to the +Mayor’s house. He was rather a panting triumph +than a man. He had beaten the police of +Perpignan. He had discovered the thief. He was +the hero of the town. Soon would the wedding +bells be playing.... He envied the marble +of the future statue. He would like to be on the +pedestal himself.</p> + +<p>He dashed past the maid-servant who opened the +door and burst into the prim salon. Madame Coquereau +was alone, just preparing to retire for the +night. Mademoiselle Stéphanie had already gone +to bed.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu</em>, what is all this?” she cried.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” shouted he, “glorious news. I have +found the thief!”</p> + +<p>He told his tale. Where was Monsieur le Maire?</p> + +<p>“He has not yet come back from the café.”</p> + +<p>“I’ll go and find him,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“And waste time? Bah!” said the iron-faced +old lady, catching up a black silk shawl. “I will +come with you and identify the ring of my sainted +sister Philomène. Who should know it better than +I?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> +“As you like, Madame,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>Two minutes found them on their journey. Madame +Coquereau, in spite of her sixty-five years +trudged along with springing step.</p> + +<p>“They don’t make metal like me, nowadays,” +she said scornfully.</p> + +<p>When they arrived at the gate of the Avenue, +the police on guard saluted. The mother +of Monsieur le Maire was a power in Perpignan.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” said Aristide, in lordly fashion, +to a policeman, “will you have the goodness to +make a passage through the crowd for Madame +Coquereau, and then help the Brigadier Pésac to +arrest the burglar who broke into the house of +Monsieur le Maire?”</p> + +<p>The man obeyed, went ahead clearing the path +with the unceremoniousness of the law, and Aristide +giving his arm to Madame Coquereau followed +gloriously. As the impressive progress continued +the revellers ceased their revels and followed +in the wake of Aristide. At the end of the +Avenue Brigadier Pésac was on guard. He approached.</p> + +<p>“They are still there,” he said.</p> + +<p>“Good,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>The two police-officers, Aristide and Madame +Coquereau turned the corner. At the sight of the +police the guilty couple started to their feet. Madame +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> +Coquereau pounced like a hawk on the +masked lady’s hand.</p> + +<p>“I identify it,” she cried. “Brigadier, give these +people in charge for theft.”</p> + +<p>The white masked crowd surged around the +group, in the midst of which stood Aristide transfigured. +It was his supreme moment. He flourished +in one hand his red mask and in the other +a pompon which he had extracted from his +pocket.</p> + +<p>“This I found,” said he, “beneath the wall of +Monsieur le Maire’s garden. Behold the shoe of +the accused.”</p> + +<p>The crowd murmured their applause and admiration. +Neither of the prisoners stirred. The pig’s +head grinned at the world with its inane, painted +leer. A rumbling voice beneath it said:</p> + +<p>“We will go quietly.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Attention s’il vous plaît</em>,” said the policemen, +and each holding a prisoner by the arm they made +a way through the crowd. Madame Coquereau +and Aristide followed close behind.</p> + +<p>“What did I tell you?” cried Aristide to the +brigadier.</p> + +<p>“It’s Puégas, all the same,” said the brigadier, +over his shoulder.</p> + +<p>“I bet you it’s not,” said Aristide, and striding +swiftly to the back of the male prisoner whipped +off the pig’s head, and revealed to the petrified +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> +throng the familiar features of the Mayor of Perpignan.</p> + +<p>Aristide regarded him for two or three seconds +open-mouthed, and then fell back into the arms of +the Brigadier Pésac screaming with convulsive +laughter. The crowd caught the infection of merriment. +Shrieks filled the air. The vast mass of +masqueraders held their sides, swayed helplessly, +rolled in heaps, men and women, tearing each +other’s garments as they fell.</p> + +<p>Aristide, deposited on the ground by the Brigadier +Pésac laughed and laughed. When he recovered +some consciousness of surroundings, he found +the Mayor bending over him and using language +that would have made Tophet put its fingers in +its ears. He rose. Madame Coquereau shook her +thin fists in his face.</p> + +<p>“Imbecile! Triple fool!” she cried.</p> + +<p>Aristide turned tail and fled. There was nothing +else to do.</p> + +<p>And that was the end of his career at Perpignan. +Vanished were the dreams of civic eminence; +melted into thin air the statue on the Quai Sadi-Carnot; +faded, too, the vision of the modest Stéphanie +crowned with orange-blossom; gone forever +the two hundred and fifty thousand francs. Never +since Alnaschar kicked over his basket of crockery +was there such a hideous welter of shattered hopes.</p> + +<p>If the Mayor had been allowed to go disguised +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> +to the Police Station, he could have disclosed his +identity and that of the lady in private to awe-stricken +functionaries. He might have forgiven +Aristide. But Aristide had exposed him to the derision +of the whole of Roussillon and the never ending +wrath of Madame Coquereau. Ruefully Aristide +asked himself the question: why had the Mayor not +taken him into the confidence of his masquerading +escapade? Why had he not told him of the pretty +widow, whom, unknown to his mother, he was +courting? Why had he permitted her to wear the +ring which he had given her so as to spite his +sainted Aunt Philomène? And why had he gone +on wearing the pig’s head after Aristide had told +him of his suspicions? Ruefully Aristide found +no answers save in the general chuckle-headedness +of mankind.</p> + +<p>“If it hadn’t been such a good farce I should +have wept like a cow,” said Aristide, after relating +this story. “But every time I wanted to cry, +I laughed. <em>Nom de Dieu!</em> You should have seen +his face! And the face of Madame Coquereau! +She opened her mouth wide showing ten yellow +teeth and squealed like a rabbit! Oh, it was a +good farce! He was very cross with me,” he +added after a smiling pause, “and when I got back +to Paris I tried to pacify him.”</p> + +<p>“What did you do?” I asked.</p> + +<p>“I sent him my photograph,” said Aristide.</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>VI</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF FLEURETTE</strong></p> + + +<p>One day, when Aristide was discoursing on +the inexhaustible subject of woman, I +pulled him up.</p> + +<p>“My good friend,” said I, “you seem to have +fallen in love with every woman you have ever met. +But for how many of them have you really cared?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em> For all of them!” he cried, springing +from his chair and making a wind-mill of himself.</p> + +<p>“Come, come,” said I; “all that amorousness is +just Gallic exuberance. Have you ever been really +in love in your life?”</p> + +<p>“How should I know?” said he. But he lit a +cigarette, turned away, and looked out of window.</p> + +<p>There was a short silence. He shrugged his +shoulders, apparently in response to his own +thoughts. Then he turned again suddenly, threw +his cigarette into the fire, and thrust his hands into +his pockets. He sighed.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps there was Fleurette,” said he, not looking +at me. “<em>Est-ce qu’on sait jamais?</em> That wasn’t +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> +her real name—it was Marie-Joséphine; but people +called her Fleurette. She looked like a flower, you +know.”</p> + +<p>I nodded in order to signify my elementary acquaintance +with the French tongue.</p> + +<p>“The most delicate little flower you can conceive,” +he continued. “<em>Tiens</em>, she was a slender lily—so +white, and her hair the flash of gold on it—and +she had eyes—<em>des yeux de pervenche</em>, as we +say in French. What is <em>pervenche</em> in English—that +little pale-blue flower?”</p> + +<p>“Periwinkle,” said I.</p> + +<p>“Periwinkle eyes! My God, what a language! +Ah, no! She had <em>des yeux de pervenche</em>.... +She was <em>diaphane</em>, diaphanous ... impalpable +as cigarette-smoke ... a little nose like nothing +at all, with nostrils like infinitesimal sea-shells. +Anyone could have made a mouthful of her.... +Ah! <em>Cré nom d’un chien!</em> Life is droll. It has no +common sense. It is the game of a mountebank.... +I’ve never told you about Fleurette. It +was this way.”</p> + +<p>And the story he narrated I will do my best to +set down.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>The good M. Bocardon, of the Hôtel de +la Curatterie at Nîmes, whose grateful devotion +to Aristide has already been recorded, had +a brother in Paris who managed the Hôtel du +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> +Soleil et de l’Ecosse (strange conjuncture), a +flourishing third-rate hostelry in the neighbourhood +of the Halles Centrales. Thither flocked sturdy +Britons in knickerbockers, stockings, and cloth caps, +Teutons with tin botanizing boxes (for lunch transportation), +and American school-marms realizing +at last the dream of their modest and laborious +lives. Accommodation was cheap, manners were +easy, and knowledge of the gay city less than rudimentary.</p> + +<p>To M. Bocardon of Paris Aristide, one August +morning, brought glowing letters of introduction +from M. and Mme. Bocardon of Nîmes. M. Bocardon +of Paris welcomed Aristide as a Provençal +and a brother. He brought out from a cupboard in +his private bureau an hospitable bottle of old Armagnac, +and discoursed with Aristide on the seductions +of the South. It was there that he longed +to retire—to a dainty little hotel of his own with +a smart clientèle. The clientèle of the Hôtel du +Soleil et de l’Ecosse was not to his taste. He spoke +slightingly of his guests.</p> + +<p>“There are people who know how to travel,” +said he, “and people who don’t. These lost muttons +here don’t, and they make hotel-keeping a +nightmare instead of a joy. A hundred times a +day have I to tell them the way to Notre Dame. +<em>Pouah!</em>” said he, gulping down his disgust and +the rest of his Armagnac, “it is back-breaking.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span> +“<em>Tu sais, mon vieux</em>,” cried Aristide—he had +the most lightning way of establishing an intimacy—“I +have an idea. These lost sheep need a shepherd.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Eh bien?</em>” said M. Bocardon.</p> + +<p>“<em>Eh bien</em>,” said Aristide. “Why should not I +be the shepherd, the official shepherd attached to +the Hôtel du Soleil et de l’Ecosse?”</p> + +<p>“Explain yourself,” said M. Bocardon.</p> + +<p>Aristide, letting loose his swift imagination, explained +copiously, and hypnotized M. Bocardon +with his glittering eye, until he had assured to himself +a means of livelihood. From that moment he +became the familiar genius of the hotel. Scorning +the title of “guide,” lest he should be associated in +the minds of the guests with the squalid scoundrels +who infest the Boulevard, he constituted himself +“Directeur de l’Agence Pujol.” An obfuscated Bocardon +formed the rest of the agency and pocketed +a percentage of Aristide’s earnings, and Aristide, +addressed as “Director” by the Anglo-Saxons, “M. +le Directeur” by the Latins, and “Herr Direktor” +by the Teutons, walked about like a peacock in a +barn-yard.</p> + +<a name="img210" id="img210"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/img210.jpg" width="600" height="422" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">he must have dealt out paralyzing information</span> +</div> + +<p>At that period, and until he had learned up Baedeker +by heart, a process which nearly gave him +brain-fever, and still, he declares, brings terror +into his slumbers, he knew little more of the history, +topography, and art-treasures of Paris than +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> +the flock he shepherded. He must have dealt out +paralyzing information. The Britons and the Germans +seemed not to heed; but now and then the +American school-marms unmasked the charlatan. +On such occasions his unfaltering impudence +reached heights truly sublime. The sharp-witted +ladies looked in his eyes, forgot their wrongs, and, +if he had told them that the Eiffel Tower had been +erected by the Pilgrim Fathers, would have accepted +the statement meekly.</p> + +<p>“My friend,” said Aristide, with Provençal flourish +and braggadocio, “I never met a woman that +would not sooner be misled by me than be taught +by the whole Faculty of the Sorbonne.”</p> + +<p>He had been practising this honourable profession +for about a month, lodging with the good +Mme. Bidoux at 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, when, +one morning, in the vestibule of the hotel, he ran +into his old friend Batterby, whom he had known +during the days of his professorship of French at +the Academy for Young Ladies in Manchester. +The pair had been fellow-lodgers in the same house +in the Rusholme Road; but, whereas Aristide lived +in one sunless bed-sitting-room looking on a forest +of chimney-pots, Batterby, man of luxury and ease, +had a suite of apartments on the first floor and kept +an inexhaustible supply of whisky, cigars, and such-like +etceteras of the opulent, and the very ugliest +prize bull-pup you can imagine. Batterby, in gaudy +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> +raiment, went to an office in Manchester; in gaudier +raiment he often attended race meetings. He +had rings and scarf-pins and rattled gold in his +trousers pockets. He might have been an insufferable +young man for a poverty-stricken teacher +of French to have as a fellow-lodger; but he was +not. Like all those born to high estate, he made +no vulgar parade of his wealth, and to Aristide he +showed the most affable hospitality. A friendship +had arisen between them, which the years had +idealized rather than impaired. So when they met +that morning in the vestibule of the Hôtel du +Soleil et de l’Ecosse their greetings were fervent +and prolonged.</p> + +<p>In person Batterby tended towards burliness. He +had a red, jolly face, divided unequally by a great +black moustache, and his manner was hearty. He +slapped Aristide on the back many times and shook +him by the shoulders.</p> + +<p>“We must have a drink on this straight away, +old man,” said he.</p> + +<p>“You’re so strange, you English,” said Aristide. +“The moment you have an emotion you must celebrate +it by a drink. ‘My dear fellow, I’ve just +come into a fortune; let us have a drink.’ Or, +‘My friend, my poor old father has just been +run over by an omnibus; let us have a drink.’ My +good Reginald, look at the clock. It is only nine +in the morning.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> +“Rot!” said Reginald. “Drink is good at any +time.”</p> + +<p>They went into the dark and deserted smoking-room, +where Batterby ordered Scotch and soda and +Aristide, an abstemious man, a plain vermouth.</p> + +<p>“What’s that muck?” asked Batterby, when the +waiter brought the drinks. Aristide explained. +“Whisky’s good enough for me,” laughed the other. +Aristide laughed too, out of politeness and out of +joy at meeting his old friend.</p> + +<p>“With you playing at guide here,” said Batterby, +when he had learned Aristide’s position in the hotel, +“it seems I have come to the right shop. There +are no flies on me, you know, but when a man +comes to Paris for the first time he likes to be put +up to the ropes.”</p> + +<p>“Your first visit to Paris?” cried Aristide. “<em>Mon +vieux</em>, what wonders are going to ravish your eyes! +What a time you are going to have!”</p> + +<p>Batterby bit off the end of a great black cigar.</p> + +<p>“If the missus will let me,” said he.</p> + +<p>“Missus? Your wife? You are married, my +dear Reginald?” Aristide leaped, in his unexpected +fashion, from his chair and almost embraced him. +“Ah, but you are happy, you are lucky. It was +always like that. You open your mouth and the +larks fall ready roasted into it! My congratulations. +And she is here, in this hotel, your wife? +Tell me about her.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span> +Batterby lit his cigar. “She’s nothing to write +home about,” he said, modestly. “She’s French.”</p> + +<p>“French? No—you don’t say so!” exclaimed +Aristide, in ecstasy.</p> + +<p>“Well, she was brought up in France from her +childhood, but her parents were Finns. Funny place +for people to come from—Finland—isn’t it? You +could never expect it—might just as well think of +’em coming from Lapland. She’s an orphan. I +met her in London.”</p> + +<p>“But that’s romantic! And she is young, +pretty?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes; in a way,” said the proprietary Briton.</p> + +<p>“And her name?”</p> + +<p>“Oh, she has a fool name—Fleurette. I wanted +to call her Flossie, but she didn’t like it.”</p> + +<p>“I should think not,” said Aristide. “Fleurette +is an adorable name.”</p> + +<p>“I suppose it’s right enough,” said Batterby. +“But if I want to call her good old Flossie, why +should she object? You married, old man? No? +Well, wait till you are. You think women are +angels all wrapped up in feathers and wings beneath +their toggery, don’t you? Well, they’re just +blooming porcupines, all bristling with objections.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mais, allons, donc!</em>” cried Aristide. “You love +her, your beautiful Finnish orphan brought up in +France and romantically met in London, with the +adorable name?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> +“Oh, that’s all right,” said the easy Batterby, +lifting his half-emptied glass. “Here’s luck!”</p> + +<p>“Ah—no!” said Aristide, leaning forward and +clinking his wineglass against the other’s tumbler. +“Here is to madame.”</p> + +<p>When they returned to the vestibule they found +Mrs. Batterby patiently awaiting her lord. She +rose from her seat at the approach of the two men, +a fragile flower of a girl, about three-and-twenty, +pale as a lily, with exquisite though rather large +features, and with eyes of the blue of the <em>pervenche</em> +(in deference to Aristide I use the French name), +which seemed to smile trustfully through perpetual +tears. She was dressed in pale, shadowy blue—graceful, +impalpable, like the smoke, said Aristide, +curling upwards from a cigarette.</p> + +<p>“Reggie has spoken of you many times, monsieur,” +said Fleurette, after the introduction had +been effected.</p> + +<p>Aristide was touched. “Fancy him remembering +me! <em>Ce bon vieux Reginald.</em> Madame,” said he, +“your husband is the best fellow in the world.”</p> + +<p>“Feed him with sugar and he won’t bite,” said +Batterby; whereat they all laughed, as if it had +been a very good joke.</p> + +<p>“Well, what about this Paris of yours?” he asked, +after a while. “The missus knows as little of it +as I do.”</p> + +<p>“Really?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span> +“I lived all my life in Brest before I went to +England,” she said, modestly.</p> + +<p>“She wants to see all the sights, the Louvre, the +Morgue, the Cathedral of What’s-its-name that +you’ve got here. I’ve got to go round, too. Pleases +her and don’t hurt me. You must tote us about. +We’ll have a cab, old girl, as you can’t do much +walking, and good old Pujol will come with us.”</p> + +<p>“But that is ideal!” cried Aristide, flying to the +door to order the cab; but before he could reach +it he was stopped by three or four waiting tourists, +who pointed, some to the clock, some to the wagonette +standing outside, and asked the director +when the personally-conducted party was to start. +Aristide, who had totally forgotten the responsibilities +attached to the directorship of the Agence +Pujol and, but for this reminder, would have blissfully +left his sheep to err and stray over Paris by +themselves, returned crestfallen to his friends and +explained the situation.</p> + +<p>“But we’ll join the party,” said the cheery Batterby. +“The more the merrier—good old bean-feast! +Will there be room?”</p> + +<p>“Plenty,” replied Aristide, brightening. “But +would it meet the wishes of madame?” Her pale +face flushed ever so slightly and the soft eyes fluttered +at him a half-astonished, half-grateful glance.</p> + +<p>“With my husband and you, monsieur, I should +love it,” she said.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span> +So Mr. and Mrs. Batterby joined the personally-conducted +party, as they did the next morning, and +the next, and several mornings after, and received +esoteric information concerning the monuments of +Paris that is hidden even from the erudite. The +evenings, however, Aristide, being off duty, devoted +to their especial entertainment. He took them to +riotous and perspiring restaurants where they dined +gorgeously for three francs fifty, wine included; +to open-air <em>cafés-concerts</em> in the Champs Elysées, +which Fleurette found infinitely diverting, but +which bored Batterby, who knew not French, to +stertorous slumber; to crowded brasseries on the +Boulevard, where Batterby awakened, under a +steady flow of whisky, to appreciative contemplation +of Paris life. As in the old days of the Rusholme +Road, Batterby flung his money about with +unostentatious generosity. He was out for a beano, +he declared, and hang the expense! Aristide, +whose purse, scantily filled (truth to say) by the +profits of the Agence Pujol, could contribute but +modestly to this reckless expenditure, found himself +forced to accept his friend’s lavish hospitality. +Once or twice, delicately, he suggested withdrawal +from the evening’s dissipation.</p> + +<p>“But, my good M. Pujol,” said Fleurette, with +childish tragicality in her <em>pervenche</em> eyes, “without +you we shall be lost. We shall not enjoy ourselves +at all, at all.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span> +So Aristide, out of love for his friend, and out +of he knew not what for his friend’s wife, continued +to show them the sights of Paris. They went +to the cabarets of Montmartre—the <em>Ciel</em>, where +one is served by angels; the <em>Enfer</em>, where one is +served by red devils in a Tartarean lighting; the +<em>Néant</em>, where one has coffins for tables—than all of +which vulgarity has imagined no more joy-killing +dreariness, but which caused Fleurette to grip Aristide’s +hand tight in scared wonderment and Batterby +to chuckle exceedingly. They went to the +Bal Bullier and to various other balls undreamed of +by the tourist, where Fleurette danced with Aristide, +as light as an autumn leaf tossed by the wind, +and Batterby absorbed a startling assortment of +alcohols. In a word, Aristide procured for his +friends prodigious diversion.</p> + +<p>“How do you like this, old girl?” Batterby asked +one night, at the Moulin de la Galette, a dizzying, +not very decorous, and to the unsophisticated visitor +a dangerous place of entertainment. “Better +than Great Coram Street, isn’t it?”</p> + +<p>She smiled and laid her hand on his. She was +a woman of few words but of many caressing +actions.</p> + +<p>“I ought to let you into a secret,” said he. “This +is our honeymoon.”</p> + +<p>“Who would have thought it?”</p> + +<a name="img220" id="img220"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 401px;"> +<img src="images/img220.jpg" width="401" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">fleurette danced with aristide, as light as an autumn leaf +tossed by the wind</span> +</div> + +<p>“A fortnight ago she was being killed in a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span> +Bloomsbury boarding-house. There were two of +’em—she and a girl called Carrie. I used to call +’em Fetch and Carrie. This one was Fetch. Well, +she fetched me, didn’t you, old girl? And now +you’re Mrs. Reginald Batterby, living at your ease, +eh?”</p> + +<p>“Madame would grace any sphere,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I wish I had more education,” said Fleurette, +humbly. “M. Pujol and yourself are so clever that +you must laugh at me.”</p> + +<p>“We do sometimes, but you mustn’t mind us. +Remember—at the what-you-call-it—the little +shanty at Versailles——?”</p> + +<p>“The Grand Trianon,” replied Aristide.</p> + +<p>“That’s it. When you were showing us the +rooms. ‘What is the Empress Josephine doing +now?’” He mimicked her accent. “Ha! ha! And +the poor soul gone to glory a couple of hundred +years ago.”</p> + +<p>The little mouth puckered at the corners and +moisture gathered in the blue eyes.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mais, mon Dieu</em>, it was natural, the mistake,” +cried Aristide, gallantly. “The Empress Eugénie, +the wife of another Napoleon, is still living.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Bien sûr</em>,” said Fleurette. “How was I to +know?”</p> + +<p>“Never mind, old girl,” said Batterby. “You’re +living all right, and out of that beastly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span> +boarding-house, and that’s the chief thing. Another month +of it would have killed her. She had a cough that +shook her to bits. She’s looking better already, +isn’t she, Pujol?”</p> + +<p>After this Aristide learned much of her simple +history, which she, at first, had been too shy to +reveal. The child of Finnish sea-folk who had +drifted to Brest and died there, she had been +adopted by an old Breton sea-dog and his wife. +On their death she had entered, as maid, the service +of an English lady residing in the town, who afterwards +had taken her to England. After a while +reverses of fortune had compelled the lady to dismiss +her, and she had taken the situation in the +boarding-house, where she had ruined her health +and met the opulent and conquering Batterby. +She had not much chance, poor child, of acquiring +a profound knowledge of the history of the First +Empire; but her manners were refined and her ways +gentle and her voice was soft; and Aristide, citizen +of the world, for whom caste distinctions existed +not, thought her the most exquisite flower grown in +earth’s garden. He told her so, much to her blushing +satisfaction.</p> + +<p>One night, about three weeks after the Batterbys’ +arrival in Paris, Batterby sent his wife to bed +and invited Aristide to accompany him for half +an hour to a neighbouring café. He looked grave +and troubled.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> +“I’ve been upset by a telegram,” said he, when +drinks had been ordered. “I’m called away to New +York on business. I must catch the boat from +Cherbourg to-morrow evening. Now, I can’t take +Fleurette with me. Women and business don’t mix. +She has jolly well got to stay here. I sha’n’t be +away more than a month. I’ll leave her plenty +of money to go on with. But what’s worrying me +is—how is she going to stick it? So look here, old +man, you’re my pal, aren’t you?”</p> + +<p>He stretched out his hand. Aristide grasped it +impulsively.</p> + +<p>“Why, of course, <em>mon vieux!</em>”</p> + +<p>“If I felt that I could leave her in your charge, +all on the square, as a real straight pal—I should +go away happy.”</p> + +<p>“She shall be my sister,” cried Aristide, “and I +shall give her all the devotion of a brother.... +I swear it—<em>tiens</em>—what can I swear it on?” He +flung out his arms and looked round the café as +if in search of an object. “I swear it on the head +of my mother. Have no fear. I, Aristide Pujol, +have never betrayed the sacred obligations of +friendship. I accept her as a consecrated trust.”</p> + +<p>“You only need to have said ‘Right-o,’ and I +would have believed you,” said Batterby. “I +haven’t told her yet. There’ll be blubbering all +night. Let us have another drink.”</p> + +<p>When Aristide arrived at the Hôtel du Soleil +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span> +et de l’Ecosse at nine o’clock the next morning he +found that Batterby had left Paris by an early +train. Fleurette he did not meet until he brought +back the sight-seers to the fold in the evening. She +had wept much during the day; but she smiled +bravely on Aristide. A woman could not stand in +the way of her husband’s business.</p> + +<p>“By the way, what is Reginald’s business?” +Aristide asked.</p> + +<p>She did not know. Reginald never spoke to +her of such things; perhaps she was too ignorant +to understand.</p> + +<p>“But he will make a lot of money by going to +America,” she said. Then she was silent for a +few moments. “<em>Mon Dieu!</em>” she sighed, at last. +“How long the day has been!”</p> + +<p>It was the beginning of many long days for +Fleurette. Reginald did not write from Cherbourg +or cable from New York, as he had promised, +and the return American mail brought no +letter. The days passed drearily. Sometimes, for +the sake of human society, she accompanied the +tourist parties of the Agence Pujol; but the thrill +had passed from the Morgue and the glory had +departed from Versailles. Sometimes she wandered +out by herself into the streets and public +gardens; but, pretty, unprotected, and fragile, she +attracted the attention of evil or careless men, +which struck cold terror into her heart. Most +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span> +often she sat alone and listless in the hotel, reading +the feuilleton of the <em>Petit Journal</em>, and waiting +for the post to bring her news.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu</em>, M. Pujol, what can have happened?”</p> + +<p>“Nothing at all, <em>chère petite madame</em>”—question +and answer came many times a day. “Only some +foolish mischance which will soon be explained. +The good Reginald has written and his letter has +been lost in the post. He has been obliged to go +on business to San Francisco or Buenos Ayres—<em>et, +que voulez-vous?</em> one cannot have letters from +those places in twenty-four hours.”</p> + +<p>“If only he had taken me with him!”</p> + +<p>“But, dear Mme. Fleurette, he could not expose +you to the hardships of travel. You, who are as +fragile as a cobweb, how could you go to Patagonia +or Senegal or Baltimore, those wild places +where there are no comforts for women? You +must be reasonable. I am sure you will get a letter +soon—or else in a day or two he will come, +with his good, honest face as if nothing had occurred—these +English are like that—and call for +whisky and soda. Be comforted, <em>chère petite madame</em>.”</p> + +<p>Aristide did his best to comfort her, threw her +in the companionship of decent women staying at +the hotel, and devoted his evenings to her entertainment. +But the days passed, and Reginald Batterby, +with the good, honest face, neither wrote +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span> +nor ordered whisky and soda. Fleurette began +to pine and fade.</p> + +<p>One day she came to Aristide.</p> + +<p>“M. Pujol, I have no more money left.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Bigre!</em>” said Pujol. “The good Bocardon will +have to give you credit. I’ll arrange it.”</p> + +<p>“But I already owe for three weeks,” said Fleurette.</p> + +<p>Aristide sought Bocardon. One week more was +all the latter dared allow.</p> + +<p>“But her husband will return and pay you. He +is my old and intimate friend. I make myself +hoarse in telling it to you, wooden-head that you +are!”</p> + +<p>But Bocardon, who had to account to higher +powers, the proprietors of the hotel, was helpless. +At the end of the week Fleurette was called upon +to give up her room. She wept with despair; Aristide +wept with fury; Bocardon wept out of sympathy. +Already, said Bocardon, the proprietors +would blame him for not using the legal right to +detain madame’s luggage.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu! mon Dieu!</em> what is to become of +me?” wailed Fleurette.</p> + +<p>“You forget, madame,” said Aristide, with one +of his fine flourishes, “that you are the sacred +trust of Aristide Pujol.”</p> + +<p>“But I can’t accept your money,” objected Fleurette.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span> +“<em>Tron de l’air!</em>” he cried. “Did your husband +put you in my charge or did he not? Am I your +legal guardian, or am I not? If I am your legal +guardian, what right have you to question the arrangements +made by your husband? Answer me +that.”</p> + +<p>Fleurette, too gentle and too miserable for intricate +argument, sighed.</p> + +<p>“But it is your money, all the same.”</p> + +<p>Aristide turned to Bocardon. “Try,” said he, +“to convince a woman! Do you want proofs? +Wait there a minute while I get them from the +safe of the Agence Pujol.”</p> + +<p>He disappeared into the bureau, where, secure +from observation, he tore an oblong strip from a +sheet of stiff paper, and, using an indelible pencil, +wrote out something fantastic halfway between a +cheque and a bill of exchange, forged as well as +he could from memory the signature of Reginald +Batterby—the imitation of handwriting was one +of Aristide’s many odd accomplishments—and made +the document look legal by means of a receipt +stamp, which he took from Bocardon’s drawer. He +returned to the vestibule with the strip folded and +somewhat crumpled in his hand. “<em>Voilà</em>,” said +he, handing it boldly to Fleurette. “Here is your +husband’s guarantee to me, your guardian, for four +thousand francs.”</p> + +<p>Fleurette examined the forgery. The stamp +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> +impressed her. For the simple souls of France there +is magic in <em>papier timbré</em>.</p> + +<p>“It was my husband who wrote this?” she asked, +curiously.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mais, oui</em>,” said Aristide, with an offended air +of challenge.</p> + +<p>Fleurette’s eyes filled again with tears.</p> + +<p>“I only inquired,” she said, “because this is the +first time I have seen his handwriting.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Ma pauvre petite</em>,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I will do whatever you tell me, M. Pujol,” +said Fleurette, humbly.</p> + +<p>“Good! That is talking like <em>une bonne petite +dame raisonnable</em>. Now, I know a woman made +up of holy bread whom St. Paul and St. Peter +are fighting to have next them when she goes to +Paradise. Her name is Mme. Bidoux, and she +sells cabbages and asparagus and charcoal at No. +213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré. She will arrange our +little affair. Bocardon, will you have madame’s +trunks sent to that address?”</p> + +<p>He gave his arm to Fleurette, and walked out of +the hotel, with serene confidence in the powers of +the sainted Mme. Bidoux. Fleurette accompanied +him unquestioningly. Of course she might have +said: “If you hold negotiable security from my +husband to the amount of four thousand francs, +why should I exchange the comforts of the hotel +for the doubtful accommodation of the sainted +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> +Mme. Bidoux who sells cabbages?” But I repeat +that Fleurette was a simple soul who took for +granted the wisdom of so flamboyant and virile a +creature as Aristide Pujol.</p> + +<p>Away up at the top of No. 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, +was a little furnished room to let, and +there Aristide installed his sacred charge. Mme. +Bidoux, who, as she herself maintained, would +have cut herself into four pieces for Aristide—did +he not save her dog’s life? Did he not marry her +daughter to the brigadier of gendarmes (<em>sale +voyou!</em>), who would otherwise have left her lamenting? +Was he not the most wonderful of God’s +creatures?—Mme. Bidoux, although not quite appreciating +Aristide’s quixotic delicacy, took the forlorn +and fragile wisp of misery to her capacious +bosom. She made her free of the cabbages and +charcoal. She provided her, at a risible charge, +with succulent meals. She told her tales of her +father and mother, of her neighbours, of the domestic +differences between the concierge and his +wife (soothing idyll for an Ariadne!), of the dirty +thief of a brigadier of gendarmes, of her bodily +ailments—her body was so large that they were +many; of the picturesque death, through apoplexy, +of the late M. Bidoux; the brave woman, in short, +gave her of her heart’s best. As far as human +hearts could provide a bed for Fleurette, that bed +was of roses. As a matter of brutal fact, it was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> +narrow and nubbly, and the little uncarpeted room +was ten feet by seven; but to provide it Aristide +went to his own bed hungry. And if the bed of a +man’s hunger is not to be accounted as one of roses, +there ought to be a vote for the reduction of the +Recording Angel’s salary.</p> + +<p>It must not be imagined that Fleurette thought +the bed hard. Her bed of life from childhood had +been nubbly. She never dreamed of complaining +of her little room under the stars, and she sat +among the cabbages like a tired lily, quite contented +with her material lot. But she drooped and +drooped, and the cough returned and shook her; +and Aristide, realizing the sacredness of his charge, +became a prey to anxious terrors.</p> + +<p>“Mère Bidoux,” said he, “she must have lots +of good, nourishing, tender, underdone beef, good +fillets, and <em>entrecôtes saignantes</em>.”</p> + +<p>Mme. Bidoux sighed. She had a heart, but +she also had a pocket which, like Aristide’s, was +not over-filled. “That costs dear, my poor friend,” +she said.</p> + +<p>“What does it matter what it costs? It is I who +provide,” said Aristide, grandly.</p> + +<p>And Aristide gave up tobacco and coffee and +the mild refreshment at cafés essential to the existence +of every Frenchman, and degraded his soul +by taking half-franc tips from tourists—a source +of income which, as Director, M. le Directeur, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> +Herr Direktor of the Agence Pujol, he had hitherto +scorned haughtily—in order to provide Fleurette +with underdone beefsteaks.</p> + +<p>All his leisure he devoted to her. She represented +something that hitherto had not come into +his life—something delicate, tender, ethereal, something +of woman that was exquisitely adorable, +apart from the flesh. Once, as he was sitting in +the little shop, she touched his temple lightly with +her fingers.</p> + +<p>“Ah, you are good to me, Aristide.”</p> + +<p>He felt a thrill such as no woman’s touch had +ever caused to pass through him—far, far sweeter, +cleaner, purer. If the <em>bon Dieu</em> could have given +her to him then and there to be his wife, what bond +could have been holier? But he had bound himself +by a sacred obligation. His friend on his return +should find him loyal.</p> + +<p>“Who could help being good to you, little Fleurette?” +said he. “Even an Apache would not tread +on a lily of the valley!”</p> + +<p>“But you put me in water and tend me so carefully.”</p> + +<p>“So that you can be fresh whenever the dear +Reginald comes back.”</p> + +<p>She sighed. “Tell me what I can do for you, +my good Aristide.”</p> + +<p>“Keep well and happy and be a valiant little +woman,” said he.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span> +Fleurette tried hard to be valiant; but the effort +exhausted her strength. As the days went on, even +Aristide’s inexhaustible conversation failed to distract +her from brooding. She lost the trick of +laughter. In the evenings, when he was most +with her, she would sit, either in the shop or in the +little room at the back, her blue childish eyes fixed +on him wistfully. At first he tried to lure her into +the gay street; but walking tired her. He encouraged +her to sit outside on the pavement of the +Rue Saint-Honoré and join with Mme. Bidoux +in the gossip of neighbours; but she listened to +them with uncomprehending ears. In despair Aristide, +to coax a smile from her lips, practised his +many queer accomplishments. He conjured with +cards; he juggled with oranges; he had a mountebank’s +trick of putting one leg round his neck; he +imitated the voices of cats and pigs and ducks, +till Mme. Bidoux held her sides with mirth. He +spent time and thought in elaborating what he +called <em>bonnes farces</em>, such as dressing himself up +in Mme. Bidoux’s raiment and personifying a +crabbed customer.</p> + +<p>Fleurette smiled but listlessly at all these comicalities.</p> + +<p>One day she was taken ill. A doctor, summoned, +said many learned words which Aristide and Mme. +Bidoux tried hard to understand.</p> + +<p>“But, after all, what is the matter with her?”</p> + +<a name="img234" id="img234"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/img234.jpg" width="400" height="500" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">aristide practised his many queer accomplishments</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> +“She has no strength to struggle. She wants +happiness.”</p> + +<p>“Can you tell me the druggist’s where that can +be procured?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>The doctor shrugged his shoulders. “I tell you +the truth. It is one of those pulmonary cases. +Happy, she will live; unhappy, she will die.”</p> + +<p>“My poor Mme. Bidoux, what is to be done?” +asked Aristide, after the doctor had gone off with +his modest fee. “How are we to make her happy?”</p> + +<p>“If only she could have news of her husband!” +replied Mme. Bidoux.</p> + +<p>Aristide’s anxieties grew heavier. It was November, +when knickerbockered and culture-seeking +tourists no longer fill the cheap hotels of Paris. +The profits of the Agence Pujol dwindled. Aristide +lived on bread and cheese, and foresaw the +time when cheese would be a sinful luxury. Meanwhile +Fleurette had her nourishing food, and grew +more like the ghost of a lily every day. But her +eyes followed Aristide, wherever he went in her +presence, as if he were the god of her salvation.</p> + +<p>One day Aristide, with an unexpected franc or +two in his pocket, stopped in front of a <em>bureau de +tabac</em>. A brown packet of caporal and a book of +cigarette-papers—a cigarette rolled—how good it +would be! He hesitated, and his glance fell on a +collection of foreign stamps exposed in the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> +window. Among them were twelve Honduras stamps +all postmarked. He stared at them, fascinated.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon brave Aristide!</em>” he cried. “If the <em>bon +Dieu</em> does not send you these vibrating inspirations, +it is because you yourself have already conceived +them!”</p> + +<p>He entered the shop and emerged, not with caporal +and cigarette-papers, but with the twelve Honduras +stamps.</p> + +<p>That night he sat up in his little bedroom at +No. 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honoré, until his candle +failed, inditing a letter in English to Fleurette. +At the head of his paper he wrote “Hotel Rosario, +Honduras.” And at the end of the letter he signed +the name of Reginald Batterby. Where Honduras +was, he had but a vague idea. For Fleurette, at +any rate, it would be somewhere at the other end +of the world, and she would not question any want +of accuracy in local detail. Just before the light +went out he read the letter through with great +pride. Batterby alluded to the many letters he +had posted from remote parts of the globe, gave +glowing forecasts of the fortune that Honduras +had in store for him, reminded her that he had +placed sufficient funds for her maintenance in the +hands of Aristide Pujol, and assured her that the +time was not far off when she would be summoned +to join her devoted husband.</p> + +<p>“Mme. Bidoux was right,” said he, before going +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span> +to sleep. “This is the only way to make her happy.”</p> + +<p>The next day Fleurette received the letter. The +envelope bore the postmarked Honduras stamp. It +had been rubbed on the dusty pavement to take +off the newness. It was in her husband’s handwriting. +There was no mistake about it—it was +a letter from Honduras.</p> + +<p>“Are you happier now, little doubting female +St. Thomas that you are?” cried Aristide when +she had told him the news.</p> + +<p>She smiled at him out of grateful eyes, and +touched his hand.</p> + +<p>“Much happier, <em>mon bon ami</em>,” she said, gently.</p> + +<p>Later in the day she handed him a letter addressed +to Batterby. It had no stamp.</p> + +<p>“Will you post this for me, Aristide?”</p> + +<p>Aristide put the letter in his pocket and turned +sharply away, lest she should see a sudden rush +of tears. He had not counted on this innocent +trustfulness. He went to his room. The poor +little letter! He had not the heart to destroy it. +No; he would keep it till Batterby came; it was not +his to destroy. So he threw it into a drawer.</p> + +<p>Having once begun the deception, however, he +thought it necessary to continue. Every week, +therefore, he invented a letter from Batterby. To +interest her he drew upon his Provençal imagination. +He described combats with crocodiles, lion-hunts, +feasts with terrific savages from the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span> +interior, who brought their lady wives chastely clad +in petticoats made out of human teeth; he drew +pictures of the town, a kind of palm-shaded Paris +by the sea, where one ate ortolans and oysters as +big as soup-plates, and where Chinamen with pigtails +rode about the streets on camels. It was not +a correct description of Honduras, but, all the +same, an exotic atmosphere stimulating and captivating +rose from the pages. With this it was necessary +to combine expressions of affection. At +first it was difficult. Essential delicacy restrained +him. He had also to keep in mind Batterby’s vernacular. +To address Fleurette, impalpable creation +of fairyland, as “old girl” was particularly distasteful. +By degrees, however, the artist prevailed. +And then at last the man himself took to forgetting +the imaginary writer and poured out words of love, +warm, true, and passionate.</p> + +<p>And every week Fleurette would smile and tell +him the wondrous news, and would put into his +hands an unstamped letter to post, which he, with +a wrench of the heart, would add to the collection +in the drawer.</p> + +<p>Once she said, diffidently, with an unwonted +blush and her pale blue eyes swimming: “I write +English so badly. Won’t you read the letter and +correct my mistakes?”</p> + +<p>But Aristide laughed and licked the flap of the +envelope and closed it. “What has love to do with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> +spelling and grammar? The good Reginald would +prefer your bad English to all the turned phrases +of the Académie Française.”</p> + +<p>“It is as you like, Aristide,” said Fleurette, with +wistful eyes.</p> + +<p>Yet, in spite of the weekly letters, Fleurette continued +to droop. The winter came, and Fleurette +was no longer able to stay among the cabbages of +Mme. Bidoux. She lay on her bed in the little +room, ten feet by seven, away, away at the top of +the house in the Rue Saint Honoré. The doctor, +informed of her comparative happiness, again +shrugged his shoulders. There was nothing more +to be done.</p> + +<p>“She is dying, monsieur, for want of strength +to live.”</p> + +<p>Then Aristide went about with a great heartache. +Fleurette would die; she would never see +the man she loved again. What would he say when +he returned and learned the tragic story? He +would not even know that Aristide, loving her, had +been loyal to him. When the Director of the +Agence Pujol personally conducted the clients of +the Hôtel du Soleil et de l’Ecosse to the Grand +Trianon and pointed out the bed of the Empress +Josephine he nearly broke down.</p> + +<p>“What is the Empress doing now?”</p> + +<p>What was Fleurette doing now? Going to join +the Empress in the world of shadows.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span> +The tourists talked after the manner of their +kind.</p> + +<p>“She must have found the bed very hard, poor +dear.”</p> + +<p>“Give me an iron bedstead and a good old spring +mattress.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, but, my dear sir, you forget. The Empress’s +bed was slung on the back of tame panthers +which Napoleon brought from Egypt.”</p> + +<p>It was hard to jest convincingly to the knickerbockered +with death in one’s soul.</p> + +<p>“Most belovèd little Flower,” ran the last letter +that Fleurette received, “I have just had a cable +from Aristide saying that you are very ill. I will +come to you as soon as I can. <em>Ces petits yeux de +pervenche</em>—I am learning your language here, you +see—haunt me day and night ...” etcetera, +etcetera.</p> + +<p>Aristide went up to her room with a great bunch +of chrysanthemums. The letter peeped from under +the pillow. Fleurette was very weak. Mme. Bidoux, +who, during Fleurette’s illness, had allowed +her green grocery business to be personally conducted +to the deuce by a youth of sixteen very +much in love with the lady who sold sausages and +other <em>charcuterie</em> next door, had spread out the +fortune-telling cards on the bed and was prophesying +mendaciously. Fleurette took the flowers and +clasped them to her bosom.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> +“No letter for <em>ce cher Reginald</em>?”</p> + +<p>She shook her head. “I can write no more,” she +whispered.</p> + +<p>She closed her eyes. Presently she said, in a +low voice:—</p> + +<p>“Aristide—if you kiss me, I think I can go to +sleep.”</p> + +<p>He bent down to kiss her forehead. A fragile +arm twined itself about his neck and he kissed her +on the lips.</p> + +<p>“She is sleeping,” said Mme. Bidoux, after a +while.</p> + +<p>Aristide tiptoed out of the room.</p> + +<p>And so died Fleurette. Aristide borrowed money +from the kind-hearted Bocardon for a beautiful +funeral, and Mme. Bidoux and Bocardon and a +few neighbours and himself saw her laid to rest. +When they got back to the Rue Saint Honoré he +told Mme. Bidoux about the letters. She wept and +clasped him, weeping too, in her kind, fat old arms.</p> + +<p>The next evening Aristide, coming back from his +day’s work at the Hôtel du Soleil et de l’Ecosse, +was confronted in the shop by Mme. Bidoux, +hands on broad hips.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens, mon petit</em>,” she said, without preliminary +greeting. “You are an angel. I knew it. But +that a man’s an angel is no reason for his being an +imbecile. Read this.”</p> + +<p>She plucked a paper from her apron pocket and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> +thrust it into his hand. He read it, and blinked in +amazement.</p> + +<p>“Where did you get this, Mère Bidoux?”</p> + +<p>“Where I got many more. In your drawer. +The letters you were saving for this infamous +scoundrel. I wanted to know what she had written +to him.”</p> + +<p>“Mère Bidoux!” cried Aristide. “Those letters +were sacred!”</p> + +<p>“Bah!” said Mme. Bidoux, unabashed. “There +is nothing sacred to a sapper or an old grandmother +who loves an imbecile. I have read the letters, <em>et +voilà, et voilà, et voilà!</em>” And she emptied her +pockets of all the letters, minus the envelopes, that +Fleurette had written.</p> + +<p>And, after one swift glance at the first letter, +Aristide had no compunction in reading. They +were all addressed to himself.</p> + +<p>They were very short, ill-written in a poor little +uncultivated hand. But they all contained one message, +that of her love for Aristide. Whatever illusions +she may have had concerning Batterby had +soon vanished. She knew, with the unerring instinct +of woman, that he had betrayed and deserted +her. Aristide’s pious fraud had never deceived her +for a second. Too gentle, too timid to let him +know what was in her heart, she had written the +secret patiently week after week, hoping every time +that curiosity, or pity, or something—she knew not +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span> +what—would induce him to open the idle letter, and +wondering in her simple peasant’s soul at the +delicacy that caused him to refrain. Once she had +boldly given him the envelope unclosed.</p> + +<a name="img244" id="img244"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 465px;"> +<img src="images/img244.jpg" width="465" height="500" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">he read it, and blinked in amazement</span> +</div> + +<p>“She died for want of love, <em>parbleu</em>,” said Aristide, +“and there was mine quivering in my heart +and trembling on my lips all the time.... She +had <em>des yeux de pervenche</em>. Ah! <em>nom d’un chien!</em> +It is only with me that Providence plays such +tricks.”</p> + +<p>He walked to the window and looked out into +the grey street. Presently I heard him murmuring +the words of the old French song:—</p> + +<p class="center"> +Elle est morte en février;<br /> + Pauvre Colinette!</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>VII</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE MIRACLE</strong></p> + + +<p>You have seen how Aristide, by attaching +himself to the Hôtel du Soleil et de l’Ecosse +as a kind of glorified courier, had founded +the Agence Pujol. As he, personally, was the +Agence, and the Agence was he, it happened that +when he was not in attendance at the hotel, the +Agence faded into space, and when he made his +appearance in the vestibule and hung up his placard +by the bureau, the Agence at once burst again into +the splendour of existence. Apparently the fitful +career of the Agence Pujol lasted some years. +Whenever a chance of more remunerative employment +turned up, Aristide took it and dissolved the +Agence. Whenever outrageous fortune chivied +him with slings and arrows penniless to Paris, there +was always the Agence waiting to be resuscitated.</p> + +<p>It was during one of these periodic flourishings +of the Agence Pujol that Aristide met the Ducksmiths.</p> + +<p>Business was slack, few guests were at the hotel, +and of those few none desired to be personally +conducted to the Louvre or Notre Dame or the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> +monument in the Place de la Bastille. They mostly +wore the placid expression of folks engaged in business +affairs instead of the worried look of pleasure-seekers.</p> + +<p>“My good Bocardon,” said Aristide, lounging +by the bureau and addressing his friend the manager, +“this is becoming desperate. In another +minute I shall take you out by main force and show +you the Pont Neuf.”</p> + +<p>At that moment the door of the stuffy salon +opened, and a travelling Briton, whom Aristide +had not seen before, advanced to the bureau and +inquired his way to the Madeleine. Aristide turned +on him like a flash.</p> + +<p>“Sir,” said he, extracting documents from his +pockets with lightning rapidity, “nothing would +give me greater pleasure than to conduct you +thither. My card. My tariff. My advertisement.” +He pointed to the placard. “I am the managing director +of the Agence Pujol, under the special patronage +of this hotel. I undertake all travelling arrangements, +from the Moulin Rouge to the Pyramids, +and, as you see, my charges are moderate.”</p> + +<p>The Briton, holding the documents in a pudgy +hand, looked at the swift-gestured director with +portentous solemnity. Then, with equal solemnity, +he looked at Bocardon.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur Ducksmith,” said the latter, “you can +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> +repose every confidence in Monsieur Aristide +Pujol.”</p> + +<p>“Umph!” said Mr. Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>After another solemn inspection of Aristide, he +stuck a pair of gold-rimmed glasses on his fleshy +nose and perused the documents. He was a fat, +heavy man of about fifty years of age, and his +scanty hair was turning grey. His puffy cheeks +hung jowl-like, giving him the appearance of some +odd dog—a similarity greatly intensified by the +eye-sockets, the lower lids of which were dragged +down in the middle, showing the red like a bloodhound’s; +but here the similarity ended, for the +man’s eyes, dull and blue, had the unspeculative +fixity of a rabbit’s. His mouth, small and weak, +dribbled away at the corners into the jowls which, +in their turn, melted into two or three chins. He +was decently dressed in grey tweeds, and wore a +diamond ring on his little finger.</p> + +<p>“Umph!” said he, at last; and went back to the +salon.</p> + +<p>As soon as the door closed behind him Aristide +sprang into an attitude of indignation.</p> + +<p>“Did you ever see such a bear! If I ever saw +a bigger one I would eat him without salt or pepper. +<em>Mais nom d’un chien</em>, such people ought to +be made into sausages!”</p> + +<p>“<em>Flègme britannique!</em>” laughed Bocardon.</p> + +<p>Half an hour passed, and Mr. Ducksmith made +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> +no reappearance from the salon. In the forlorn +hope of a client Aristide went in after him. He +found Mr. Ducksmith, glasses on nose, reading a +newspaper, and a plump, black-haired lady, with an +expressionless face, knitting a grey woollen sock. +Why they should be spending their first morning—and +a crisp, sunny morning, too—in Paris in the +murky staleness of this awful little salon, Aristide +could not imagine. As he entered, Mr. Ducksmith +regarded him vacantly over the top of his gold-rimmed +glasses.</p> + +<p>“I have looked in,” said Aristide, with his ingratiating +smile, “to see whether you are ready to +go to the Madeleine.”</p> + +<p>“Madeleine?” the lady inquired, softly, pausing +in her knitting.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” Aristide came forward, and, hand +on heart, made her the lowest of bows. “Madame, +have I the honour of speaking to Madame Ducksmith? +Enchanted, madame, to make your acquaintance,” +he continued, after a grunt from Mr. +Ducksmith had assured him of the correctness of +his conjecture. “I am Monsieur Aristide Pujol, +director of the Agence Pujol, and my poor services +are absolutely at your disposal.”</p> + +<p>He drew himself up, twisted his moustache, and +met her eyes—they were rather sad and tired—with +the roguish mockery of his own. She turned +to her husband.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span> +“Are you thinking of going to the Madeleine, +Bartholomew?”</p> + +<p>“I am, Henrietta,” said he. “I have decided to +do it. And I have also decided to put ourselves +in the charge of this gentleman. Mrs. Ducksmith +and I are accustomed to all the conveniences of +travel—I may say that we are great travellers—and +I leave it to you to make the necessary arrangements. +I prefer to travel at so much per head per +day.”</p> + +<p>He spoke in a wheezy, solemn monotone, from +which all elements of life and joy seemed to have +been eliminated. His wife’s voice, though softer +in timbre, was likewise devoid of colour.</p> + +<p>“My husband finds that it saves us from responsibilities,” +she remarked.</p> + +<p>“And over-charges, and the necessity of learning +foreign languages, which at our time of life would +be difficult. During all our travels we have not +been to Paris before, owing to the impossibility of +finding a personally-conducted tour of an adequate +class.”</p> + +<p>“Then, my dear sir,” cried Aristide, “it is Providence +itself that has put you in the way of the +Agence Pujol. I will now conduct you to the +Madeleine without the least discomfort or danger.”</p> + +<p>“Put on your hat, Henrietta,” said Mr. Ducksmith, +“while this gentleman and I discuss terms.”</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith gathered up her knitting and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> +retired, Aristide dashing to the door to open it for +her. This gallantry surprised her ever so little, for +a faint flush came into her cheek and the shadow of +a smile into her eyes.</p> + +<p>“I wish you to understand, Mr. Pujol,” said Mr. +Ducksmith, “that being, I may say, a comparatively +rich man, I can afford to pay for certain luxuries; +but I made a resolution many years ago, which has +stood me in good stead during my business life, +that I would never be cheated. You will find me +liberal but just.”</p> + +<p>He was as good as his word. Aristide, who had +never in his life exploited another’s wealth to his +own advantage, suggested certain terms, on the +basis of so much per head per day, which Mr. +Ducksmith declared, with a sigh of relief, to be +perfectly satisfactory.</p> + +<p>“Perhaps,” said he, after further conversation, +“you will be good enough to schedule out a month’s +railway tour through France, and give me an inclusive +estimate for the three of us. As I say, Mrs. +Ducksmith and I are great travellers—we have +been to Norway, to Egypt, to Morocco and the +Canaries, to the Holy Land, to Rome, and lovely +Lucerne—but we find that attention to the trivial +detail of travel militates against our enjoyment.”</p> + +<p>“My dear sir,” said Aristide, “trust in me, and +your path and that of the charming Mrs. Ducksmith +will be strewn with roses.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span> +Whereupon Mrs. Ducksmith appeared, arrayed +for walking out, and Aristide, having ordered a +cab, drove with them to the Madeleine. They +alighted in front of the majestic flight of steps. +Mr. Ducksmith stared at the classical portico supported +on its Corinthian columns with his rabbit-like, +unspeculative gaze—he had those filmy blue +eyes that never seem to wink—and after a moment +or two turned away.</p> + +<p>“Umph!” said he.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith, dutiful and silent, turned away +also.</p> + +<p>“This sacred edifice,” Aristide began, in his best +cicerone manner, “was built, after a classic model, +by the great Napoleon, as a Temple of Fame. It +was afterwards used as a church. You will observe—and, +if you care to, you can count, as a conscientious +American lady did last week—the fifty-six +Corinthian columns. You will see they are Corinthian +by the acanthus leaves on the capitals. For +the vulgar, who have no architectural knowledge, +I have <em>memoria technica</em> for the instant recognition +of the three orders—Cabbages, Corinthian; horns, +Ionic; anything else, Doric. We will now mount +the steps and inspect the interior.”</p> + +<p>He was dashing off in his eager fashion, when +Mr. Ducksmith laid a detaining hand on his arm.</p> + +<p>“No,” said he, solemnly. “I disapprove of +Popish interiors. Take us to the next place.”</p> + +<a name="img254" id="img254"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/img254.jpg" width="400" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">he might as well have pointed out the marvels of kubla khan’s +pleasure-dome to a couple of guinea-pigs</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span> +He entered the waiting victoria. His wife +meekly followed.</p> + +<p>“I suppose the Louvre is the next place?” said +Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I leave it to you,” said Mr. Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>Aristide gave the order to the cabman and took +the little seat in the cab facing his employers. On +the way down the Rue Royale and the Rue de +Rivoli he pointed out the various buildings of interest—Maxim’s, +the Cercle Royal, the Ministère +de la Marine, the Hôtel Continental. Two expressionless +faces, two pairs of unresponsive eyes, met +his merry glance. He might as well have pointed +out the marvels of Kubla Khan’s pleasure-dome to +a couple of guinea-pigs.</p> + +<p>The cab stopped at the entrance to the galleries +of the Louvre. They entered and walked up the +great staircase on the turn of which the Winged +Victory stands, with the wind of God in her vesture, +proclaiming to each beholder the deathless, +ever-soaring, ever-conquering spirit of man, +and heralding the immortal glories of the souls, +wind-swept likewise by the wind of God, +that are enshrined in the treasure-houses beyond.</p> + +<p>“There!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Umph! No head,” said Mr. Ducksmith, passing +it by with scarcely a glance.</p> + +<p>“Would it cost very much to get a new one?” +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span> +asked Mrs. Ducksmith, timidly. She was three or +four paces behind her spouse.</p> + +<p>“It would cost the blood and tears and laughter +of the human race,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>(“That was devilish good, wasn’t it?” remarked +Aristide, when telling me this story. He always +took care not to hide his light under the least possibility +of a bushel.)</p> + +<p>The Ducksmiths looked at him in their lacklustre +way, and allowed themselves to be guided +into the picture-galleries, vaguely hearing Aristide’s +comments, scarcely glancing at the pictures, +and manifesting no sign of interest in anything +whatever. From the Louvre they drove to Notre +Dame, where the same thing happened. The +venerable pile, standing imperishable amid the vicissitudes +of centuries (the phrase was that of the +director of the Agence Pujol), stirred in their +bosoms no perceptible emotion. Mr. Ducksmith +grunted and declined to enter; Mrs. Ducksmith +said nothing.</p> + +<p>As with pictures and cathedrals, so it was with +their food at lunch. Beyond a solemn statement +to the effect that in their quality of practised +travellers they made a point of eating the food and +drinking the wine of the country, Mr. Ducksmith +did not allude to the meal. At any rate, thought +Aristide, they don’t clamour for underdone chops +and tea. So far they were human. Nor did they +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span> +maintain an awful silence during the repast. On +the contrary, Mr. Ducksmith loved to talk—in a +dismal, pompous way—chiefly of British politics. +His method of discourse was to place himself in +the position of those in authority and to declare +what he would do in any given circumstances. +Now, unless the interlocutor adopts the same +method and declares what <em>he</em> would do, conversation +is apt to become one-sided. Aristide, having +no notion of a policy should he find himself exercising +the functions of the British Chancellor of the +Exchequer, cheerfully tried to change the ground +of debate.</p> + +<p>“What would you do, Mr. Ducksmith, if you +were King of England?”</p> + +<p>“I should try to rule the realm like a Christian +statesman,” replied Mr. Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>“I should have a devil of a time!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I beg your pardon?” said Mr. Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>“I should have a—ah, I see—<em>pardon</em>. I +should——” He looked from one paralyzing face +to the other, and threw out his arms. “<em>Parbleu!</em>” +said he, “I should decapitate your Mrs. Grundy, +and make it compulsory for bishops to dance once +a week in Trafalgar Square. <em>Tiens!</em> I would have +it a capital offence for any English cook to prepare +hashed mutton without a license, and I would banish +all the bakers of the kingdom to Siberia—ah! +your English bread, which you have to eat stale +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span> +so as to avoid a horrible death!—and I would open +two hundred thousand <em>cafés</em>—<em>mon Dieu!</em> how +thirsty I have been there!—and I would make +every English work-girl do her hair properly, and +I would ordain that everybody should laugh three +times a day, under pain of imprisonment for life.”</p> + +<p>“I am afraid, Mr. Pujol,” remarked Mr. Ducksmith, +seriously, “you would not be acting as a constitutional +monarch. There is such a thing as the +British Constitution, which foreigners are bound +to admire, even though they may not understand.”</p> + +<p>“To be a king must be a great responsibility,” +said Mrs. Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” said Aristide, “you have uttered a +profound truth.” And to himself he murmured, +though he should not have done so, “<em>Nom de Dieu! +Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!</em>”</p> + +<p>After lunch they drove to Versailles, which they +inspected in the same apathetic fashion; then they +returned to the hotel, where they established themselves +for the rest of the day in the airless salon, +Mr. Ducksmith reading English newspapers and +his wife knitting a grey woollen sock.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon vieux!</em>” said Aristide to Bocardon, “they +are people of a nightmare. They are automata endowed +with the faculty of digestion. <em>Ce sont des +gens invraisemblables.</em>”</p> + +<p>Paris providing them, apparently, with no entertainment, +they started, after a couple of days, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> +<em>Aristide duce et auspice Pujol</em>, on their railway tour +through France, to Aristide a pilgrimage of unimaginable +depression. They began with Chartres, +continued with the Châteaux of the Loire, and began +to work their way south. Nothing that Aristide +could do roused them from their apathy. They +were exasperatingly docile, made few complaints, +got up, entrained, detrained, fed, excursioned, slept, +just as they were bidden. But they looked at nothing, +enjoyed nothing (save perhaps English newspapers +and knitting), and uttered nothing by way +of criticism or appreciation when Aristide attempted +to review the wonders through which they +had passed. They did not care to know the history, +authentic or Pujolic, of any place they visited; they +were impressed by no scene of grandeur, no corner +of exquisite beauty. To go on and on, in a dull, +non-sentient way, so long as they were spared all +forethought, all trouble, all afterthought, seemed to +be their ideal of travel. Sometimes Aristide, after +a fruitless effort to capture their interest, would +hold his head, wondering whether he or the Ducksmith +couple were insane. It was a dragon-fly personally +conducting two moles through a rose-garden.</p> + +<p>Once only, during the early part of their journey, +did a gleam of joyousness pierce the dull +glaze of Mr. Ducksmith’s eyes. He had procured +from the bookstall of a station a pile of English +newspapers, and was reading them in the train, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> +while his wife knitted the interminable sock. Suddenly +he folded a <em>Daily Telegraph</em>, and handed it +over to Aristide so that he should see nothing but a +half-page advertisement. The great capitals leaped +to Aristide’s eyes:—</p> + +<p class="center"> +“DUCKSMITH’S DELICATE JAMS.”</p> + +<p>“I am <em>the</em> Ducksmith,” said he. “I started and +built up the business. When I found that I could +retire, I turned it into a limited liability company, +and now I am free and rich and able to enjoy the +advantages of foreign travel.”</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith started, sighed, and dropped a +stitch.</p> + +<p>“Did you also make pickles?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I did manufacture pickles, but I made my name +in jam. In the trade you will find it an honoured +one.”</p> + +<p>“It is that in every nursery in Europe,” Aristide +declared, with polite hyperbole.</p> + +<p>“I have done my best to deserve my reputation,” +said Mr. Ducksmith, as impervious to flattery as to +impressions of beauty.</p> + +<p>“<em>Pécaïre!</em>” said Aristide to himself, “how can I +galvanize these corpses?”</p> + +<p>As the soulless days went by this problem grew +to be Aristide’s main solicitude. He felt strangled, +choked, borne down by an intolerable weight. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> +What could he do to stir their vitality? Should he +fire off pistols behind them, just to see them jump? +But would they jump? Would not Mr. Ducksmith +merely turn his rabbit-eyes, set in their bloodhound +sockets, vacantly on him, and assume that the detonations +were part of the tour’s programme? +Could he not fill him up with conflicting alcohols, +and see what inebriety would do for him? But +Mr. Ducksmith declined insidious potations. He +drank only at meal-times, and sparingly. Aristide +prayed that some Thaïs might come along, cast her +spell upon him, and induce him to wink. He himself +was powerless. His raciest stories fell on dull +ears; none of his jokes called forth a smile. At +last, having taken them to nearly all the historic +châteaux of Touraine, without eliciting one cry of +admiration, he gave Mr. Ducksmith up in despair +and devoted his attention to the lady.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith parted her smooth black hair in +the middle and fastened it in a knob at the back of +her head. Her clothes were good and new, but +some desolate dressmaker had contrived to invest +them with an air of hopeless dowdiness. At her +bosom she wore a great brooch, containing intertwined +locks of a grandfather and grandmother +long since defunct. Her mind was as drearily +equipped as her person. She had a vague idea that +they were travelling in France; but if Aristide had +told her that it was Japan she would have meekly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> +accepted the information. She had no opinions. +Still she was a woman, and Aristide, firm in his +conviction that when it comes to love-making all +women are the same, proceeded forthwith to make +love to her.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” said he, one morning—she was knitting +in the vestibule of the Hôtel du Faisan at +Tours, Mr. Ducksmith being engaged, as usual, in +the salon with his newspapers—“how much more +charming that beautiful grey dress would be if it +had a spot of colour.”</p> + +<p>His audacious hand placed a deep crimson rose +against her corsage, and he stood away at arm’s +length, his head on one side, judging the effect.</p> + +<p>“Magnificent! If madame would only do me +the honour to wear it.”</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith took the flower hesitatingly.</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid my husband does not like colour,” +she said.</p> + +<p>“He must be taught,” cried Aristide. “You +must teach him. I must teach him. Let us begin +at once. Here is a pin.”</p> + +<p>He held the pin delicately between finger and +thumb, and controlled her with his roguish eyes. +She took the pin and fixed the rose to her dress.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know what Mr. Ducksmith will say.”</p> + +<p>“What he ought to say, madame, is ‘Bountiful +Providence, I thank Thee for giving me such a +beautiful wife.’”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> +Mrs. Ducksmith blushed and, to conceal her face, +bent it over her resumed knitting. She made +woman’s time-honoured response.</p> + +<p>“I don’t think you ought to say such things, Mr. +Pujol.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, madame,” said he, lowering his voice; “I +have tried not to; but, <em>que voulez-vous</em>, it was +stronger than I. When I see you going about like +a little grey mouse”—the lady weighed at least +twelve stone—“you, who ought to be ravishing the +eyes of mankind, I feel indignation here”—he +thumped his chest; “my Provençal heart is stirred. +It is enough to make one weep.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t quite understand you, Mr. Pujol,” she +said, dropping stitches recklessly.</p> + +<p>“Ah, madame,” he whispered—and the rascal’s +whisper on such occasions could be very seductive—“that +I will never believe.”</p> + +<p>“I am too old to dress myself up in fine clothes,” +she murmured.</p> + +<p>“That’s an illusion,” said he, with a wide-flung +gesture, “that will vanish at the first experiment.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Ducksmith emerged from the salon, <em>Daily +Telegraph</em> in hand. Mrs. Ducksmith shot a timid +glance at him and the knitting needles clicked together +nervously. But the vacant eyes of the heavy +man seemed no more to note the rose on her bosom +than they noted any point of beauty in landscape or +building.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> +Aristide went away chuckling, highly diverted +by the success of his first effort. He had touched +some hidden springs of feeling. Whatever might +happen, at any rate, for the remainder of the tour +he would not have to spend his emotional force in +vain attempts to knock sparks out of a jelly-fish. +He noticed with delight that at dinner that evening +Mrs. Ducksmith, still wearing the rose, had modified +the rigid sweep of her hair from the mid-parting. +It gave just a wavy hint of coquetry. He +made her a little bow and whispered, “Charming!” +Whereupon she coloured and dropped her eyes. +And during the meal, while Mr. Ducksmith discoursed +on bounty-fed sugar, his wife and Aristide +exchanged, across the table, the glances +of conspirators. After dinner he approached +her.</p> + +<p>“Madame, may I have the privilege of showing +you the moon of Touraine?”</p> + +<p>She laid down her knitting. “Bartholomew, +will you come out?”</p> + +<p>He looked at her over his glasses and shook his +head.</p> + +<p>“What is the good of looking at moonshine? +The moon itself I have already seen.”</p> + +<p>So Aristide and Mrs. Ducksmith sat by themselves +outside the hotel, and he expounded to her +the beauty of moonlight and its intoxicating effect +on folks in love.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span> +“Wouldn’t you like,” said he, “to be lying on +that white burnished cloud with your beloved kissing +your feet?”</p> + +<p>“What odd things you think of.”</p> + +<p>“But wouldn’t you?” he insinuated.</p> + +<p>Her bosom heaved and swelled on a sigh. She +watched the strip of silver for a while and then +murmured a wistful “Yes.”</p> + +<p>“I can tell you of many odd things,” said Aristide. +“I can tell you how flowers sing and what +colour there is in the notes of birds. And how a +cornfield laughs, and how the face of a woman +who loves can outdazzle the sun. <em>Chère madame</em>,” +he went on, after a pause, touching her little plump +hand, “you have been hungering for beauty and +thirsting for sympathy all your life. Isn’t that +so?”</p> + +<p>She nodded.</p> + +<p>“You have always been misunderstood.”</p> + +<p>A tear fell. Our rascal saw the glistening drop +with peculiar satisfaction. Poor Mrs. Ducksmith! +It was a child’s game. <em>Enfin</em>, what woman could +resist him? He had, however, one transitory +qualm of conscience, for, with all his vagaries, +Aristide was a kindly and honest man. Was it +right to disturb those placid depths? Was it right +to fill this woman with romantic aspirations that +could never be gratified? He himself had not the +slightest intention of playing Lothario and of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> +wrecking the peace of the Ducksmith household. +The realization of the saint-like purity of his aims +reassured him. When he wanted to make love to a +woman, <em>pour tout de bon</em>, it would not be to Mrs. +Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>“Bah!” said he to himself. “I am doing a noble +and disinterested act. I am restoring sight to the +blind. I am giving life to one in a state of suspended +animation. <em>Tron de l’Air!</em> I am playing +the part of a soul-reviver! And, <em>parbleu!</em> it isn’t +Jean or Jacques that can do that. It takes an Aristide +Pujol!”</p> + +<p>So, having persuaded himself, in his Southern +way, that he was executing an almost divine mission, +he continued, with a zest now sharpened by +an approving conscience, to revive Mrs. Ducksmith’s +soul.</p> + +<p>The poor lady, who had suffered the blighting +influence of Mr. Ducksmith for twenty years with +never a ray of counteracting warmth from the outside, +expanded like a flower to the sun under the +soul-reviving process. Day by day she exhibited +some fresh timid coquetry in dress and manner. +Gradually she began to respond to Aristide’s suggestions +of beauty in natural scenery and exquisite +building. On the ramparts of Angoulême, daintiest +of towns in France, she gazed at the smiling +valleys of the Charente and the Son stretching +away below, and of her own accord touched his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> +arm lightly and said: “How beautiful!” She appealed +to her husband.</p> + +<p>“Umph!” said he.</p> + +<p>Once more (it had become a habit) she exchanged +glances with Aristide. He drew her a little farther +along, under pretext of pointing out the dreamy +sweep of the Charente.</p> + +<p>“If he appreciates nothing at all, why on earth +does he travel?”</p> + +<p>Her eyelids fluttered upwards for a fraction of +a second.</p> + +<p>“It’s his mania,” she said. “He can never rest +at home. He must always be going on—on.”</p> + +<p>“How can you endure it?” he asked.</p> + +<p>She sighed. “It is better now that you can +teach me how to look at things.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” thought Aristide. “When I leave them +she can teach him to look at things and revive his +soul. Truly I deserve a halo.”</p> + +<p>As Mr. Ducksmith appeared to be entirely unperceptive +of his wife’s spiritual expansion, Aristide +grew bolder in his apostolate. He complimented +Mrs. Ducksmith to his face. He presented +her daily with flowers. He scarcely waited for +the heavy man’s back to be turned to make love to +her. If she did not believe that she was the most +beautiful, the most ravishing, the most delicate-souled +woman in the world, it was through no fault +of Aristide. Mr. Ducksmith went his pompous, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span> +unseeing way. At every stopping-place stacks of +English daily papers awaited him. Sometimes, +while Aristide was showing them the sights of a +town—to which, by the way, he insisted on being +conducted—he would extract a newspaper from his +pocket and read with dull and dogged stupidity. +Once Aristide caught him reading the advertisements +for cooks and housemaids. In these circumstances +Mrs. Ducksmith spiritually expanded at an +alarming rate; and, correspondingly, dwindled the +progress of Mr. Ducksmith’s sock.</p> + +<p>They arrived at Perigueux, in Perigord, land of +truffles, one morning, in time for lunch. Towards +the end of the meal the <em>maître d’hôtel</em> helped them +to great slabs of <em>pâté de foie gras</em>, made in the +house—most of the hotel-keepers in Perigord make +<em>pâté de foie gras</em>, both for home consumption and +for exportation—and waited expectant of their appreciation. +He was not disappointed. Mr. Ducksmith, +after a hesitating glance at the first mouthful, +swallowed it, greedily devoured his slab, and, +after pointing to his empty plate, said, solemnly:—</p> + +<p>“<em>Plou.</em>”</p> + +<p>Like Oliver, he asked for more.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens!</em>” thought Aristide, astounded. “Is he, +too, developing a soul?”</p> + +<p>But, alas! there were no signs of it when they +went their dreary round of the town in the usual +ramshackle open cab. The cathedral of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> +Saint-Front, extolled by Aristide and restored by Abadie—a +terrible fellow who has capped with tops of pepper-castors +every pre-Gothic building in France—gave +him no thrill; nor did the picturesque, tumble-down +ancient buildings on the banks of the Dordogne, +nor the delicate Renaissance façades in the +cool, narrow Rue du Lys.</p> + +<p>“We will now go back to the hotel,” said Mr. +Ducksmith.</p> + +<p>“But have we seen it all?” asked his wife.</p> + +<p>“By no means,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“We will go back to the hotel,” repeated her +husband, in his expressionless tones. “I have seen +enough of Perigueux.”</p> + +<p>This was final. They drove back to the hotel. +Mr. Ducksmith, without a word, went straight into +the salon, leaving Aristide and his wife standing in +the vestibule.</p> + +<p>“And you, madame,” said Aristide; “are you +going to sacrifice the glory of God’s sunshine to +the manufacture of woollen socks?”</p> + +<p>She smiled—she had caught the trick at last—and +said, in happy submission: “What would you +have me do?”</p> + +<p>With one hand he clasped her arm; with the +other, in a superb gesture, he indicated the sunlit +world outside.</p> + +<p>“Let us drain together,” cried he, “the loveliness +of Perigueux to its dregs!”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> +Greatly daring, she followed him. It was a +rapturous escapade—the first adventure of her life. +She turned her comely face to him and he saw +smiles round her lips and laughter in her eyes. +Aristide, worker of miracles, strutted by her side +choke-full of vanity. They wandered through the +picturesque streets of the old town with the gaiety +of truant children, peeping through iron gateways +into old courtyards, venturing their heads into the +murk of black stairways, talking (on the part +of Aristide) with mothers who nursed chuckling +babes on their doorsteps, crossing the thresholds, +hitherto taboo, of churches, and meeting the mystery +of coloured glass and shadows and the heavy +smell of incense.</p> + +<p>Her hand was on his arm when they entered the +flagged courtyard of an ancient palace, a stately +medley of the centuries, with wrought ironwork in +the balconies, tourelles, oriels, exquisite Renaissance +ornaments on architraves, and a great central +Gothic doorway, with great window-openings +above, through which was visible the stone staircase +of honour leading to the upper floors. In a corner +stood a mediæval well, the sides curiously carved. +One side of the courtyard blazed in sunshine, the +other lay cool and grey in shadow. Not a human +form or voice troubled the serenity of the spot. On +a stone bench against the shady wall Aristide and +Mrs. Ducksmith sat down to rest.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> +“<em>Voilà!</em>” said Aristide. “Here one can suck in +all the past like an omelette. They had the feeling +for beauty, those old fellows.”</p> + +<p>“I have wasted twenty years of my life,” said +Mrs. Ducksmith, with a sigh. “Why didn’t I meet +someone like you when I was young? Ah, you +don’t know what my life has been, Mr. Pujol.”</p> + +<p>“Why not Aristide when we are alone? Why +not, Henriette?”</p> + +<p>He too had the sense of adventure, and his eyes +were more than usually compelling and his voice +more seductive. For some reason or other, undivined +by Aristide—over-excitement of nerves, +perhaps—she burst into tears.</p> + +<p>“<em>Henriette! Henriette, ne pleurez pas.</em>”</p> + +<p>His arm crept round her—he knew not how; her +head sank on his shoulder, she knew not why—faithlessness +to her lord was as far from her +thoughts as murder or arson; but for one poor +little moment in a lifetime it is good to weep on +someone’s shoulder and to have someone’s sympathetic +arm around one’s waist.</p> + +<p>“<em>Pauvre petite femme!</em> And is it love she is +pining for?”</p> + +<p>She sobbed; he lifted her chin with his free hand—and +what less could mortal apostle do?—he kissed +her on her wet cheek.</p> + +<p>A bellow like that of an angry bull caused them +to start asunder. They looked up, and there was +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> +Mr. Ducksmith within a few yards of them, his +face aflame, his rabbit’s eyes on fire with rage. He +advanced, shook his fists in their faces.</p> + +<p>“I’ve caught you! At last, after twenty years, +I’ve caught you!”</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” cried Aristide, starting up, “allow +me to explain.”</p> + +<p>He swept Aristide aside like an intercepting +willow-branch, and poured forth a torrent of +furious speech upon his wife.</p> + +<p>“I have hated you for twenty years. Day by +day I have hated you more. I’ve watched you, +watched you, watched you! But, you sly jade, +you’ve been too clever for me till now. Yes; I +followed you from the hotel. I dogged you. I +foresaw what would happen. Now the end has +come. I’ve hated you for twenty years—ever since +you first betrayed me——”</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith, who had sat with overwhelmed +head in her hands, started bolt upright, and looked +at him like one thunderstruck.</p> + +<p>“I betrayed you?” she gasped, in bewilderment. +“My God! When? How? What do you mean?”</p> + +<p>He laughed—for the first time since Aristide had +known him—but it was a ghastly laugh, that made +the jowls of his cheeks spread horribly to his ears; +and again he flooded the calm, stately courtyard +with the raging violence of words. The veneer of +easy life fell from him. He became the low-born, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span> +petty tradesman, using the language of the hands +of his jam factory. No, he had never told her. +He had awaited his chance. Now he had found it. +He called her names....</p> + +<a name="img274" id="img274"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 461px;"> +<img src="images/img274.jpg" width="461" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">“i’ve caught you! at last, after twenty years,<br /> +i’ve caught you!”</span> +</div> + +<p>Aristide interposed, his Southern being athrob +with the insults heaped upon the woman.</p> + +<p>“Say that again, monsieur,” he shouted, “and I +will take you up in my arms like a sheep and +throw you down that well.”</p> + +<p>The two men glared at one another, Aristide +standing bent, with crooked fingers, ready to spring +at the other’s throat. The woman threw herself +between them.</p> + +<p>“For Heaven’s sake,” she cried, “listen to me! +I have done no wrong. I have done no wrong now—I +never did you wrong, so help me God!”</p> + +<p>Mr. Ducksmith laughed again, and his laugh re-echoed +round the quiet walls and up the vast staircase +of honour.</p> + +<p>“You’d be a fool not to say it. But now I’ve +done with you. Here, you, sir. Take her away—do +what you like with her; I’ll divorce her. I’ll +give you a thousand pounds never to see her +again.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Goujat! Triple goujat!</em>” cried Aristide, more +incensed than ever at this final insult.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Ducksmith, deadly white, swayed sideways, +and Aristide caught her in his arms and dragged +her to the stone bench. The fat, heavy man looked +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> +at them for a second, laughed again, and sped +through the <em>porte-cochère</em>. Mrs. Ducksmith quickly +recovered from her fainting attack, and gently +pushed the solicitous Aristide away.</p> + +<p>“Merciful Heaven!” she murmured. “What is +to become of me?”</p> + +<p>The last person to answer the question was +Aristide. For once in his adventurous life resource +failed him. He stared at the woman for +whom he cared not the snap of a finger, and who, +he knew, cared not the snap of a finger for him, +aghast at the havoc he had wrought. If he had +set out to arouse emotion in these two sluggish +breasts he had done so with a vengeance. He had +thought he was amusing himself with a toy cannon, +and he had fired a charge of dynamite.</p> + +<p>He questioned her almost stupidly—for a man +in the comic mask does not readily attune himself +to tragedy. She answered with the desolate frankness +of a lost soul. And then the whole meaning—or +the lack of meaning—of their inanimate lives +was revealed to him. Absolute estrangement had +followed the birth of their child nearly twenty years +ago. The child had died after a few weeks. Since +then he saw—and the generous blood of his heart +froze as the vision came to him—that the vulgar, +half-sentient, rabbit-eyed bloodhound of a man +had nursed an unexpressed, dull, implacable resentment +against the woman. It did not matter +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> +that the man’s suspicion was vain. To Aristide +the woman’s blank amazement at the preposterous +charge was proof enough; to the man the +thing was real. For nearly twenty years the man +had suffered the cancer to eat away his vitals, and +he had watched and watched his blameless wife, +until now, at last, he had caught her in this folly. +No wonder he could not rest at home; no wonder +he was driven, Io-wise, on and on, although he +hated travel and all its discomforts, knew no word +of a foreign language, knew no scrap of history, +had no sense of beauty, was utterly ignorant, as +every single one of our expensively State-educated +English lower classes is, of everything that matters +on God’s earth; no wonder that, in the unfamiliarity +of foreign lands, feeling as helpless as a ballet-dancer +in a cavalry charge, he looked to Cook, or +Lunn, or the Agence Pujol to carry him through +his uninspired pilgrimage. For twenty years he +had shown no sign of joy or sorrow or anger, +scarcely even of pleasure or annoyance. A tortoise +could not have been more unemotional. The unsuspected +volcano had slumbered. To-day came +disastrous eruption. And what was a mere laughing, +crying child of a man like Aristide Pujol in +front of a Ducksmith volcano?</p> + +<p>“What is to become of me?” wailed Mrs. Ducksmith +again.</p> + +<p>“<em>Ma foi!</em>” said Aristide, with a shrug of his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> +shoulders. “What’s going to become of anyone? +Who can foretell what will happen in a minute’s +time? <em>Tiens!</em>” he added, kindly laying his hand +on the sobbing woman’s shoulder. “Be comforted, +my poor Henriette. Just as nothing in this world +is as good as we hope, so nothing is as bad as we +fear. <em>Voyons!</em> All is not lost yet. We must return +to the hotel.”</p> + +<p>She weepingly acquiesced. They walked through +the quiet streets like children whose truancy had +been discovered and who were creeping back to +condign punishment at school. When they reached +the hotel, Mrs. Ducksmith went straight up to the +woman’s haven, her bedroom.</p> + +<p>Aristide tugged at his Vandyke beard in dire +perplexity. The situation was too pregnant with +tragedy for him to run away and leave the pair to +deal with it as best they could. But what was he +to do? He sat down in the vestibule and tried to +think. The landlord, an unstoppable gramophone +of garrulity, entering by the street-door and bearing +down upon him, put him to flight. He, too, +sought his bedroom, a cool apartment with a balcony +outside the French window. On this balcony, +which stretched along the whole range of +first-floor bedrooms, he stood for a while, pondering +deeply. Then, in an absent way, he overstepped the +limit of his own room-frontage. A queer sound +startled him. He paused, glanced through the open +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> +window, and there he saw a sight which for the +moment paralyzed him.</p> + +<a name="img280" id="img280"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 334px;"> +<img src="images/img280.jpg" width="334" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">there he saw a sight which for the moment paralyzed him</span> +</div> + +<p>Recovering command of his muscles, he tiptoed +his way back. He remembered now that the three +rooms adjoined. Next to his was Mr. Ducksmith’s, +and then came Mrs. Ducksmith’s. It was Mr. Ducksmith +whom he had seen. Suddenly his dark face +became luminous with laughter, his eyes glowed, he +threw his hat in the air and danced with glee about +the room. Having thus worked off the first intoxication +of his idea, he flung his few articles of +attire and toilet necessaries into his bag, strapped +it, and darted, in his dragon-fly way, into the corridor +and tapped softly at Mrs. Ducksmith’s +door. She opened it. He put his finger to +his lips.</p> + +<p>“Madame,” he whispered, bringing to bear on +her all the mocking magnetism of his eyes, “if you +value your happiness you will do exactly what I +tell you. You will obey me implicitly. You must +not ask questions. Pack your trunks at once. In +ten minutes’ time the porter will come for them.”</p> + +<p>She looked at him with a scared face. “But +what am I going to do?”</p> + +<p>“You are going to revenge yourself on your +husband.”</p> + +<p>“But I don’t want to,” she replied, piteously.</p> + +<p>“I do,” said he. “Begin, <em>chère madame</em>. Every +moment is precious.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> +In a state of stupefied terror the poor woman +obeyed him. He saw her start seriously on her task +and then went downstairs, where he held a violent +and gesticulatory conversation with the landlord +and with a man in a green baize apron summoned +from some dim lair of the hotel. After that he +lit a cigarette and smoked feverishly, walking up +and down the pavement. In ten minutes’ time his +luggage with that of Mrs. Ducksmith was placed +upon the cab. Mrs. Ducksmith appeared trembling +and tear-stained in the vestibule.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>The man in the green baize apron knocked at +Mr. Ducksmith’s door and entered the room.</p> + +<p>“I have come for the baggage of monsieur,” +said he.</p> + +<p>“Baggage? What baggage?” asked Mr. Ducksmith, +sitting up.</p> + +<p>“I have descended the baggage of Monsieur Pujol,” +said the porter in his stumbling English, “and +of madame, and put them in a cab, and I naturally +thought monsieur was going away, too.”</p> + +<p>“Going away!” He rubbed his eyes, glared at +the porter, and dashed into his wife’s room. It +was empty. He dashed into Aristide’s room. It +was empty, too. Shrieking inarticulate anathema, +he rushed downstairs, the man in the green baize +apron following at his heels.</p> + +<p>Not a soul was in the vestibule. No cab was at +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> +the door. Mr. Ducksmith turned upon his stupefied +satellite.</p> + +<p>“Where are they?”</p> + +<p>“They must have gone already. I filled the +cab. Perhaps Monsieur Pujol and madame have +gone before to make arrangements.”</p> + +<p>“Where have they gone to?”</p> + +<p>“In Perigueux there is nowhere to go to with +baggage but the railway station.”</p> + +<p>A decrepit vehicle with a gaudy linen canopy +hove in sight. Mr. Ducksmith hailed it +as the last victims of the Flood must have +hailed the Ark. He sprang into it and drove to +the station.</p> + +<p>There, in the <em>salle d’attente</em>, he found Aristide +mounting guard over his wife’s luggage. He hurled +his immense bulk at his betrayer.</p> + +<p>“You blackguard! Where is my wife?”</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” said Aristide, puffing a cigarette, +sublimely impudent and debonair, “I decline to answer +any questions. Your wife is no longer your +wife. You offered me a thousand pounds to take +her away. I am taking her away. I did not deign +to disturb you for such a trifle as a thousand +pounds, but, since you are here——”</p> + +<p>He smiled engagingly and held out his curved +palm. Mr. Ducksmith foamed at the corners of the +small mouth that disappeared into the bloodhound +jowls.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> +“My wife!” he shouted. “If you don’t want +me to throw you down and trample on you.”</p> + +<p>A band of loungers, railway officials, peasants, +and other travellers awaiting their trains, gathered +round. As the altercation was conducted in English, +which they did not understand, they could only +hope for the commencement of physical hostilities.</p> + +<p>“My dear sir,” said Aristide, “I do not understand +you. For twenty years you hold an innocent +and virtuous woman under an infamous suspicion. +She meets a sympathetic soul, and you come across +her pouring into his ear the love and despair of a +lifetime. You have more suspicion. You tell me +you will give me a thousand pounds to go away +with her. I take you at your word. And now you +want to stamp on me. <em>Ma foi!</em> it is not reasonable.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Ducksmith seized him by the lapels of his +coat. A gasp of expectation went round the crowd. +But Aristide recognized an agonized appeal in the +eyes now bloodshot.</p> + +<p>“My wife!” he said hoarsely. “I want my wife. +I can’t live without her. Give her back to me. +Where is she?”</p> + +<p>“You had better search the station,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>The heavy man unconsciously shook him in his +powerful grasp, as a child might shake a doll.</p> + +<p>“Give her to me! Give her to me, I say! She +won’t regret it.”</p> + +<a name="img286" id="img286"></a> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 370px;"> +<img src="images/img286.jpg" width="370" height="600" alt="image" title="" /> +<span class="caption">mr. ducksmith seized him by the lapels of his coat</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> +“You swear that?” asked Aristide, with lightning +quickness.</p> + +<p>“I swear it, by God! Where is she?”</p> + +<p>Aristide disengaged himself, waved his hand +airily towards Perigueux, and smiled blandly.</p> + +<p>“In the salon of the hotel, waiting for you to +prostrate yourself on your knees before her.”</p> + +<p>Mr. Ducksmith gripped him by the arm.</p> + +<p>“Come back with me. If you’re lying I’ll kill +you.”</p> + +<p>“The luggage?” queried Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Confound the luggage!” said Mr. Ducksmith, +and dragged him out of the station.</p> + +<p>A cab brought them quickly to the hotel. Mr. +Ducksmith bolted like an obese rabbit into the salon. +A few moments afterwards Aristide, entering, +found them locked in each other’s arms.</p> + +<p>They started alone for England that night, and +Aristide returned to the directorship of the Agence +Pujol. But he took upon himself enormous credit +for having worked a miracle.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>“One thing I can’t understand,” said I, after he +had told me the story, “is what put this sham +elopement into your crazy head. What did you see +when you looked into Mr. Ducksmith’s bedroom?”</p> + +<p>“Ah, <em>mon vieux</em>, I did not tell you. If +I had told you, you would not have been +surprised at what I did. I saw a sight that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span> +would have melted the heart of a stone. I +saw Ducksmith wallowing on his bed and sobbing +as if his heart would break. It filled my soul with +pity. I said: ‘If that mountain of insensibility can +weep and sob in such agony, it is because he loves—and +it is I, Aristide, who have reawakened that +love.’”</p> + +<p>“Then,” said I, “why on earth didn’t you go and +fetch Mrs. Ducksmith and leave them together?”</p> + +<p>He started from his chair and threw up both +hands.</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em>” cried he. “You English! You are +a charming people, but you have no romance. You +have no dramatic sense. I will help myself to a +whisky and soda.”</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII"></a>VIII</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF THE FICKLE GODDESS</strong></p> + + +<p>It may be remembered that Aristide Pujol had +aged parents, browned and wrinkled children +of the soil, who had passed all their days in +the desolation of Aigues-Mortes, the little fortified, +derelict city in the salt marshes of Provence. Although +they regarded him with the same unimaginative +wonder as a pair of alligators might regard +an Argus butterfly, their undoubted but +freakish progeny, and although Aristide soared high +above their heads in all phases of thought and emotion, +the mutual ties remained strong and perdurable. +Scarcely a year passed without Aristide +struggling somehow south to visit <em>ses vieux</em>, as he +affectionately called them, and whenever Fortune +shed a few smiles on him, one or two at least were +sure to find their way to Aigues-Mortes in the shape +of, say, a silver-mounted umbrella for his father or +a deuce of a Paris hat for the old lady’s Sunday +wear. Monsieur and Madame Pujol had a sacred +museum of these unused objects—the pride of their +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> +lives. Aristide was entirely incomprehensible, but +he was a good son. A bad son in France is rare.</p> + +<p>But once Aristide nearly killed his old people +outright. An envelope from him contained two +large caressive slips of bluish paper, which when +scrutinized with starting eyes turned out to be two +one-thousand-franc notes. Mon Dieu! What had +happened? Had Aristide been robbing the Bank +of France? They stood paralyzed and only recovered +motive force when a neighbour suggested +their reading the accompanying letter. It did not +explain things very clearly. He was in Aix-les-Bains, +a place which they had never heard of, making +his fortune. He was staying at the Hôtel de +l’Europe, where Queen Victoria (they had heard +of Queen Victoria) had been contented to reside, +he was a glittering figure in a splendid beau-monde, +and if <em>ses vieux</em> would buy a few cakes and a bottle +of vin cacheté with the enclosed trifle, to celebrate +his prosperity, he would deem it the privilege of a +devoted son. But Pujol senior, though wondering +where the devil he had fished all that money from, +did not waste it in profligate revelry. He took the +eighty pounds to the bank and exchanged the perishable +paper for one hundred solid golden louis +which he carried home in a bag curiously bulging +beneath his woollen jersey and secreted it with the +savings of his long life in the mattress of the conjugal +bed.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> +“If only he hasn’t stolen it,” sighed the mother.</p> + +<p>“What does it matter, since it is sewn up there +all secure?” said the old man. “No one can +find it.”</p> + +<p>The Provençal peasant is as hard-headed and +practical as a Scottish miner, and if left alone by +the fairies would produce no imaginative effect +whatever upon his generation; but in his progeniture +he is more preposterously afflicted with changelings +than any of his fellows the world over, which, +though ethnologically an entirely new proposition, +accounts for a singular number of things and <em>inter +alia</em> for my dragon-fly friend, Aristide Pujol.</p> + +<p>Now, Aristide, be it said at the outset, had not +stolen the money. It (and a vast amount more) +had been honestly come by. He did not lie when +he said that he was staying at the Hôtel de l’Europe, +Aix-les-Bains, honoured by the late Queen Victoria +(pedantic accuracy requires the correction that +the august lady rented the annexe, the Villa Victoria, +on the other side of the shady way—but no +matter—an hotel and its annexe are the same +thing) nor did he lie in boasting of his prodigious +prosperity. Aristide was in clover. For the first, +and up to now as I write, the only, time in his life +he realized the gorgeous visions of pallid years. +He was leading the existence of the amazing rich. +He could drink champagne—not your miserable +<em>tisane</em> at five francs a quart—but real champagne, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> +with year of vintage and <em>gôut américan</em> or <em>gôut +anglais</em> marked on label, fabulously priced; he +could dine lavishly at the Casino restaurants or at +Nikola’s, prince of restaurateurs, among the opulent +and the fair; he could clothe himself in attractive +raiment; he could step into a fiacre and bid the +man drive and not care whither he went or what +he paid; he could also distribute five-franc pieces +to lame beggars. He scattered his money abroad +with both hands, according to his expansive temperament; +and why not, when he was drawing +wealth out of an inexhaustible fount? The process +was so simple, so sure. All you had to do was +to believe in the cards on which you staked your +money. If you knew you were going to win, you +won. Nothing could be easier.</p> + +<p>He had drifted into Aix-les-Bains from Geneva on +the lamentable determination of a commission agency +in the matter of some patent fuel, with a couple of +louis in his pocket forlornly jingling the tale of his +entire fortune. As this was before the days when +you had to exhibit certificates of baptism, marriage, +sanity and bank-balance before being allowed to +enter the baccarat rooms, Aristide paid his two +francs and made a bee line for the tables. I am +afraid Aristide was a gambler. He was never so +happy as when taking chances; his whole life was a +gamble, with Providence holding the bank. Before +the night was over he had converted his two +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> +louis into fifty. The next day they became five +hundred. By the end of a week his garments were +wadded with bank notes whose value amounted to +a sum so stupendous as to be beyond need of computation. +He was a celebrity in the place and +people nudged each other as he passed by. And +Aristide passed by with a swagger, his head high +and the end of his pointed beard sticking joyously +up in the air.</p> + +<p>We see him one August morning, in the plentitude +of his success, lounging in a wicker chair on +the shady lawn of the Hôtel de l’Europe. He wore +white buckskin shoes—I begin with these as they +were the first point of his person to attract the +notice of the onlooker—lilac silk socks, a white +flannel suit with a zig-zag black stripe, a violet tie +secured by a sapphire and diamond pin, and a rakish +panama hat. On his knees lay the <em>Matin</em>; the fingers +of his left hand held a fragrant corona; his +right hand was uplifted in a gesture, for he was +talking. He was talking to a couple of ladies who +sat near by, one a mild-looking Englishwoman of +fifty, dressed in black, the other, her daughter, a +beautiful girl of twenty-four. That Aristide should +fly to feminine charms, like moth to candle, was a +law of his being; that he should lie, with shriveled +wings, at Miss Errington’s feet was the obvious result. +Her charms were of the winsome kind to +which he was most susceptible. She had an oval +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> +face, a little mouth like crumpled rose petals (so +Aristide himself described it), a complexion the +mingling of ivory and peach blossom (Aristide +again), a straight little nose, appealing eyes of the +deepest blue veiled by sweeping lashes and fascinating +fluffiness of dark hair over a pure brow. +She had a graceful figure, and the slender foot below +her white piqué skirt was at once the envy and +admiration of Aix-les-Bains.</p> + +<p>Aristide talked. The ladies listened, with obvious +amusement. In the easy hotel way he had +fallen into their acquaintance. As the man of +wealth, the careless player who took five-hundred-louis +banks at the table with the five-louis minimum, +and cleared out the punt, he felt it necessary to explain +himself. I am afraid he deviated from the +narrow path of truth.</p> + +<p>“What perfect English you speak,” Miss Errington +remarked, when he had finished his harangue +and had put the corona between his lips. Her +voice was a soft contralto.</p> + +<p>“I have mixed much in English society, since I +was a child,” replied Aristide, in his grandest +manner. “Fortune has made me know many +of your county families and members of Parliament.”</p> + +<p>Miss Errington laughed. “Our M. P.’s are rather +a mixed lot, Monsieur Pujol.”</p> + +<p>“To me an English Member of Parliament is a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> +high-bred conservative. I do not recognize the +others,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Unfortunately we have to recognize them,” said +the elder lady with a smile.</p> + +<p>“Not socially, madame. They exist as mechanical +factors of the legislative machine; but that is +all.” He swelled as if the blood of the Montmorencys +and the Colignys boiled in his veins. “We +do not ask them into our drawing rooms. We do +not allow them to marry our daughters. We only +salute them with cold politeness when we pass them +in the street.”</p> + +<p>“It’s astonishing,” said Miss Errington, “how +strongly the aristocratic principle exists in republican +France. Now, there’s our friend, the Comte de +Lussigny, for instance——”</p> + +<p>A frown momentarily darkened the cloudless +brow of Aristide Pujol. He did not like the +Comte de Lussigny——</p> + +<p>“With Monsieur de Lussigny,” he interposed, “it +is a matter of prejudice, not of principle.”</p> + +<p>“And with you?”</p> + +<p>“The reasoned philosophy of a lifetime, mademoiselle,” +answered Aristide. He turned to Mrs. +Errington.</p> + +<p>“How long have you known Monsieur de Lussigny, +madame?”</p> + +<p>She looked at her daughter. “It was in Monte +Carlo the winter before last, wasn’t it, Betty? +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> +Since then we have met him frequently in England +and Paris. We came across him, just lately, at +Trouville. I think he’s charming, don’t you?”</p> + +<p>“He’s a great gambler,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>Betty Errington laughed again. “But so are +you. So is mamma. So am I, in my poor little +way.”</p> + +<p>“We gamble for amusement,” said Aristide +loftily.</p> + +<p>“I’m sure I don’t,” cried Miss Betty, with merry +eyes—and she looked adorable—“When I put my +despised five-franc piece down on the table I want +desperately to win, and when the horrid croupier +rakes it up I want to hit him—Oh! I want to hit +him hard.”</p> + +<p>“And when you win?”</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid I don’t think of the croupier at all,” +said Miss Betty.</p> + +<p>Her mother smiled indulgently and exchanged a +glance with Aristide. This pleased him; there was +an agreeable little touch of intimacy in it. It confirmed +friendly relations with the mother. What +were his designs as regards the daughter he did not +know. They were not evil, certainly. For all his +southern blood, Latin traditions and devil-may-care +upbringing, Aristide, though perhaps not reaching +our divinely set and therefore unique English standard +of morality, was a decent soul; further, partly +through his pedagogic sojourn among them, and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span> +partly through his childish adoration of the frank, +fair-cheeked, northern goddesses talking the quick, +clear speech, who passed him by when he was a +hunted little devil of a <em>chasseur</em> in the Marseilles +café, he had acquired a peculiarly imaginative reverence +for English girls. The reverence, indeed, +extended to English ladies generally. Owing to +the queer circumstances of his life they were the +only women of a class above his own, with whom +he had associated on terms of equality. He had, +then, no dishonorable designs as regards Miss Betty +Errington. On the other hand, the thoughts of +marriage had as yet not entered his head. You +see, a Frenchman and an Englishman or an American, +view marriage from entirely different angles. +The Anglo-Saxon of honest instincts, attracted towards +a pretty girl at once thinks of the possibilities +of marriage; if he finds them infinitely remote, +he makes romantic love to her in the solitude of his +walks abroad or of his sleepless nights, and, in +her presence, is as dumb and dismal as a freshly +hooked trout. The equally honest Gaul does +nothing of the kind. The attraction in itself +is a stimulus to adventure. He makes love to her, +just because it is the nature of a lusty son of Adam +to make love to a pretty daughter of Eve. He lives +in the present. The rest doesn’t matter. He leaves +it to chance. I am speaking, be it understood, not +of deep passions—that is a different matter +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> +altogether—but of the more superficial sexual attractions +which we, as a race, take so seriously and +puritanically, often to our most disastrous undoing, +and which the Latin light-heartedly regards as +essential, but transient phenomena of human existence. +Aristide made the most respectful love in +the world to Betty Errington, because he could not +help himself. “<em>Tonnerre de Dieu!</em>” he cried when +from my Britannic point of view, I talked to him +on the subject. “You English whom I try to understand +and can never understand are so funny! +It would have been insulting to Miss Betty Errington—<em>tiens!</em>—a +purple hyacinth of spring—that was +what she was—not to have made love to her. Love +to a pretty woman is like a shower of rain to hyacinths. +It passes, it goes. Another one comes. +<em>Qu’importe?</em> But the shower is necessary—Ah! +<em>sacré gredin</em>, when will you comprehend?”</p> + +<p>All this to make as clear as an Englishman, in +the confidence of a changeling child of Provence +can hope to do, the attitude of Aristide Pujol towards +the sweet and innocent Betty Errington with +her mouth like crumpled rose-petals, her ivory and +peach-blossom complexion, her soft contralto voice, +et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, as per foregoing bald +description, and as per what can, by imaginative +effort, be pictured from the Pujolic hyperbole, by +which I, the unimportant narrator of these chronicles, +was dazzled and overwhelmed.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> +“I’m afraid I don’t think of the croupier at all,” +said Betty.</p> + +<p>“Do you think of no one who brings you good +fortune?” asked Aristide. He threw the <em>Matin</em> on +the grass, and, doubling himself up in his chair +regarded her earnestly. “Last night you put five +louis into my bank——”</p> + +<p>“And I won forty. I could have hugged +you.”</p> + +<p>“Why didn’t you? Ah!” His arms spread wide +and high. “What I have lost!”</p> + +<p>“Betty!” cried Mrs. Errington.</p> + +<p>“Alas, Madame,” said Aristide, “that is the despair +of our artificial civilization. It prohibits so +much spontaneous expression of emotion.”</p> + +<p>“You’ll forgive me, Monsieur Pujol,” said Mrs. +Errington dryly, “but I think our artificial civilization +has its advantages.”</p> + +<p>“If you will forgive me, in your turn,” said Aristide, +“I see a doubtful one advancing.”</p> + +<p>A man approached the group and with profuse +gestures took off a straw hat which he thrust under +his right arm, exposing an amazingly flat head on +which the closely cropped hair stood brush-fashion +upright. He had an insignificant pale face to +which a specious individuality was given by a moustache +with ends waxed up to the eyes and by a +monocle with a tortoise shell rim. He was dressed +(his valet had misjudged things—and valets like +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> +the rest of us are fallible) in what was yesterday a +fairly white flannel suit.</p> + +<p>“Madame—Mademoiselle.” He shook hands with +charming grace. “Monsieur.” He bowed stiffly. +Aristide doffed his Panama hat with adequate +ceremony. “May I be permitted to join you?”</p> + +<p>“With pleasure, Monsieur de Lussigny,” said +Mrs. Errington.</p> + +<p>Monsieur de Lussigny brought up a chair and +sat down.</p> + +<p>“What time did you get to bed, last night?” +asked Betty Errington. She spoke excellently pure +French, and so did her mother.</p> + +<p>“Soon after we parted, mademoiselle, quite early +for me but late for you. And you look this morning +as if you had gone to bed at sundown and got +up at dawn.”</p> + +<p>Miss Betty’s glance responsive to the compliment +filled Aristide with wrath. What right had the +Comte de Lussigny, a fellow who consorted with +Brazilian Rastaquouères and perfumed Levantine +nondescripts, to win such a glance from Betty Errington?</p> + +<p>“If Mademoiselle can look so fresh,” said he, “in +the artificial atmosphere of Aix, what is there of +adorable that she must not resemble in the innocence +of her Somersetshire home?”</p> + +<p>“You cannot imagine it, Monsieur,” said the +Count; “but I have had the privilege to see it.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> +“I hope Monsieur Pujol will visit us also in our +country home, when we get back,” said Mrs. Errington +with intent to pacificate. “It is modest, +but it is old-world and has been in our family for +hundreds of years.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, these old English homes!” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Would you care to hear about it?”</p> + +<p>“I should,” said he.</p> + +<p>He drew his chair courteously a foot or so +nearer that of the mild lady; Monsieur de +Lussigny took instant advantage of the move +to establish himself close to Miss Betty. Aristide +turned one ear politely to Mrs. Errington’s +discourse, the other ragingly and impotently to the +whispered conversation between the detached +pair.</p> + +<p>Presently a novel fell from the lady’s lap. Aristide +sprang to his feet and restored it. He remained +standing. Mrs. Errington consulted a +watch. It was nearing lunch time. She rose, too. +Aristide took her a pace or two aside.</p> + +<p>“My dear Mrs. Errington,” said he, in English. +“I do not wish to be indiscreet—but you come from +your quiet home in Somerset and your beautiful +daughter is so young and inexperienced, and I am +a man of the world who has mingled in all the +society of Europe—may I warn you against admitting +the Comte de Lussigny too far into your intimacy.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span> +She turned an anxious face. “Monsieur Pujol, +is there anything against the Count?”</p> + +<p>Aristide executed the large and expressive shrug +of the Southerner.</p> + +<p>“I play high at the tables for my amusement—I +know the principal players, people of high standing. +Among them Monsieur de Lussigny’s reputation +is not spotless.”</p> + +<p>“You alarm me very much,” said Mrs. Errington, +troubled.</p> + +<p>“I only put you on your guard,” said he.</p> + +<p>The others who had risen and followed, caught +them up. At the entrance to the hotel the ladies +left the men elaborately saluting. The latter, alone, +looked at each other.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur.”</p> + +<p>“Monsieur.”</p> + +<p>Each man raised his hat, turned on his heel and +went his way. Aristide betook himself to the café +on the Place Carnot on the side of the square facing +the white Etablissement des Bains, with a stern +sense of having done his duty. It was monstrous +that this English damask rose should fall a prey to +so detestable a person as the Comte de Lussigny. +He suspected him of disgraceful things. If only he +had proof. Fortune, ever favoring him, stood at +his elbow. She guided him straight to a table in +the front row of the terrace where sat a black-haired, +hard-featured though comely youth deep +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span> +in thought, in front of an untouched glass of beer. +At Aristide’s approach he raised his head, smiled, +nodded and said: “Good morning, sir. Will you +join me?”</p> + +<p>Aristide graciously accepted the invitation and +sat down. The young man was another hotel acquaintance, +one Eugene Miller of Atlanta, Georgia, +a curious compound of shrewdness and simplicity, +to whom Aristide had taken a fancy. He was +twenty-eight and ran a colossal boot-factory in +partnership with another youth and had a consuming +passion for stained-glass windows. From books +he knew every square foot of old stained-glass in +Europe. But he had crossed the Atlantic for the +first time only six weeks before, and having indulged +his craving immoderately, had rested for a +span at Aix-les-Bains to recover from æsthetic indigestion. +He had found these amenities agreeable +to his ingenuous age. He had also, quite recently, +come across the Comte de Lussigny. Hence +the depth of thought in which Aristide discovered +him. Now, the fact that North is North and South +is South and that never these twain shall meet is +a proposition all too little considered. One of these +days when I can retire from the dull but exacting +avocation of tea-broking in the City, I think I shall +write a newspaper article on the subject. Anyhow, +I hold the theory that the Northerners of all nations +have a common characteristic and the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span> +Southerners of all nations have a common characteristic, +and that it is this common characteristic in each +case that makes North seek and understand North +and South seek and understand South. I will not +go further into the general proposition; but as a +particular instance I will state that the American +of the South and the Frenchman of the South +found themselves in essential sympathy. Eugene +Miller had the unfearing frankness of Aristide +Pujol.</p> + +<p>“I used rather to look down upon Europe as a +place where people knew nothing at all,” said he. +“We’re sort of trained to think it’s an extinct volcano, +but it isn’t. It’s alive. My God! It’s alive. +It’s Hell in the shape of a Limburger cheese. I +wish the whole population of Atlanta, Georgia, +would come over and just see. There’s a lot to be +learned. I thought I knew how to take care of +myself, but this tortoise-shell-eyed Count taught me +last night that I couldn’t. He cleaned me out of +twenty-five hundred dollars——”</p> + +<p>“How?” asked Aristide, sharply.</p> + +<p>“Ecarté.”</p> + +<p>Aristide brought his hand down with a bang on +the table and uttered anathemas in French and +Provençal entirely unintelligible to Eugene Miller; +but the youth knew by instinct that they were +useful, soul-destroying curses and he felt comforted.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span> +“Ecarté! You played ecarté with Lussigny? +But my dear young friend, do you know anything +of ecarté?”</p> + +<p>“Of course,” said Miller. “I used to play it as +a child with my sisters.”</p> + +<p>“Do you know the <em>jeux de règle</em>?”</p> + +<p>“The what?”</p> + +<p>“The formal laws of the game—the rules of discards——”</p> + +<p>“Never heard of them,” said Eugene Miller.</p> + +<p>“But they are as absolute as the Code Napoléon,” +cried Aristide. “You can’t play without knowing +them. You might as well play chess without knowing +the moves.”</p> + +<p>“Can’t help it,” said the young man.</p> + +<p>“Well, don’t play ecarté any more.”</p> + +<p>“I must,” said Miller.</p> + +<p>“<em>Comment?</em>”</p> + +<p>“I must. I’ve fixed it up to get my revenge +this afternoon—in my sitting room at the hotel.”</p> + +<p>“But it’s imbecile!”</p> + +<p>The sweep of Aristide’s arm produced prismatic +chaos among a tray-full of drinks which the waiter +was bringing to the family party at the next table. +“It’s imbecile,” he cried, as soon as order was +apologetically and pecuniarily restored. “You are +a little mutton going to have its wool taken +off.”</p> + +<p>“I’ve fixed it up,” said Miller. “I’ve never gone +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span> +back on an engagement yet in my own country +and I’m not going to begin this side.”</p> + +<p>Aristide argued. He argued during the mechanical +absorption of four glasses of <em>vermouth-cassis</em>—after +which prodigious quantity of black +currant syrup he rose and took the Gadarene youth +to Nikola’s where he continued the argument during +déjeuner. Eugene Miller’s sole concession was that +Aristide should be present at the encounter and, +backing his hand, should have the power (given by +the rules of the French game) to guide his play. +Aristide agreed and crammed his young friend +with the <em>jeux de règle</em> and <em>pâté de foie gras</em>.</p> + +<p>The Count looked rather black when he found +Aristide Pujol in Miller’s sitting room. He could +not, however, refuse him admittance to the game. +The three sat down, Aristide by Miller’s side, so +that he could overlook the hand and, by pointing, +indicate the cards that it was advisable to play. +The game began. Fortune favored Mr. Eugene +Miller. The Count’s brow grew blacker.</p> + +<p>“You are bringing your own luck to our friend, +Monsieur Pujol,” said he, dealing the cards.</p> + +<p>“He needs it,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“<em>Le roi</em>,” said the Count, turning up the king.</p> + +<p>The Count won the vole, or all five tricks, and +swept the stakes towards him. Then, fortune +quickly and firmly deserted Mr. Miller. The Count +besides being an amazingly fine player, held +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> +amazingly fine hands. The pile of folded notes in front +of him rose higher and higher. Aristide tugged at +his beard in agitation. Suddenly, as the Count +dealt a king as trump card, he sprang to his feet +knocking over the chair behind him.</p> + +<p>“You cheat, monsieur. You cheat!”</p> + +<p>“Monsieur!” cried the outraged dealer.</p> + +<p>“What has he done?”</p> + +<p>“He has been palming kings and neutralizing the +cut. I’ve been watching. Now I catch him,” cried +Aristide in great excitement. “<em>Ah, sale voleur! +Maintenant je vous tiens!</em>”</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” said the Comte de Lussigny with +dignity, stuffing his winnings into his jacket pocket. +“You insult me. It is an infamy. Two of my +friends will call upon you.”</p> + +<p>“And Monsieur Miller and I will kick them over +Mont Revard.”</p> + +<p>“You cannot treat <em>gens d’honneur</em> in such a way, +monsieur.” He turned to Miller, and said haughtily +in his imperfect English, “Did you see the cheat, +you?”</p> + +<p>“I can’t say that I did,” replied the young man. +“On the other hand that torch-light procession of +kings doesn’t seem exactly natural.”</p> + +<p>“But you did not see anything! <em>Bon!</em>”</p> + +<p>“But I saw. Isn’t that enough, <em>hein</em>?” shouted +Aristide brandishing his fingers in the Count’s face. +“You come here and think there’s nothing easier +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> +than to cheat young foreigners who don’t know the +rules of ecarté. You come here and think you can +carry off rich young English misses. Ah, <em>sale +escroc!</em> You never thought you would have to +reckon with Aristide Pujol. You call yourself +the Comte de Lussigny. Bah! I know you——” +he didn’t, but that doesn’t matter—“your <em>dossier</em> +is in the hands of the prefect of Police. I am +going to get that <em>dossier</em>. Monsieur Lepine is my +intimate friend. Every autumn we shoot together. +Aha! You send me your two galley-birds and see +what I do to them.”</p> + +<p>The Comte de Lussigny twirled the tips of his +moustache almost to his forehead and caught up his +hat.</p> + +<p>“My friends shall be officers in the uniform of +the French Army,” he said, by the door.</p> + +<p>“And mine shall be two gendarmes,” retorted +Aristide. “<em>Nom de Dieu!</em>” he cried, after the +other had left the room. “We let him take the +money!”</p> + +<p>“That’s of no consequence. He didn’t get away +with much anyway,” said young Miller. “But +he would have if you hadn’t been here. If ever +I can do you a return service, just ask.”</p> + +<p>Aristide went out to look for the Erringtons. +But they were not to be found. It was only late +in the afternoon that he met Mrs. Errington in the +hall of the hotel. He dragged her into a corner +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> +and in his impulsive fashion told her everything. +She listened white faced, in great distress.</p> + +<p>“My daughter’s engaged to him. I’ve only just +learned,” she faltered.</p> + +<p>“Engaged? <em>Sacrebleu!</em> Ah, <em>le goujat!</em>”—for +the second he was desperately, furiously, jealously +in love with Betty Errington. “<em>Ah, le sale type! +Voyons!</em> This engagement must be broken off. +At once! You are her mother.”</p> + +<p>“She will hear of nothing against him.”</p> + +<p>“You will tell her this. It will be a blow; +but——”</p> + +<p>Mrs. Errington twisted a handkerchief between +helpless fingers. “Betty is infatuated. She won’t +believe it.” She regarded him piteously. “Oh, +Monsieur Pujol, what can I do? You see she has +an independent fortune and is over twenty-one. I +am powerless.”</p> + +<p>“I will meet his two friends,” exclaimed Aristide +magnificently—“and I will kill him. <em>Voilà!</em>”</p> + +<p>“Oh, a duel? No! How awful!” cried the mild +lady horror-stricken.</p> + +<p>He thrust his cane dramatically through a sheet +of a newspaper, which he had caught up from a +table. “I will run him through the body like that”—Aristide +had never handled a foil in his life—“and +when he is dead, your beautiful daughter will +thank me for having saved her from such an execrable +fellow.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span> +“But you mustn’t fight. It would be too dreadful. +Is there no other way?”</p> + +<p>“You must consult first with your daughter,” +said Aristide.</p> + +<p>He dined in the hotel with Eugene Miller. Neither +the Erringtons nor the Comte de Lussigny +were anywhere to be seen. After dinner, however, +he found the elder lady waiting for him in the hall. +They walked out into the quiet of the garden. She +had been too upset to dine, she explained, having +had a terrible scene with Betty. Nothing but absolute +proofs of her lover’s iniquity would satisfy her. +The world was full of slanderous tongues; the +noblest and purest did not escape. For herself, she +had never been comfortable with the Comte de Lussigny. +She had noticed too that he had always +avoided the best French people in hotels. She +would give anything to save her daughter. She +wept.</p> + +<p>“And the unhappy girl has written him compromising +letters,” she lamented.</p> + +<p>“They must be got back.”</p> + +<p>“But how? Oh, Monsieur Pujol, do you think +he would take money for them?”</p> + +<p>“A scoundrel like that would take money for his +dead mother’s shroud,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“A thousand pounds?”</p> + +<p>She looked very haggard and helpless beneath +the blue arc-lights. Aristide’s heart went out to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span> +her. He knew her type—the sweet gentlewoman +of rural England who comes abroad to give her +pretty daughter a sight of life, ingenuously confident +that foreign watering-places are as innocent +as her own sequestered village.</p> + +<p>“That is much money, <em>chère madame</em>,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“I am fairly well off,” said Mrs. Errington.</p> + +<p>Aristide reflected. At the offer of a smaller sum +the Count would possibly bluff. But to a Knight +of Industry, as he knew the Count to be, a certain +thousand pounds would be a great temptation. And +after all to a wealthy Englishwoman what was a +thousand pounds?</p> + +<p>“Madame,” said he, “if you offer him a thousand +pounds for the letters, and a written confession +that he is not the Comte de Lussigny, but a common +adventurer, I stake my reputation that he will +accept.”</p> + +<p>They walked along for a few moments in silence; +the opera had begun at the adjoining Villa des +Fleurs and the strains floated through the still August +air. After a while she halted and laid her +hand on his sleeve.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur Pujol, I have never been faced with +such a thing, before. Will you undertake for me +this delicate and difficult business?”</p> + +<p>“Madame,” said he, “my life is at the service +of yourself and your most exquisite daughter.” +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> +She pressed his hand. “Thank God, I’ve got a +friend in this dreadful place,” she said brokenly. +“Let me go in.” And when they reached the +lounge, she said, “Wait for me here.”</p> + +<p>She entered the lift. Aristide waited. Presently +the lift descended and she emerged with a slip of +paper in her hand.</p> + +<p>“Here is a bearer cheque, Monsieur Pujol, for +a thousand pounds. Get the letters and the confession +if you can, and a mother’s blessing will go +with you.”</p> + +<p>She left him and went upstairs again in the lift. +Aristide athirst with love, living drama and unholy +hatred of the Comte de Lussigny, cocked his black, +soft-felt evening hat at an engaging angle on his +head and swaggered into the Villa des Fleurs. As +he passed the plebeian crowd round the petits-chevaux +table—these were the days of little horses +and not the modern equivalent of <em>la boule</em>—he +threw a louis on the square marked 5, waited for +the croupier to push him his winnings, seven louis +and his stake on the little white horse, and walked +into the baccarat room. A bank was being called +for thirty louis at the end table.</p> + +<p>“<em>Quarante</em>,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“<em>Ajugé à quarante louis</em>,” cried the croupier, no +one bidding higher.</p> + +<p>Aristide took the banker’s seat and put down his +forty louis. Looking round the long table he saw +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> +the Comte de Lussigny sitting in the punt. The +two men glared at each other defiantly. Someone +went “banco.” Aristide won. The fact of his +holding the bank attracted a crowd round the table. +The regular game began. Aristide won, lost, won +again. Now it must be explained, without going +into the details of the game, that the hand against +the bank is played by the members of the punt in +turn.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, before dealing the cards, Aristide +asked, “<em>A qui la main?</em>”</p> + +<p>“<em>C’est à Monsieur</em>,” said the croupier, indicating +Lussigny.</p> + +<p>“<em>Il y a une suite</em>,” said Aristide, signifying, as +was his right, that he would retire from the bank +with his winnings. “The face of that gentleman +does not please me.”</p> + +<p>There was a hush at the humming table. The +Count grew dead white and looked at his fingernails. +Aristide superbly gathered up his notes and +gold, and tossing a couple of louis to the croupiers, +left the table, followed by all eyes. It was one +of the thrilling moments of Aristide’s life. He had +taken the stage, commanded the situation. He had +publicly offered the Comte de Lussigny the most +deadly insult and the Comte de Lussigny sat down +beneath it like a lamb. He swaggered slowly +through the crowded room, twirling his moustache, +and went into the cool of the moonlit deserted +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span> +garden beyond, where he waited gleefully. He +had a puckish knowledge of human nature. After +a decent interval, and during the absorbing interest +of the newly constituted bank, the Comte de Lussigny +slipped unnoticed from the table and went in +search of Aristide. He found him smoking a large +corona and lounging in one wicker chair with his +feet on another, beside a very large whisky and +soda.</p> + +<p>“Ah, it’s you,” said he without moving.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said the Count furiously.</p> + +<p>“I haven’t yet had the pleasure of kicking your +friends over Mont Revard,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Look here, <em>mon petit</em>, this has got to finish,” +cried the Count.</p> + +<p>“<em>Parfaitement.</em> I should like nothing better than +to finish. But let us finish like well-bred people,” +said Aristide suavely. “We don’t want the whole +Casino as witnesses. You’ll find a chair over there. +Bring it up.”</p> + +<p>He was enjoying himself immensely. The Count +glared at him, turned and banged a chair over by +the side of the table.</p> + +<p>“Why do you insult me like this?”</p> + +<p>“Because,” said Aristide, “I’ve talked by telephone +this evening with my good friend Monsieur +Lepine, Prefect of Police of Paris.”</p> + +<p>“You lie,” said the Count.</p> + +<p>“<em>Vous verrez.</em> In the meantime, perhaps we +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> +might have a little conversation. Will you have a +whisky and soda? It is one of my English habits.”</p> + +<p>“No,” said the Count emphatically.</p> + +<p>“You permit me then?” He drank a great +draught. “You are wrong. It helps to cool one’s +temper. <em>Eh bien</em>, let us talk.”</p> + +<p>He talked. He put before the Count the situation +of the beautiful Miss Errington. He conducted +the scene like the friend of the family whose +astuteness he had admired as a boy in the melodramas +that found their way to Marseilles.</p> + +<p>“Look,” said he, at last, having vainly offered +from one hundred to eight hundred pounds for poor +Betty Errington’s compromising letters. “Look——” +He drew the cheque from his note-case. +“Here are twenty-five thousand francs. The signature +is that of the charming Madame Errington +herself. The letters, and a little signed word, just +a little word. ‘Mademoiselle, I am a <em>chevalier d’industrie</em>. +I have a wife and five children. I am not +worthy of you. I give you back your promise.’ +Just that. And twenty-five thousand francs, <em>mon +ami</em>.”</p> + +<p>“Never in life!” exclaimed the Count rising. +“You continue to insult me.”</p> + +<p>Aristide for the first time abandoned his lazy +and insolent attitude and jumped to his feet.</p> + +<p>“And I’ll continue to insult you, <em>canaille</em> that +you are, all through that room,” he cried, with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span> +a swift-flung gesture towards the brilliant doorway. +“You are dealing with Aristide Pujol. Will +you never understand? The letters and a confession +for twenty-five thousand francs.”</p> + +<p>“Never in life,” said the Count, and he moved +swiftly away.</p> + +<p>Aristide caught him by the collar as he stood on +the covered terrace, a foot or two from the +threshold of the gaming-room.</p> + +<p>“I swear to you, I’ll make a scandal that you +won’t survive.”</p> + +<p>The Count stopped and pushed Aristide’s hand +away.</p> + +<p>“I admit nothing,” said he. “But you are a gambler +and so am I. I will play you for those documents +against twenty-five thousand francs.”</p> + +<p>“Eh?” said Aristide, staggered for the moment.</p> + +<p>The Comte de Lussigny repeated his proposition.</p> + +<p>“<em>Bon</em>,” said Aristide. “<em>Trés bon. C’est entendu. +C’est fait.</em>”</p> + +<p>If Beelzebub had arisen and offered to play +beggar-my-neighbour for his soul, Aristide would +have agreed; especially after the large whisky and +soda and the Mumm Cordon Rouge and the Napoleon +brandy which Eugene Miller had insisted on +his drinking at dinner.</p> + +<p>“I have a large room at the hotel,” said he.</p> + +<p>“I will join you,” said the Count. “Monsieur,” +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span> +he took off his hat very politely. “Go first. I +will be there in three minutes.”</p> + +<p>Aristide trod on air during the two minutes’ walk +to the Hôtel de l’Europe. At the bureau he ordered +a couple of packs of cards and a supply of +drinks and went to his palatial room on the ground +floor. In a few moments the Comte de Lussigny +appeared. Aristide offered him a two francs corona +which was ceremoniously accepted. Then he tore +the wrapping off one of the packs of cards and +shuffled.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” said he, still shuffling. “I should +like to deal two hands at ecarté. It signifies nothing. +It is an experiment. Will you cut?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Volontiers</em>,” said the Count.</p> + +<p>Aristide took up the pack, dealt three cards to +the Count, three cards to himself, two cards to the +Count, two to himself and turned up the King of +Hearts as the eleventh card.</p> + +<p>“Monsieur,” said he, “expose your hand and I +will expose mine.”</p> + +<p>Both men threw their hands face uppermost on +the table. Aristide’s was full of trumps, the Count’s +of valueless cards.</p> + +<p>He looked at his adversary with his roguish, triumphant +smile. The Count looked at him darkly.</p> + +<p>“The ordinary card player does not know how +to deal like that,” he said with sinister significance.</p> + +<p>“But I am not ordinary in anything, my dear +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span> +sir,” laughed Aristide, in his large boastfulness. +“If I were, do you think I would have agreed to +your absurd proposal? <em>Voyons</em>, I only wanted to +show you that in dealing cards I am your equal. +Now, the letters——” The Count threw a small +packet on the table. “You will permit me? I do +not wish to read them. I verify only. Good,” +said he. “And the confession?”</p> + +<p>“What you like,” said the Count, coldly. Aristide +scribbled a few lines that would have been +devastating to the character of a Hyrcanean tiger +and handed the paper and fountain pen to the +Count.</p> + +<p>“Will you sign?”</p> + +<p>The Count glanced at the words and signed.</p> + +<p>“<em>Voilà</em>,” said Aristide, laying Mrs. Errington’s +cheque beside the documents. “Now let us play. +The best of three games?”</p> + +<p>“Good,” said the Count. “But you will excuse +me, monsieur, if I claim to play for ready money. +The cheque will take five days to negotiate and if +I lose, I shall evidently have to leave Aix to-morrow +morning.”</p> + +<p>“That’s reasonable,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>He drew out his fat note-case and counted +twenty-five one-thousand-franc notes on to the table. +And then began the most exciting game of +cards he had ever played. In the first place he was +playing with another person’s money for a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> +fantastic stake, a girl’s honour and happiness. Secondly +he was pitted against a master of ecarté. +And thirdly he knew that his adversary would cheat +if he could and that his adversary suspected him of +fraudulent designs. So as they played, each man +craned his head forward and looked at the other +man’s fingers with fierce intensity.</p> + +<p>Aristide lost the first game. He wiped the sweat +from his forehead. In the second game, he won +the vole in one hand. The third and final game began. +They played slowly, carefully, with keen +quick eyes. Their breathing came hard. The +Count’s lips parted beneath his uptwisted moustache +showed his teeth like a cat’s. Aristide lost +sense of all outer things in the thrill of the encounter. +They snarled the stereotyped phrases necessary +for the conduct of the game. At last the +points stood at four for Aristide and three for his +adversary. It was Aristide’s deal. Before turning +up the eleventh card he paused for the fraction of +a second. If it was the King, he had won. He +flicked it neatly face upward. It was not the King.</p> + +<p><em>“J’en donne.”</em></p> + +<p><em>“Non. Le roi.”</em></p> + +<p>The Count played and marked the King. Aristide +had no trumps. The game was lost.</p> + +<p>He sat back white, while the Count smiling gathered +up the bank-notes.</p> + +<p>“And now, Monsieur Pujol,” said he impudently, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> +“I am willing to sell you this rubbish for the +cheque.”</p> + +<p>Aristide jumped to his feet. “Never!” he cried. +Madness seized him. Regardless of the fact that +he had nothing like another thousand pounds left +wherewith to repay Mrs. Errington if he lost, he +shouted: “I will play again for it. Not ecarté. +One cut of the cards. Ace lowest.”</p> + +<p>“All right,” said the Count.</p> + +<p>“Begin, you.”</p> + +<p>Aristide watched his hand like cat, as he cut. +He cut an eight. Aristide gave a little gasp of +joy and cut quickly. He held up a Knave and +laughed aloud. Then he stopped short as he saw +the Count about to pounce on the documents and +the cheque. He made a swift movement and +grabbed them first, the other man’s hand on his.</p> + +<p>“<em>Canaille!</em>”</p> + +<p>He dashed his free hand into the adventurer’s +face. The man staggered back. Aristide pocketed +the precious papers. The Count scowled at him for +an undecided second, and then bolted from the +room.</p> + +<p>“Whew!” said Aristide, sinking into his chair +and wiping his face. “That was a narrow escape.”</p> + +<p>He looked at his watch. It was only ten o’clock. +It had seemed as if his game with Lussigny had +lasted for hours. He could not go to bed and +stood confronted with anti-climax. After a while +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> +he went in search of Eugene Miller and having +found him in solitary meditation on stained glass +windows in the dim-lit grounds of the Villa, +sat down by his side and for the rest of the +evening poured his peculiar knowledge of Europe +into the listening ear of the young man +from Atlanta.</p> + +<p>On the following morning, as soon as he was +dressed, he learned from the Concierge that the +Comte de Lussigny had left for Paris by the early +train.</p> + +<p>“Good,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>A little later Mrs. Errington met him in the +lounge and accompanied him to the lawn where +they had sat the day before.</p> + +<p>“I have no words to thank you, Monsieur Pujol,” +she said with tears in her eyes. “I have heard how +you shamed him at the tables. It was brave of +you.”</p> + +<p>“It was nothing.” He shrugged his shoulders +as if he were in the habit of doing deeds like that +every day of his life. “And your exquisite daughter, +Madame?”</p> + +<p>“Poor Betty! She is prostrate. She says she +will never hold up her head again. Her heart is +broken.”</p> + +<p>“It is young and will be mended,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>She smiled sadly. “It will be a question of time. +But she is grateful to you, Monsieur Pujol. She +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span> +realizes from what a terrible fate you have saved +her.” She sighed. There was a brief silence.</p> + +<p>“After this,” she continued, “a further stay in +Aix would be too painful. We have decided to +take the Savoy express this evening and get back +to our quiet home in Somerset.”</p> + +<p>“Ah, madame,” said Aristide earnestly. “And +shall I not have the pleasure of seeing the charming +Miss Betty again?”</p> + +<p>“You will come and stay with us in September. +Let me see? The fifteenth. Why not fix a date? +You have my address? No? Will you write it +down?” she dictated: “Wrotesly Manor, Burnholme, +Somerset. There I’ll try to show you how +grateful I am.”</p> + +<p>She extended her hand. He bowed over it and +kissed it in his French way and departed a very +happy man.</p> + +<p>The Erringtons left that evening. Aristide waylaid +them as they were entering the hotel omnibus, +with a preposterous bouquet of flowers which he +presented to Betty, whose pretty face was hidden +by a motor-veil. He bowed, laid his hand on his +heart and said: “<em>Adieu, mademoiselle.</em>”</p> + +<p>“No,” she said in a low voice, but most graciously, +“<em>Au revoir</em>, Monsieur Pujol.”</p> + +<p>For the next few days Aix seemed to be tame +and colourless. In an inexplicable fashion, too, it +had become unprofitable. Aristide no longer knew +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span> +that he was going to win; and he did not win. He +lost considerably. So much so that on the morning +when he was to draw the cash for the cheque, +at the Crédit Lyonnais, he had only fifty pounds +and some odd silver left. Aristide looking at the +remainder rather ruefully made a great resolution. +He would gamble no more. Already he was richer +than he had ever been in his life. He would leave +Aix. <em>Tiens!</em> why should he not go to his good +friends the Bocardons at Nîmes, bringing with him +a gold chain for Bocardon and a pair of ear-rings +for the adorable Zette? There he would look about +him. He would use the thousand pounds as a stepping-stone +to legitimate fortune. Then he would +visit the Erringtons in England, and if the beautiful +Miss Betty smiled on him—why, after all, <em>sacrebleu</em> +he was an honest man, without a feather on +his conscience.</p> + +<p>So, jauntily swinging his cane, he marched into +the office of the Crédit Lyonnais, went into the +inner room and explained his business.</p> + +<p>“Ah, your cheque, monsieur, that we were to collect. +I am sorry. It has come back from the London +bankers.”</p> + +<p>“How come back?”</p> + +<p>“It has not been honoured. See, monsieur. ‘Not +known. No account.’” The cashier pointed to the +grim words across the cheque.</p> + +<p>“<em>Comprends pas</em>,” faltered Aristide.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span> +“It means that the person who gave you the +cheque has no account at this bank.”</p> + +<p>Aristide took the cheque and looked at it in a +dazed way.</p> + +<p>“Then I do not get my twenty-five thousand +francs?”</p> + +<p>“Evidently not,” said the cashier.</p> + +<p>Aristide stood for a while stunned. What did +it mean? His thousand pounds could not be lost. +It was impossible. There was some mistake. It +was an evil dream. With a heavy weight on the +top of his head, he went out of the Crédit Lyonnais +and mechanically crossed the little street separating +the Bank from the café on the Place Carnot. +There he sat stupidly and wondered. The +waiter hovered in front of him. “<em>Monsieur désire?</em>” +Aristide waved him away absently. Yes, +it was some mistake. Mrs. Errington in her agitation +must have used the wrong cheque book. But +even rich English people do not carry about with +them a circulating library assortment of cheque +books. It was incomprehensible—and meanwhile, +his thousand pounds....</p> + +<p>The little square blazed before him in the August +sunshine. Opposite flashed the white mass of the +Etablissement des Bains. There was the old Roman +Arch of Titus, gray and venerable. There were +the trees of the gardens in riotous greenery. There +on the right marking the hour of eleven on its +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span> +black face was the clock of the Comptoir National. +It was Aix; familiar Aix; not a land of dreams. +And there coming rapidly across from the Comptoir +National was the well knit figure of the young man +from Atlanta.</p> + +<p>“<em>Nom de Dieu</em>,” murmured Aristide. “<em>Nom de +Dieu de nom de Dieu!</em>”</p> + +<p>Eugene Miller, in a fine frenzy, threw himself +into a chair beside Aristide.</p> + +<p>“See here. Can you understand this?”</p> + +<p>He thrust into his hand a pink strip of paper. +It was a cheque for a hundred pounds, made payable +to Eugene Miller, Esquire, signed by Mary Errington, +and marked “Not known. No account.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Tonnerre de Dieu!</em>” cried Aristide. “How did +you get this?”</p> + +<p>“How did I get it? I cashed it for her—the day +she went away. She said urgent affairs summoned +her from Aix—no time to wire for funds—wanted +to pay her hotel bill—and she gave me the address +of her old English home in Somerset and invited +me to come there in September. Fifteenth of September. +Said that you were coming. And now +I’ve got a bum cheque. I guess I can’t wander +about this country alone. I need blinkers and harness +and a man with a whip.”</p> + +<p>He went on indignantly. Aristide composed his +face into an expression of parental interest; but +within him there was shivering and sickening +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span> +upheaval. He saw it all, the whole mocking drama....</p> + +<p>He, Aristide Pujol, was the most sweetly, the +most completely swindled man in France.</p> + +<p>The Comte de Lussigny, the mild Mrs. +Errington and the beautiful Betty were in league +together and had exquisitely plotted. They had +conspired, as soon as he had accused the Count +of cheating. The rascal must have gone straight +to them from Miller’s room. No wonder that Lussigny, +when insulted at the tables, had sat like a +tame rabbit and had sought him in the garden. No +wonder he had accepted the accusation of adventurer. +No wonder he had refused to play for the +cheque which he knew to be valueless. But why, +thought Aristide, did he not at once consent to sell +the papers on the stipulation that he should be paid +in notes? Aristide found an answer. He wanted +to get everything for nothing, afraid of the use +that Aristide might make of a damning confession, +and also relying for success on his manipulation of +the cards. Finally he had desired to get hold of a +dangerous cheque. In that he had been foiled. +But the trio has got away with his thousand +pounds, his wonderful thousand pounds. He reflected, +still keeping an attentive eye on young Eugene +Miller and interjecting a sympathetic word, +that after he had paid his hotel bill, he would be +as poor on quitting Aix-les-Bains as he was when +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span> +he had entered it. <em>Sic transit</em>.... As it was +in the beginning with Aristide Pujol, is now and +ever shall be....</p> + +<p>“But I have my clothes—such clothes as I’ve +never had in my life,” thought Aristide. “And a +diamond and sapphire tie-pin and a gold watch, and +all sorts of other things. <em>Tron de l’air</em>, I’m still +rich.”</p> + +<p>“Who would have thought she was like that?” +said he. “And a hundred pounds, too. A lot of +money.”</p> + +<p>For nothing in the world would he have confessed +himself a fellow-victim.</p> + +<p>“I don’t care a cent for the hundred pounds,” +cried the young man. “Our factory turns out seven +hundred and sixty-seven million pairs of boots per +annum.” (Aristide, not I, is responsible for the +statistics.) “But I have a feeling that in this +hoary country I’m just a little toddling child. And +I hate it. I do, sir. I want a nurse to take me +round.”</p> + +<p>Aristide flashed the lightning of his wit upon +the young man from Atlanta, Georgia.</p> + +<p>“You do, my dear young friend. I’ll be your +nurse, at a weekly salary—say a hundred francs—it +doesn’t matter. We will not quarrel.” Eugene +Miller was startled. “Yes,” said Aristide, with a +convincing flourish. “I’ll clear robbers and sirens +and harpies from your path. I’ll show you things +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span> +in Europe—from Tromsö to Cap Spartivento that +you never dreamed of. I’ll lead you to every +stained glass window in the world. I know them +all.”</p> + +<p>“I particularly want to see those in the church of +St. Sebald in Nuremberg.”</p> + +<p>“I know them like my pocket,” said Aristide. “I +will take you there. We start to-day.”</p> + +<p>“But, Mr. Pujol,” said the somewhat bewildered +Georgian. “I thought you were a man of fortune.”</p> + +<p>“I am more than a man. I am a soldier. I am +a soldier of Fortune. The fickle goddess has for +the moment deserted me. But I am loyal. I have +for all worldly goods, two hundred and fifty dollars, +with which I shall honorably pay my hotel +bill. I say I am a soldier of Fortune. But,” he +slapped his chest, “I am the only honorable one on +the Continent of Europe.”</p> + +<p>The young man fixed upon him the hard blue +eyes, not of the enthusiast for stained glass windows, +but of the senior partner in the boot factory +of Atlanta, Georgia.</p> + +<p>“I believe you,” said he. “It’s a deal. Shake.”</p> + +<p>“And now,” said Aristide, after having shaken +hands, “come and lunch with me at Nikola’s for +the last time.”</p> + +<p>He rose, stretched out both arms in a wide gesture +and smiled with his irresistible Ancient Mariner’s +eyes at the young man.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span> +“We lunch. We eat ambrosia. Then we go out +together and see the wonderful world through the +glass-blood of saints and martyrs and apostles and +the good Father Abraham and Louis Quatorze. +<em>Viens, mon cher ami.</em> It is the dream of my life.”</p> + +<p>Practically penniless and absolutely disillusioned, +the amazing man was radiantly happy.</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="IX" id="IX"></a>IX</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN’S SUMMER</strong></p> + + +<p>My good friend Blessington, who is a mighty +man in the Bordeaux wine-trade, happening +one day to lament the irreparable loss +of a deceased employé, an Admirable Crichton of +a myriad accomplishments and linguistic attainments +whose functions it had been, apparently, to travel +about between London, Bordeaux, Marseilles and +Algiers, I immediately thought of a certain living +and presumably unemployed paragon of my acquaintance.</p> + +<p>“I know the very man you’re looking for,” said I.</p> + +<p>“Who is he?”</p> + +<p>“He’s a kind of human firework,” said I, “and +his name is Aristide Pujol.”</p> + +<p>I sketched the man—in my desire to do a good +turn to Aristide, perhaps in exaggerated colour.</p> + +<p>“Let me have a look at him,” said Blessington.</p> + +<p>“He may be anywhere on the continent of +Europe,” said I. “How long can you give me to +produce him?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span> +“A week. Not longer.”</p> + +<p>“I’ll do my best,” said I.</p> + +<p>By good luck my telegram, sent off about four +o’clock, found him at 213 <em>bis</em> Rue Saint-Honoré. +He had just returned to Paris after some mad dash +for fortune (he told me afterwards a wild and disastrous +story of a Russian Grand-Duke, a Dancer +and a gold mine in the Dolomites) and had once +more resumed the dreary conduct of the Agence +Pujol at the Hôtel du Soleil et de l’Ecosse. My +summons being imperative, he abandoned the +Agence Pujol as a cat jumps off a wall, and, +leaving the guests of the Hotel guideless, to +the indignation of Monsieur Bocardon, whom he +had served this trick several times before, paid his +good landlady, Madam Bidoux, what he owed her, +took a third-class ticket to London, bought, lunatic +that he was, a ripe Brie cheese, a foot in diameter, +a present to myself, which he carried in his hand +most of the journey, and turned up at my house at +eight o’clock the next morning with absolutely +empty pockets and the happiest and most fascinating +smile that ever irradiated the face of man. As a +matter of fact, he burst his way past my scandalized +valet into my bedroom and woke me up.</p> + +<p>“Here I am, my dear friend, and here is something +French you love that I have brought you,” +and he thrust the Brie cheese under my nose.</p> + +<p>“— — —,” said I.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span> +If you were awakened by a Brie cheese, an hour +before your time, you would say the same. Aristide +sat at the foot of the bed and laughed till the tears +ran down his beard.</p> + +<p>As soon as it was decent I sent him into the city +to interview Blessington. Three hours afterward +he returned more radiant than ever. He threw +himself into my arms; before I could disentagle +myself, he kissed me on both cheeks; then he danced +about the room.</p> + +<p>“<em>Me voici</em>,” he said, “accredited representative of +the great Maison Dulau et Compagnie. I have +hundreds of pounds a year. I go about. I watch. +I control. I see that the Great British Public can +assuage its thirst with the pure juice of the grape +and not with the dregs of a laboratory. I test vintages. +I count barrels. I enter them in books. I +smile at Algerian wine growers and say, ‘Ha! ha! +none of your <em>petite piquette frélateé</em> for me but +good sound wine.’ It is diplomacy. It is as simple +as kissing hands. And I have a sustained income. +Now I can be <em>un bon bourgeois</em> instead of a stray +cat. And all due to you, <em>mon cher ami</em>. I am grateful—<em>voyons</em>—if +anybody ever says Aristide Pujol +is ungrateful, he is a liar. You believe me! Say +you believe me.”</p> + +<p>He looked at me earnestly.</p> + +<p>“I do, old chap,” said I.</p> + +<p>I had known Aristide for some years, and in all +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span> +kinds of little ways he had continuously manifested +his gratitude for the trifling service I had rendered +him, at our first meeting, in delivering him out of +the hands of the horrific Madam Gougasse. That +gratitude is the expectation of favors to come was, +in the case of Aristide, a cynical and inapplicable +proposition. And here, as this (as far as I can +see) is the last of Aristide’s adventures I have to +relate, let me make an honest and considered statement:—</p> + +<p>During the course of an interesting and fairly +prosperous life, I have made many delightful Bohemian, +devil-may-care acquaintances, but among +them all Aristide stands as the one bright star who +has never asked me to lend him money. I have +offered it times without number, but he has refused. +I believe there is no man living to whom Aristide +is in debt. In the depths of the man’s changeling +and feckless soul is a principle which has carried +him untarnished through many a wild adventure. +If he ever accepted money—money to the Provençal +peasant is the transcendental materialised, and Aristide +(save by the changeling theory) was Provençal +peasant bone and blood—it was always for what he +honestly thought was value received. If he met +a man who wanted to take a mule ride among the +Mountains of the Moon, Aristide would at once +have offered himself as guide. The man would +have paid him; but Aristide, by some quaint spiritual +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span> +juggling, would have persuaded him that the +ascent of Primrose Hill was equal to any lunar +achievement, seeing that, himself, Aristide Pujol, +was keeper of the Sun, Moon and Seven Stars; and +the gift to that man of Aristide’s dynamic personality +would have been well worth anything that he +would have found in the extinct volcano we know +to be the moon.</p> + +<p>“The only thing I would suggest, if you would +allow me to do so,” said I, “is not to try to make +the fortune of Messrs. Dulau & Co. by some dazzling +but devastating <em>coup</em> of your own.”</p> + +<p>He looked at me in his bright, shrewd way. “You +think it time I restrained my imagination?”</p> + +<p>“Exactly.”</p> + +<p>“I will read The Times and buy a family Bible,” +said Aristide.</p> + +<p>A week after he had taken up his work in +the City, under my friend Blessington, I saw +the delighted and prosperous man again. It +was a Saturday and he came to lunch at my +house.</p> + +<p>“<em>Tiens!</em>” said he, when he had recounted his success +in the office, “it is four years since I was in +England?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said I, with a jerk of memory. “Time +passes quickly.”</p> + +<p>“It is three years since I lost little Jean.”</p> + +<p>“Who is little Jean?” I asked.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span> +“Did I not tell you when I saw you last in +Paris?”</p> + +<p>“No.”</p> + +<p>“It is strange. I have been thinking about him +and my heart has been aching for him all the time. +You must hear. It is most important.” He lit a +cigar and began.</p> + +<p>It was then that he told me the story of which +I have already related in these +chronicles:<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> +how he was scouring France in a ramshackle automobile +as the peripatetic vendor of a patent corn cure +and found a babe of nine months lying abandoned +in the middle of that silent road through the +wilderness between Salon and Arles; how instead +of delivering it over to the authorities, he adopted +it and carried it about with him from town to town, +a motor accessory sometimes embarrassing, but always +divinely precious; how an evil day came upon +him at Aix-en-Provence when, the wheezing automobile +having uttered its last gasp, he found his +occupation gone; how, no longer being able to care +for <em>le petit</em> Jean, he left him with a letter and half +his fortune outside the door of a couple of English +maiden ladies who, staying in the same hotel, had +manifested great interest in the baby and himself; +and how, in the dead of the night, he had tramped +away from Aix-en-Provence in the rain, his pockets +light and his heart as heavy as lead.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span> +“And I have never heard of my little Jean +again,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Why didn’t you write?” I asked.</p> + +<p>“I knew their names, Honeywood; Miss Janet +was the elder, Miss Anne the younger. But the +name of the place they lived at I have never been +able to remember. It was near London—they used +to come up by train to matinées and afternoon concerts. +But what it is called, <em>mon Dieu</em>, I have racked +my brain for it. <em>Sacré mille tonnerres!</em>” He leaped +to his feet in his unexpected, startling way, and +pounced on a Bradshaw’s Railway Guide lying on +my library table. “Imbecile, pig, triple ass that I +am! Why did I not think of this before? It is near +London. If I look through all the stations near +London on every line, I shall find it.”</p> + +<p>“All right,” said I, “go ahead.”</p> + +<p>I lit a cigarette and took up a novel. I had not +read very far when a sudden uproar from the +table caused me to turn round. Aristide +danced and flourished the Bradshaw over his +head.</p> + +<p>“Chislehurst! Chislehurst! Ah, <em>mon ami</em>, now +I am happy. Now I have found my little Jean. +You will forgive me—but I must go now and embrace +him.”</p> + +<p>He held out his hand.</p> + +<p>“Where are you off to?” I demanded.</p> + +<p>“The Chislehurst, where else?”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span> +“My dear fellow,” said I, rising, “do you +seriously suppose that these two English maiden +ladies have taken on themselves the responsibility +of that foreign brat’s upbringing?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu!</em>” said he taken aback for the moment, +hypothesis having entered his head. Then, with +a wide gesture, he flung the preposterous idea to +the winds. “Of course. They have hearts, these +English women. They have maternal instincts. +They have money.” He looked at Bradshaw again, +then at his watch. “I have just time to catch a +train. <em>Au revoir, mon vieux.</em>”</p> + +<p>“But,” I objected, “why don’t you write? It’s +the natural thing to do.”</p> + +<p>“Write? <em>Bah!</em> Did you ever hear of a Provençal +writing when he could talk?” He tapped his +lips, and in an instant, like a whirlwind, he passed +from my ken.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>Aristide on his arrival at Chislehurst looked +about the pleasant, leafy place—it was a bright +October afternoon and the wooded hillside blazed +in russet and gold—and decided it was the perfect +environment for Miss Janet and Miss Anne, +to say nothing of little Jean. A neat red brick +house with a trim garden in front of it looked +just the kind of a house wherein Miss Janet and +Miss Anne would live. He rang the bell. A parlour-maid, +in spotless black and white, tutelary +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span> +nymph of Suburbia, the very parlour-maid who +would minister to Miss Janet and Miss Anne, +opened the door.</p> + +<p>“Miss Honeywood?” he inquired.</p> + +<p>“Not here, sir,” said the parlour-maid.</p> + +<p>“Where is she? I mean, where are they?”</p> + +<p>“No one of that name lives here,” said the parlour-maid.</p> + +<p>“Who does live here?”</p> + +<p>“Colonel Brabazon.”</p> + +<p>“And where do the two Miss Honeywood live?” +he asked with his engaging smile.</p> + +<p>But English suburban parlour-maids are on their +guard against smiles, no matter how engaging. She +prepared to shut the door.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know.”</p> + +<p>“How can I find out?”</p> + +<p>“You might enquire among the tradespeople.”</p> + +<p>“Thank you, mademoiselle, you are a most intelligent +young——”</p> + +<p>The door shut in his face. Aristide frowned. She +was a pretty parlour-maid, and Aristide didn’t like +to be so haughtily treated by a pretty woman. But +his quest being little Jean and not the eternal feminine, +he took the maid’s advice and made enquiries +at the prim and respectable shops.</p> + +<p>“Oh, yes,” said a comely young woman in a fragrant +bakers’ and confectioners’. “They were two +ladies, weren’t they? They lived at Hope Cottage. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span> +We used to supply them. They left Chislehurst +two years ago.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Sacré nom d’un chien!</em>” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Beg pardon?” asked the young woman.</p> + +<p>“I am disappointed,” said Aristide. “Where +did they go to?”</p> + +<p>“I’m sure I can’t tell you.”</p> + +<p>“Do you remember whether they had a baby?”</p> + +<p>“They were maiden ladies,” said the young +woman rebukingly.</p> + +<p>“But anybody can keep a baby without being its +father or mother. I want to know what has become +of the baby.”</p> + +<p>The young woman gazed through the window.</p> + +<p>“You had better ask the policeman.”</p> + +<p>“That’s an idea,” said Aristide, and, leaving her, +he caught up the passing constable.</p> + +<p>The constable knew nothing of maiden ladies +with a baby, but he directed him to Hope Cottage. +He found a pretty half-timber house lying back +from the road, with a neat semi-circular gravelled +path leading to a porch covered thick with Virginia +creeper. Even more than the red brick residence +of Colonel Brabazon did it look, with its air +of dainty comfort, the fitting abode of Miss Janet +and Miss Anne. He rang the bell and interviewed +another trim parlour-maid. More susceptible to +smiles than the former, she summoned her master, +a kindly, middle-aged man, who came out into the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span> +porch. Yes, Honeywood was the name of the previous +tenants. Two ladies, he believed. He had +never seen them and knew nothing about a child. +Messrs. Tompkin & Briggs, the estate agents in the +High Street, could no doubt give him information. +Aristide thanked him and made his way to Messrs. +Tompkin & Briggs. A dreary spectacled youth in +resentful charge of the office—his principals, it being +Saturday afternoon, were golfing the happy +hours away—professed blank ignorance of everything. +Aristide fixed him with his glittering eye +and flickered his fingers and spoke richly. The +youth in a kind of mesmeric trance took down a +battered, dog’s eared book and turned over the +pages.</p> + +<p>“Honeywood—Miss—Beverly Stoke—near St. +Albans—Herts. That’s it,” he said.</p> + +<p>Aristide made a note of the address. “Is that +all you can tell me?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said the youth.</p> + +<p>“I thank you very much, my young friend,” said +Aristide, raising his hat, “and here is something +to buy a smile with,” and, leaving a sixpence on the +table to shimmer before the youth’s stupefied eyes, +Aristide strutted out of the office.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>“You had much better have written,” said I, when +he came back and told me of his experiences. “The +post-office would have done all that for you.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span> +“You have no idea of business, <em>mon cher ami</em>”—(I—a +successful tea-broker of twenty-five years’ +standing!—the impudence of the fellow!)—“If I +had written to-day, the letter would have reached +Chislehurst on Monday morning. It would be redirected +and reach Hertfordshire on Tuesday. I +should not get any news till Wednesday. I go +down to Beverly Stoke to-morrow, and then I find +at once Miss Janet and Miss Anne and my little +Jean! The secret of business men, and I am a business +man, the accredited representative of Dulau +et Compagnie—never forget that—the secret of +business is no delay.”</p> + +<p>He darted across the room to Bradshaw.</p> + +<p>“For God’s sake,” said I, “put that nightmare +of perpetual motion in your pocket and go mad over +it in the privacy of your own chamber.”</p> + +<p>“Very good,” said he, tucking the brain-convulsing +volume under his arm. “I will put it on top of +The Times and the family Bible and I will say +‘Ha! now I am British. Now I am very respectable!’ +What else can I do?”</p> + +<p>“Rent a pew in a Baptist chapel,” said I.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>After a three-mile trudge from St. Albans Aristide, +following directions, found himself on a high +road running through the middle of a straggy common +decked here and there with great elms splendid +in autumn bravery, and populated chiefly by +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span> +geese, who when he halted in some perplexity—for +on each side, beyond the green, were indications +of a human settlement—advanced in waddling +flocks towards him and signified their disapproval +of his presence. A Sundayfied youth in a rainbow +tie rode past on a bicycle. Aristide took off his +hat. The youth nearly fell off the bicycle, but British +doggedness saved him from disaster.</p> + +<p>“Beverly Stoke? Will you have the courtesy——”</p> + +<p>“Here,” bawled the youth, with a circular twist +of his head, and, eager to escape from a madman, +he rode on furiously.</p> + +<p>Aristide looked to left and right at the little +houses beyond the green—some white and thatched +and dilapidated, others horridly new and perky—but +all poor and insignificant. As his eyes became +accustomed to the scene they were aware of human +forms dotted sparsely about the common. He +struck across and accosted one, an elderly woman +with a prayer-book. “Miss Honeywood? A lady +from London?”</p> + +<p>“That house over there—the third beyond the +poplar.”</p> + +<p>“And little Jean—a beautiful child about four +years old?”</p> + +<p>“That I don’t know, sir. I live at Wilmer’s End, +a good half mile from here.”</p> + +<p>Aristide made for the third house past the poplar. +First there was a plank bridge across a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span> +grass-grown ditch; then a tiny patch of garden; then a +humble whitewashed cottage with a small leaded +casement window on each side of the front door. +Unlike Hope Cottage, it did not look at all the residence +of Miss Janet and Miss Anne. Its appearance, +indeed, was woe-begone. Aristide, however, +went up to the door; as there was neither knocker +nor bell, he rapped with his knuckles. The door +opened, and there, poorly dressed in blouse and +skirt, stood Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>She regarded him for a moment in a bewildered +way, then, recognizing him, drew back into the +stone flagged passage with a sharp cry.</p> + +<p>“You? You—Mr. Pujol?”</p> + +<p>“<em>Oui, Mademoiselle, c’est moi.</em> It is I, Aristide +Pujol.”</p> + +<p>She put her hands on her bosom. “It is rather +a shock seeing you—so unexpectedly. Will you +come in?”</p> + +<p>She led the way into a tiny parlour, very clean, +very simple with its furniture of old oak and brass, +and bade him sit. She looked a little older than +when he had seen her at Aix-en-Provence. A few +lines had marred the comely face and there was +here and there a touch of grey in the reddish hair, +and, though still buxom, she had grown thinner. +Care had set its stamp upon her.</p> + +<p>“Miss Honeywood,” said Aristide. “It is on account +of little Jean that I have come——”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span> +She turned on him swiftly. “Not to take him +away!”</p> + +<p>“Then he is here!” He jumped to his feet and +wrung both her hands and kissed them to her great +embarrassment. “Ah, mademoiselle, I knew it. I +felt it. When such an inspiration comes to a man, +it is the <em>bon Dieu</em> who sends it. He is here, actually +here, in this house?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>Aristide threw out his arms. “Let me see him. +<em>Ah, le cher petit!</em> I have been yearning after him +for three years. It was my heart that I ripped out +of my body that night and laid at your threshold.”</p> + +<p>“Hush!” said Miss Anne, with an interrupting +gesture. “You must not talk so loud. He is asleep +in the next room. You mustn’t wake him. He is +very ill.”</p> + +<p>“Ill? Dangerously ill?”</p> + +<p>“I’m afraid so.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Mon Dieu</em>,” said he, sitting down again in the +oak settle. To Aristide the emotion of the moment +was absorbing, overwhelming. His attitude betokened +deepest misery and dejection.</p> + +<p>“And I expected to see him full of joy and +health!”</p> + +<p>“It is not my fault, Mr. Pujol,” said Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>He started. “But no. How could it be? You +loved him when you first set eyes on him at Aix-en-Provence.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span> +Miss Anne began to cry. “God knows,” said +she, “what I should do without him. The dear +mite is all that is left to me.”</p> + +<p>“All? But there is your sister, the dear Miss +Janet.”</p> + +<p>Miss Anne’s eyes were hidden in her handkerchief. +“My poor sister died last year, Mr. Pujol.”</p> + +<p>“I am very sorry. I did not know,” said Aristide +gently.</p> + +<p>There was a short silence. “It was a great sorrow +to you,” he said.</p> + +<p>“It was God’s will,” said Anne. Then, after another +pause, during which she dried her eyes, she +strove to smile. “Tell me about yourself. How +do you come to be here?”</p> + +<p>Aristide replied in a hesitating way. He was in +the presence of grief and sickness and trouble; the +Provençal braggadocio dropped from him and he +became the simple and childish creature that he was. +He accounted very truthfully, very convincingly, +for his queer life; for his abandonment of little +Jean, for his silence, for his sudden and unexpected +appearance. During the ingenuous <em>apologia pro +vita sua</em> Miss Anne regarded him with her honest +candour.</p> + +<p>“Janet and I both understood,” she said. “Janet +was gifted with a divine comprehension and pity. The +landlady at the hotel, I remember, said some unkind +things about you; but we didn’t believe them. We +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span> +felt that you were a good man—no one but a good +man could have written that letter—we cried over +it—and when she tried to poison our minds we said +to each other: ‘What does it matter? Here God in +his mercy has given us a child.’ But, Mr. Pujol, +why didn’t you take us into your confidence?”</p> + +<p>“My dear Miss Anne,” said Aristide, “we of the +South do things impulsively, by lightning flashes. +An idea comes suddenly. <em>Vlan!</em> we carry it out in +two seconds. We are not less human than the +Northerner, who reflects two months.”</p> + +<p>“That is almost what dear, wise Janet told me,” +said Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>“Then you know in your heart,” said Aristide, +after a while, “that if I had not been only a football +at the feet of fortune, I should never have deserted +little Jean?”</p> + +<p>“I do, Mr. Pujol. My sister and I have been +footballs, too.” She added with a change of tone: +“You tell me you saw our dear home at Chislehurst?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“And you see this. There is a difference.”</p> + +<p>“What has happened?” asked Aristide.</p> + +<p>She told him the commonplace pathetic story. +Their father had left them shares in the company +of which he had been managing director. For +many years they had enjoyed a comfortable income. +Then the company had become bankrupt and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span> +only a miserable ninety pounds a year had been +saved from the wreckage. The cottage at Beverly +Stoke belonging to them—it had been their mother’s—they +had migrated thither with their fallen fortunes +and little Jean. And then Janet had died. +She was delicate and unaccustomed to privation +and discomfort—and the cottage had its disadvantages. +She, Anne herself, was as strong as a horse +and had never been ill in her life, but others were +not quite so hardy. “However”—she smiled—“one +has to make the best of things.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Parbleu</em>,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>Miss Anne went on to talk of Jean, a miraculous +infant of infinite graces and accomplishments. Up +to now he had been the sturdiest and merriest +fellow.</p> + +<p>“At nine months old he saw that life was a big +joke,” said Aristide. “How he used to laugh.”</p> + +<p>“There’s not much laugh left in him, poor darling,” +she sighed. And she told how he had caught +a chill which had gone to his lungs and how the +night before last she thought she had lost him.</p> + +<p>She sat up and listened. “Will you excuse me +for a moment?”</p> + +<p>She went out and presently returned, standing +at the doorway. “He is still asleep. Would you +like to see him? Only”—she put her fingers on her +lips—“you must be very, very quiet.”</p> + +<p>He followed her into the next room and looked +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span> +about him shyly, recognizing that it was Miss +Anne’s own bedroom; and there, lying in a little +cot beside the big bed, he saw the sleeping child, +his brown face flushed with fever. He had a curly +shock of black hair and well formed features. An +old woolly lamb nose to nose with him shared his +pillow. Aristide drew from his pocket a Teddy +bear, and, having asked Miss Anne’s permission +with a glance, laid it down gently on the +coverlid.</p> + +<p>His eyes were wet when they returned to the +parlour. So were Miss Anne’s. The Teddy bear +was proof of the simplicity of his faith in her.</p> + +<p>After a while, conscious of hunger, he rose to +take leave. He must be getting back to St. Albans. +But might he be permitted to come back later in +the afternoon? Miss Anne reddened. It outraged +her sense of hospitality to send a guest away from +her house on a three-mile walk for food. And +yet——</p> + +<p>“Mr. Pujol,” she said bravely, “I would ask you +to stay to luncheon if I had anything to offer you. +But I am single handed, and, with Jean’s illness, +I haven’t given much thought to housekeeping. The +woman who does some of the rough work won’t +be back till six. I hate to let you go all those miles—I +am so distressed——”</p> + +<p>“But, mademoiselle,” said Aristide. “You have +some bread. You have water. It has been a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span> +banquet many a day to me, and this time it would be +the most precious banquet of all.”</p> + +<p>“I can do a little better than that,” faltered Miss +Anne. “I have plenty of eggs and there is bacon.”</p> + +<p>“Eggs—bacon!” cried Aristide, his bright eyes +twinkling and his hands going up in the familiar +gesture. “That is superb. <em>Tiens!</em> you shall not do +the cooking. You shall rest. I will make you an +<em>omelette au lard</em>—<em>ah!</em>”—he kissed the tips of his +fingers—“such an omelette as you have not eaten +since you were in France—and even there I doubt +whether you have ever eaten an omelette like mine.” +His soul simmering with omelette, he darted towards +the door. “The kitchen—it is this way?”</p> + +<p>“But, Mr. Pujol——!” Miss Anne laughed, protestingly. +Who could be angry with the vivid and +impulsive creature?</p> + +<p>“It is the room opposite Jean’s—not so?”</p> + +<p>She followed him into the clean little kitchen, +half amused, half flustered. Already he had hooked +off the top of the kitchen range. “Ah! a good fire. +And your frying-pan?” He dived into the scullery.</p> + +<p>“Please don’t be in such a hurry,” she pleaded. +“You will have made the omelette before I’ve had +time to lay the cloth, and it will get cold. Besides, +I want to learn how to do it.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Trés bien</em>,” said Aristide, laying down the frying-pan. +“You shall see how it is made—the omelette +of the universe.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span> +So he helped Miss Anne to lay the cloth on the +gate-legged oak table in the parlour and to set it +out with bread and butter and the end of a tinned +tongue and a couple of bottles of stout. After +which they went back to the little kitchen, where +in a kind of giggling awe she watched him shred +the bacon and break the eggs with his thin, skilful +fingers and perform his magic with the frying-pan +and turn out the great golden creation into the +dish.</p> + +<p>“Now,” said he, pulling her in his enthusiasm, +“to table while it is hot.”</p> + +<p>Miss Anne laughed. She lost her head ever so +little. The days had been drab and hopeless of +late and she was still young; so, if she felt excited +at this unhoped for inrush of life and colour, who +shall blame her? The light sparkled once more in +her eyes and the pink of her naturally florid complexion +shone on her cheek as they sat down to +table.</p> + +<p>“It is I who help it,” said Aristide. “Taste +that.” He passed the plate and waited, with the +artist’s expectation for her approval.</p> + +<p>“It’s delicious.”</p> + +<p>It was indeed the perfection of omelette, all its +suave juiciness contained in film as fine as goldbeater’s +skin.</p> + +<p>“Yes, it’s good.” He was delighted, childlike, at +the success of his cookery. His gaiety kept the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span> +careworn woman in rare laughter during the meal. +She lost all consciousness that he was a strange +man plunged down suddenly in the midst of her +old maidish existence—and a strange man, too, who +had once behaved in a most outrageous fashion. +But that was ever the way of Aristide. The moment +you yielded to his attraction he made you feel +that you had known him for years. His fascination +possessed you.</p> + +<p>“Miss Anne,” said he, smoking a cigarette, at +her urgent invitation, “is there a poor woman in +Beverly Stoke with whom I could lodge?”</p> + +<p>She gasped. “You lodge in Beverly Stoke?”</p> + +<p>“Why yes,” said Aristide, as if it were the most +natural thing in the world. “I am engaged in the +city from ten to five every day. I can’t come here +and go back to London every night, and I can’t +stay a whole week without my little Jean. And I +have my duty to Jean. I stand to him in the relation +of a father. I must help you to nurse him +and make him better. I must give him soup and +apples and ice cream and——”</p> + +<p>“You would kill the darling in five minutes,” interrupted +Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>He waved his forefinger in the air. “No, no, I +have nursed the sick in my time. My dear friend,” +said he, with a change of tone, “when did you go to +bed last?”</p> + +<p>“I don’t know,” she answered in some confusion. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span> +“The district nurse has helped me—and the doctor +has been very good. Jean has turned the corner +now. Please don’t worry. And as for your coming +to live down here, it’s absurd.”</p> + +<p>“Of course, if you formally forbid me to do so, +mademoiselle, and if you don’t want to see me——”</p> + +<p>“How can you say a thing like that? Haven’t I +shown you to-day that you are welcome?”</p> + +<p>“Dear Miss Anne,” said he, “forgive me. But +what is that great vast town of London to me who +know nobody there? Here in this tiny spot is concentrated +all I care for in the world. Why +shouldn’t I live in it?”</p> + +<p>“You would be so dreadfully uncomfortable,” +said Miss Anne, weakly.</p> + +<p>“Bah!” cried Aristide. “You talk of discomfort +to an old client of <em>L’Hôtel de la Belle Étoile</em>?”</p> + +<p>“The Hotel of the Beautiful Star? Where is +that?” asked the innocent lady.</p> + +<p>“Wherever you like,” said Aristide. “Your bed +is dry leaves and your bed-curtains, if you demand +luxury, are a hedge, and your ceiling, if you are +fortunate, is ornamented with stars.”</p> + +<p>She looked at him wide-eyed, in great concern.</p> + +<p>“Do you mean that you have ever been homeless?”</p> + +<p>He laughed. “I think I’ve been everything imaginable, +except married.”</p> + +<p>“Hush!” she said. “Listen!” Her keen ear had +caught a child’s cry. “It’s Jean. I must go.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span> +She hurried out. Aristide prepared to light another +cigarette. But a second before the application +of the flaring match an idea struck him. He +blew out the match, replaced the cigarette in his +case, and with a dexterity that revealed the professional +of years ago, began to clear the table. He +took the things noiselessly into the kitchen, shut the +door, and master of the kitchen and scullery washed +up. Then, the most care-free creature in the world, +he stole down the stone passage into the wilderness +of Beverly Stoke.</p> + +<p>An hour afterwards he knocked at the front door, +Anne Honeywood admitted him.</p> + +<p>“I have arranged with the good Mrs. Buttershaw. +She lives a hundred yards down the road. +I bring my baggage to-morrow evening.”</p> + +<p>Anne regarded him in a humorous, helpless way. +“I can’t prevent you,” she said, “but I can give you +a piece of advice.”</p> + +<p>“What is it?”</p> + +<p>“Don’t wash up for Mrs. Buttershaw.”</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>So it came to pass that Aristide Pujol took up +his residence at Beverly Stoke, trudging every +morning three miles to catch his business train at +St. Albans, and trudging back every evening three +miles to Beverly Stoke. Every morning he ran +into the cottage for a sight of little Jean and every +evening after a digestion-racking meal prepared by +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span> +Mrs. Buttershaw he went to the cottage armed with +toys and weird and injudicious food for little Jean +and demanded an account of the precious infant’s +doings during the day. Gradually Jean recovered +of his congestion, being a sturdy urchin, and, to +Aristide’s delight, resumed the normal life of childhood.</p> + +<p>“<em>Moi, je suis papa</em>,” said Aristide. “He has got +to speak French, and he had better begin at once. +It is absurd that anyone born between Salon and +Arles should not speak French and Provençal; we’ll +leave Provençal till later. <em>Moi, je suis papa, Jean.</em> +Say <em>papa</em>.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t quite see how he can call you that, Mr. +Pujol,” said Anne, with the suspicion of a flush on +her cheek.</p> + +<p>“And why not? Has the poor child any other +papa in the whole wide world? And at four years +old not to have a father is heart-breaking. Do you +want us to bring him up an orphan? No. You +shan’t be an orphan, <em>mon brave</em>,” he continued, +bending over the child and putting his little hands +against his bearded face, “you couldn’t bear such a +calamity, could you? And so you will call me +<em>papa</em>.”</p> + +<p>“<em>Papa</em>,” said Jean, with a grin.</p> + +<p>“There, he has settled it,” said Aristide. “<em>Moi +je suis papa.</em> And you, mademoiselle?”</p> + +<p>“I am Auntie Anne,” she replied demurely.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span> +Saturday afternoons and Sundays were Aristide’s +days of delight. He could devote himself entirely +to Jean. The thrill of the weeks when he had +paraded the child in the market places of France +while he sold his corn cure again ran through his +veins. The two rows of cottages separated by the +common, which was the whole of Beverly Stoke, +became too small a theatre for his parental pride. +He bewailed the loss of his automobile that had +perished of senile decay at Aix-en-Provence. If he +only had it now he could exhibit Jean to the astonished +eyes of St. Albans, Watford—nay London +itself!</p> + +<p>“I wish I could take him to Dulau & Company,” +said he.</p> + +<p>“Good Heavens!” cried Miss Anne in alarm, for +Aristide was capable of everything. “What in the +world would you do with him there?”</p> + +<p>“What would I do with him?” replied Aristide, +picking the child up in his arms—the three were +strolling on the common—“<em>Parbleu!</em> I would use +him to strike the staff of Dulau & Company green +with envy. Do you think the united efforts of the +whole lot of them, from the good Mr. Blessington +to the office boy, could produce a hero like this? +You are a hero, Jean, aren’t you?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, papa,” said Jean.</p> + +<p>“He knows it,” shouted Aristide with a delighted +gesture which nearly cast Jean to the circumambient +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span> +geese. “Miss Anne, we have the most wonderful +child in the universe.”</p> + +<p>This, as far as Anne was concerned, was a +proposition which for the past three years +she had regarded as incontrovertible. She +smiled at Aristide, who smiled at her, and +Jean, seeing them happy, smiled largely at them +both.</p> + +<p>In a very short time Aristide, who could magically +manufacture boats and cocks and pigs and +giraffes out of bits of paper, who could bark like +a dog and quack like a goose, who could turn himself +into a horse or a bear at a minute’s notice, +whose pockets were a perennial mine of infantile +ecstasy, established himself in Jean’s mind as a kind +of tame, necessary and beloved jinn. Being a loyal +little soul, the child retained his affection for Auntie +Anne, but he was swept off his little feet by his +mirific parent. The time came when, if he was +not dressed in his tiny woollen jersey and knee +breeches and had not his nose glued against the +parlour window in readiness to scramble to the +front door for Aristide’s morning kiss, he would +have thought that chaos had come again. And +Anne, humouring the child, hastened to get him +washed and dressed in time; until at last, so greatly +was she affected by his obsession, she got into the +foolish habit of watching the clock and saying to +herself: “In another minute he will be here,” or: +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span> +“He is a minute late. What can have happened +to him?”</p> + +<p>So Aristide, in his childlike way, found remarkable +happiness in Beverly Stoke. A very wet summer +had been followed by a dry and mellow autumn. +Aristide waxed enthusiastic over the English climate +and rejoiced in the mild country air. He was +also happy under my friend Blessington, who spoke +of him to me in glowing terms. At the back of all +Aristide’s eccentricities was the Provençal peasant’s +shrewdness. He realized that, for the first time in +his life, he had taken up a sound and serious avocation. +Also, he was no longer irresponsible. He +had found little Jean. Jean’s future was in his +hands. Jean was to be an architect—God knows +why—but Aristide settled it, definitely, off-hand. +He would have to be educated. “And, my dear +friend,” said he, when we were discussing Jean—and +for months I heard nothing but Jean, Jean, +Jean, so that I loathed the brat, until I met the +brown-skinned, black-eyed, merry little wretch and +fell, like everybody else, fatuously in love with him—“my +dear friend,” said he, “an architect, to be +the architect that I mean him to be, must have universal +knowledge. He must know the first word +of the classic, the last word of the modern. He +must be steeped in poetry, his brain must vibrate +with science. He must be what you call in England +a gentleman. He must go to one of your great +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span> +public schools—Eton, Winchester, Rugby, Harrow—you +see I know them all—he must go to Cambridge +or Oxford. Ah, I tell you, he is to be a big +man. I, Aristide Pujol, did not pick him up on +that deserted road, in the Arabia Petrea of Provence, +between Salon and Arles, for nothing. He was +wrapped, as I have told you, in an old blanket—and +<em>ma foi</em> it smelt bad—and I dressed him in my +pyjamas and made a Neapolitan cap for him out of +one of my socks. The <em>bon Dieu</em> sent him, and I +shall arrange just as the <em>bon Dieu</em> intended. Poor +Miss Anne Honeywood with her ninety pounds a +year, what can she do? Pouf! It is for me to look +after the future of little Jean.”</p> + +<p>By means of such discourse he convinced Miss +Anne that Jean was predestined to greatness and +that Providence had appointed him, Aristide, as +the child’s agent in advance. Very much bewildered +by his riotous flow of language and +very reluctant to sacrifice her woman’s pride, she +agreed to allow him to contribute towards Jean’s +upbringing.</p> + +<p>“Dear Miss Anne,” said he, “it is my right. It is +Jean’s right. You would love to put him on top +of the pinnacle of fame, would you not?”</p> + +<p>“Of course,” said Miss Anne.</p> + +<p>“<em>Eh bien!</em> we will work together. You will give +him what can be given by a beautiful and exquisite +woman, and I will do all that can be done by the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span> +accredited agent of Dulau et Compagnie, Wine +Shippers of Bordeaux.”</p> + +<p>So, I repeat, Aristide was entirely happy. His +waking dreams were of the four-year-old child. +The glad anticipation of the working day in Great +Tower St., E. C., was the evening welcome from +the simple but capable gentlewoman and the sense +of home and intimacy in her little parlour no bigger +than the never-entered and nerve-destroying salon +of his parents at Aigues Mortes, but smiling with +the grace of old oak and faded chintz. At Aigues +Mortes the salon was a comfortless, tasteless convention, +set apart for the celebrations of baptisms +and marriages and deaths, a pride and a terror to +the inhabitants. But here everything seemed to be +as much a warm bit of Anne Honeywood as the +tortoise-shell comb in her hair and the square of +Brussels lace that rose and fell on the bosom of +her old evening frock. For, you see, since she expected +a visitor in the evenings, Anne had taken +to dressing for her sketch of a dinner. For all +her struggle with poverty she had retained the +charm that four years before had made her +touch upon Jean seem a consecration to the +impressionable man. And now that he entered +more deeply into her life and thoughts, he found +himself in fragrant places that were very strange +to him. He discovered, too, with some surprise, +that a man who has been at fierce grips with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span> +Fortune all his life from ten to forty is ever so little +tired in spirit and is glad to rest. In the tranquility +of Anne Honeywood’s presence his soul was +singularly at peace. He also wondered why Anne +Honeywood seemed to grow younger, and, in her +gentle fashion, more laughter-loving, every day.</p> + +<p>The Saint Martin’s summer lasted to the beginning +of December, and then it came to an end, and +with it the idyll of Aristide and Anne Honeywood.</p> + +<p>One Saturday afternoon, when the rain was falling +dismally, she received him with an embarrassment +she could scarcely conceal. The usual heightened +colour no longer gave youth to her cheek; an +anxious frown knitted her candid brows; and there +was no laughter in her eyes. He looked at her +questioningly. Was anything the matter with Jean? +But Jean answered the question for himself by running +down the passage and springing like a puppy +into Aristide’s arms. Anne turned her face away, +as if the sight pained her, and, pleading a headache +and the desire to lie down, she left the two together. +Returning after a couple of hours with the tea-tray, +she found them on the floor breathlessly absorbed +in the erection of card pagodas. She bit her lip +and swallowed a sob. Aristide jumped up and took +the tray. Was not the headache better? He was +so grieved. Jean must be very quiet and drink up +his milk quietly like a hero because Auntie was +suffering. Tea was a very subdued affair. Then +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span> +Anne carried off Jean to bed, refusing Aristide’s +helpful ministrations. It was his Saturday and +Sunday joy to bath Jean amid a score of crawly +tin insects which he had provided for the child’s +ablutionary entertainment, and it formed the climax +of Jean’s blissful day. But this afternoon Anne +tore the twain asunder. Aristide looked mournfully +over the rain-swept common through the leaded +panes, and speculated on the enigma of woman. A +man, feeling ill, would have been only too glad for +somebody to do his work; but a woman, just because +she was ill, declined assistance. Surely +women were an intellect-baffling sex.</p> + +<p>She came back, having put Jean to bed.</p> + +<p>“My dear friend,” she said, with a blurt of bravery, +“I have something very hard to say, but I must +say it. You must go away from Beverly Stoke.”</p> + +<p>“Ah!” cried Aristide, “is it I, then, that give you +a headache?”</p> + +<p>“It’s not your fault,” she said gently. “You have +been everything that a loyal gentleman could be—and +it’s because you’re a loyal gentleman that you +must go.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t understand,” said he, puzzled. “I must +go away because I give you a headache, although +it is not my fault.”</p> + +<p>“It’s nothing to do with headaches,” she explained. +“Don’t you see? People around here are +talking.”</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span> +“About you and me?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Miss Anne, faintly.</p> + +<p>“<em>Saprelotte!</em>” cried Aristide, with a fine flourish, +“let them talk!”</p> + +<p>“Against Jean and myself?”</p> + +<p>The reproach brought him to his feet. “No,” +said he. “No. Sooner than they should talk, I +would go out and strangle every one of them. But +it is infamous. What do they say?”</p> + +<p>“How can I tell you? What would they say in +your own country?”</p> + +<p>“France is France and England is England.”</p> + +<p>“And a little cackling village is the same all the +world over. No, my dear friend—for you are my +dear friend—you must go back to London, for the +sake of my good name and Jean’s.”</p> + +<p>“But let us leave the cackling village.”</p> + +<p>“There are geese on every common,” said Anne.</p> + +<p>“<em>Nom de Dieu!</em>” muttered Aristide, walking about +the tiny parlour. “<em>Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!</em>” +He stood in front of her and flung out his arms +wide. “But without Jean and you life will have +no meaning for me. I shall die. I shall fade away. +I shall perish. Tell me, dear Miss Anne, what they +are saying, the miserable peasants with souls of +mud.”</p> + +<p>But Anne could tell him no more. It had been +hateful and degrading to tell him so much. She +shivered through all her purity. After a barren +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> +discussion she held out her hand, large and generous +like herself.</p> + +<p>“Good-bye”—she hesitated for the fraction of a +second—“Good-bye, Aristide. I promise you shall +provide for Jean’s future. I will bring him up to +London now and then to see you. We will find +some way out of the difficulty. But you see, don’t +you, that you must leave Beverly Stoke?”</p> + +<p>Aristide went back to his comfortless lodgings +aflame with bewilderment, indignation and despair. +He fell upon Mrs. Buttershaw, a slatternly and sour-visaged +woman, and hurled at her a tornado of questions. +She responded with the glee of a hag, and +Aristide learned the amazing fact that in the matter +of sheer uncharitableness, unkindness and foulness +of thought Beverly Stoke, with its population +of three hundred hinds, could have brought down +upon it the righteous indignation of Sodom, Gomorrah, +Babylon, Paris, and London. For a fortnight +or so Anne Honeywood’s life in the village +had been that of a pariah dog.</p> + +<p>“And now you’ve spoke of it yourself,” said +Mrs. Buttershaw, her hands on her hips, “I’m glad. +I’m a respectable woman, I am, and go to church +regularly, and I don’t want to be mixed up in such +goings on. And I never have held with foreigners, +anyway. And the sooner you find other lodgings, +the better.”</p> + +<p>For the first and only time in his life words +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span> +failed Aristide Pujol. He stood in front of the virtuous +harridan, his lips working, his fingers convulsively +clutching the air.</p> + +<p>“You—you—you—you naughty woman!” he +gasped, and, sweeping her away from the doorway +of his box of a sitting-room, he rushed up to his +tinier bedroom and in furious haste packed his portmanteau.</p> + +<p>“I would rather die than sleep another night beneath +your slanderous roof,” he cried at the foot +of the stairs. “Here is more than your week’s +money.” He flung a couple of gold coins on the +floor and dashed out into the darkness and the rain.</p> + +<p>He hammered at Anne Honeywood’s door. She +opened it in some alarm.</p> + +<p>“You?—but——” she stammered.</p> + +<p>“I have come,” said he, dumping his portmanteau +in the passage, “to take you and Jean away from +this abomination of a place. It is a Tophet reserved +for those who are not good enough for hell. In +hell there is dignity, <em>que diable!</em> Here there is none. +I know what you have suffered. I know how they +insult you. I know what they say. You cannot stay +one more night here. Pack up all your things. +Pack up all Jean’s things. I have my valise here. +I walk to St. Albans and I come back for you in an +automobile. You lock up the door. I tell the policeman +to guard the cottage. You come with me. We +take a train to London. You and Jean will stay at +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span> +a hotel. I will go to my good friend who saved +me from Madam Gougasse. After that we will +think.”</p> + +<p>“That’s just like you,” she said, smiling in spite +of her trouble, “you act first and think afterwards. +Unfortunately I’m in the habit of doing the reverse.”</p> + +<p>“But it’s I who am doing all the thinking for +you. I have thought till my brain is red hot.” He +laughed in his luminous and excited way, and, seizing +both her hands, kissed them one after the other. +“There!” said he, “be ready by the time I return. +Do not hesitate. Do not look back. Remember +Lot’s wife!” He flourished his hat and was gone +like a flash into the heavy rain and darkness of the +December evening. Anne cried after him, but he +too remembering Lot’s wife would not turn. He +marched on buoyantly, heedless of the wet and +the squirting mud from unseen puddles. It was +an adventure such as he loved. It was a knightly +errand, <em>parbleu!</em> Was he not delivering a beautiful +lady from the dragon of calumny? And in +an automobile, too! His imagination fondled the +idea.</p> + +<p>At a garage in St. Albans he readily found a car +for hire. He was all for driving it himself—that is +how he had pictured the rescue—but the proprietor, +dull and unimaginative tradesman, declined firmly. +It was a hireling who drove the car to Beverly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span> +Stoke. Anne, unhatted and uncloaked, admitted +him.</p> + +<p>“You are not ready?”</p> + +<p>“My dear friend, how can I——?”</p> + +<p>“You are not coming?” His hands dropped to +his sides and his face was the incarnation of disappointment.</p> + +<p>“Let us talk things over reasonably,” she urged, +opening the parlour door.</p> + +<p>“But I have brought the automobile.”</p> + +<p>“He can wait for five minutes, can’t he?”</p> + +<p>“He can wait till Doomsday,” said Aristide.</p> + +<p>“Take off your dripping coat. You must be wet +through. Oh, how impulsive you are!”</p> + +<p>He took off his overcoat dejectedly and followed +her into the parlour, where she tried to point +out the impossibility of his scheme. How could +she abandon her home at a moment’s notice? Failing +to convince him, she said at last in some embarrassment, +but with gentle dignity: “Suppose we +did run away together in your romantic fashion, +would it not confirm the scandal in the eyes of this +wretched village?”</p> + +<p>“You are right,” said Aristide. “I had not +thought of it.”</p> + +<p>He knew himself to be a madman. It was not +thus that ladies were rescued from calumny. But +to leave her alone to face it for time indefinite was +unthinkable. And, meanwhile, what would become +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span> +of him severed from her and little Jean? He sighed +and looked around the little room where he had +been so happy, and at the sweet-faced woman whose +companionship had been so dear to him. And then +the true meaning of all the precious things that had +been his life for the past two months appeared before +him like a smiling valley hitherto hidden and +now revealed by dissolving mist. A great gladness +gathered round his heart. He leaned across the +table by which he was sitting and looked at her and +for the first time noticed that her eyes were red.</p> + +<p>“You have been crying, dear Anne,” said he, +using her name boldly. “Why?”</p> + +<p>A man ought not to put a question like that at +a woman’s head and bid her stand and deliver. How +is she to answer? Anne felt Aristide’s bright eyes +upon her and the colour mounted and mounted and +deepened on her cheeks and brow.</p> + +<p>“I don’t like changes,” she said in a low voice.</p> + +<p>Aristide slipped noiselessly to the side of her chair +and knelt on one knee and took her hand.</p> + +<p>“Anne—my beloved Anne!” said he.</p> + +<p>And Anne neither moved nor protested, but looked +away from him into the fire.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>And that is all that Aristide told me. There are +sacred and beautiful things in life that one man does +not tell to another. He did, however, mention that +they forgot all about the unfortunate chauffeur +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span> +sitting in the rain till about three hours afterwards, +when Aristide sped away to a St. Albans hotel in +joyous solitude.</p> + +<p>The very next day he burst in upon me in a state +of bliss bordering on mania.</p> + +<p>“But there is a tragic side to it,” he said when the +story was over. “For half the year I shall be exiled +to Bordeaux, Marseilles and Algiers as the representative +of Dulau et Compagnie.”</p> + +<p>“The very best thing that could happen for your +domestic happiness,” said I.</p> + +<p>“What? With my heart”—he thumped his heart—“with +my heart hurting like the devil all the +time?”</p> + +<p>“So long as your heart hurts,” said I, “you know +it isn’t dead.”</p> + +<p>A short while afterwards they were married in +London. I was best man and Jean, specklessly attired, +was page of honour, and the vicar of her own +church at Chislehurst performed the ceremony. The +most myopic of creatures could have seen that Anne +was foolishly in love with her rascal husband. How +could she help it?</p> + +<p>As soon as the newly wedded pair had received +the exhortation, Aristide, darting to the altar-rail, +caught Jean up in his arms, and, to the consternation +of the officiating clergy, the verger, and Anne’s +conventional friends, cried out exultingly:</p> + +<p>“<em>Ah, mon petit.</em> It was a lucky day for both of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span> +us when I picked you up on the road between Salon +and Arles. Put your hands together as you do when +you’re saying your prayers, <em>mon brave</em>, and say, +‘God bless father and mother.’”</p> + +<p>Jean obediently adopted the attitude of the infant +Samuel in the pictures.</p> + +<p>“God bless father and mother,” said he, and the +childish treble rang out queerly in the large, almost +empty church.</p> + +<p>There was a span of silence and then all the +women-folk fell on little Jean and that was the end +of that wedding.</p> + +<p> </p> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The End</span>.</p> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> The Adventures of the Foundling.</p></div> + +</div> + +<p> </p> + +<div class="box2"> + +<p> </p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span></p> +<h2>THE GLORY OF CLEMENTINA</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>BY</strong></p> + +<h2>William J. Locke</h2> + +<p class="center">Author of “The Belovèd Vagabond,” “Simon the +Jester,” etc.</p> + +<p class="center"> +<em>Cloth</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>12mo</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>$1.30 net</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>Postage 12 cents</em></span></p> + +<p class="center">Illustrations by Arthur I. Keller</p> + +<p>“Mr. Locke has succeeded in uniting with the firm carefulness +of his early work the rapid, fluent, vibrating style that +makes his later books so delightful; therefore it is easy to make +the deduction that ‘Clementina’ is the best piece of work he has +done.”—<em>New York Evening Sun</em></p> + +<p>“Among the novels of the past five years no books have more +consistently produced an effect at once certain, satisfactory and +delightful than those of William J. Locke. This latest addition +to his shelf is full of life and laughter and the love not only of +man for woman but of man for man and for humanity. Mr. +Locke is a born story-teller and a master of the art of expression.”—<em>The Outlook</em></p> + +<p>“The book contains a mass of good material, with original +characterization, and is written in a style piquant and clever.”—<em>The Literary Digest</em></p> + +<p>“A story containing the essence of humanity, with an abundance of +sensible and sensitive, casual and unobtrusive commentary +upon life and man, and especially upon woman.”—<em>Boston Evening Transcript</em></p> + +<p>“It contains even more of the popular qualities than are usually +associated with the writings of this noted author.”—<em>Boston Times</em></p> + +<p>“Mr. Locke’s flights into the realms of fancy have been a +delight to many readers. He has a lightness of touch that is +entirely captivating, and his remarkable characterization of inconsequent +people gives them a reality that is very insistent.”—<em>Baltimore Evening Sun</em></p> + +<p>“Never has he drawn so deeply from that well that is the +human heart; never so near those invisible heights which are +the soul; and, if we are not altogether mistaken, ‘The Glory of +Clementina’ will also prove to be that of its author.”—<em>Baltimore News</em></p> + +<p>“A fascinating story with delicate, whimsical touches.”—<em>Albany Times-Union</em></p> + +<p>“The book seems destined to live longer than any written +by the author to date, because it is so sane and so fundamentally true.”—<em>Philadelphia Enquirer</em></p> + +<hr style="width: 100%; color: black; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: -1em;" /> + +<h1>JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK</h1> + +</div> + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<div class="box2"> + +<p> </p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span></p> +<h2>MANALIVE</h2> + +<p class="center"><strong>BY</strong></p> + +<h2>Gilbert K. Chesterton</h2> + +<p class="center">Author of “The Innocence of Father Brown,” +“Heretics,” “Orthodoxy,” etc.</p> + +<p class="center"> +<em>Cloth</em> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>12mo</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>$1.30 net</em></span> <span style="margin-left: 3em;"><em>Postage 12 cents</em></span> +</p> + +<p class="center">Frontispiece and Jacket Illustration by Will Foster</p> + +<p>“Mr. Chesterton has undertaken in this quaint narrative to +make burlesque the vehicle of a sermon and a philosophy. It +is all a part of the author’s war upon artificial attitudes which +enclose the living men like a shell and make for human purposes +a dead man of him. He speaks here in a parable—a parable of +his own kind, having about it a broad waggishness like that of +Mr. Punch and a distinct flavor of that sort of low comedy which +one finds in Dickens and Shakespeare. You are likely to find, +before you are done with the parable, that there has been forced +upon your attention a possible view of the life worth living. +‘Manalive’ is a ‘Peterpantheistic’ novel full of Chestertonisms.”—<em>New +York Times</em></p> + +<p>“One of the oddest books Mr. Chesterton has yet given us.”—<em>New +York Evening Globe</em></p> + +<p>“The fun of the book (and there is plenty of it) comes quite +as much from the extraordinary and improbable characters as +from the situations. Epigrams, witticisms, odd fancies, queer +conceits, singular whimsies, follow after one another in quick +succession.”—<em>Brooklyn Eagle</em></p> + + +<p>“One of the most humorous tales of modern fiction, combined +with a very tender and appealing love story.”—<em>Cleveland +Plain Dealer</em></p> + +<p>“The book is certain to have a wide circulation, not only +because of the name of the author attached to it, but because +of its own intrinsic worth.”—<em>Buffalo Commercial</em></p> + +<p>“There can be no doubt as to the iridescent brilliance of the +book. Page after page—full of caustic satire, humorous sally and +profound epigram—fairly bristles with merriment. The book is +a compact mass of scintillating wit.”—<em>Philadelphia Public Ledger</em></p> + +<hr style="width: 100%; color: black; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: -1em;" /> + +<h1>JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK</h1> + + +</div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol, by +William J. 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Locke + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol + +Author: William J. Locke + +Release Date: July 31, 2008 [EBook #26154] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADVENTURES OF ARISTIDE PUJOL *** + + + + +Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Anne Storer and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +Transcriber's Note: Table of Contents added. + + + * * * * * + + + + + _BY THE SAME AUTHOR_ + IDOLS + SEPTIMUS + DERELICTS + THE USURPER + WHERE LOVE IS + THE WHITE DOVE + SIMON THE JESTER + A STUDY IN SHADOWS + A CHRISTMAS MYSTERY + THE BELOVED VAGABOND + AT THE GATE OF SAMARIA + THE MORALS OF MARCUS ORDEYNE + THE DEMAGOGUE AND LADY PHAYRE + THE GLORY OF CLEMENTINA + + + + + [Illustration: AT THE BEGINNING OF THE FOURTH KISS OUT CAME HER FATHER + _See page 34_] + + + + + THE + JOYOUS ADVENTURES + OF ARISTIDE PUJOL + + BY + WILLIAM J. LOCKE + + + ILLUSTRATIONS BY + ALEC BALL + + + NEW YORK + JOHN LANE COMPANY + MCMXII + + + * * * * * + + + + +CONTENTS + + + I THE ADVENTURE OF THE FAIR PATRONNE + II THE ADVENTURE OF THE ARLESIENNE + III THE ADVENTURE OF THE KIND MR. SMITH + IV THE ADVENTURE OF THE FOUNDLING + V THE ADVENTURE OF THE PIG'S HEAD + VI THE ADVENTURE OF FLEURETTE + VII THE ADVENTURE OF THE MIRACLE + VIII THE ADVENTURE OF THE FICKLE GODDESS + IX THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN'S SUMMER + + + * * * * * + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + + FACING + PAGE + + At the Beginning of the Fourth Kiss Out Came Her + Father _Frontispiece_ + + I Had Knocked Him Down on Purpose. He Was + Crippled for Life 14 + + Anything Less Congruous as the Bride-Elect of the + Debonair Aristide Pujol it Was Impossible to + Imagine 22 + + Had Straightway Poured His Grievances into a + Feminine Ear 32 + + I Found Both Tyres Had Been Punctured in a Hundred + Places 40 + + "Madame," said Aristide, "You Are Adorable, and + I Love You to Distraction" 50 + + "The Villain Was a Traveller in Buttons--Buttons!" 60 + + He Burst into Shrieks of Laughter 64 + + "And You!" shouted Bocardon, Falling on Aristide; + "I Must Embrace You Also" 68 + + Standing on the Arrival Platform of Euston Station 78 + + "Ah! the Pictures," cried Aristide, with a Wide + Sweep of His Arms 88 + + "I'll Take Five Hundred Pounds," said He, "to + Stay in" 96 + + Between the Folds of a Blanket Peeped the Face of + a Sleeping Child 110 + + He Demonstrated the Proper Application of the Cure 120 + + It is a Fearsome Thing for a Man to be Left Alone in + the Dead of Night with a Young Baby 124 + + One of the Little Girls in Pigtails Was Holding + Him, While Miss Anne Administered the Feeding-Bottle 134 + + He Must Have Dealt Out Paralyzing Information 180 + + Fleurette Danced with Aristide, as Light as an + Autumn Leaf Tossed by the Wind 188 + + Aristide Practised His Many Queer Accomplishments 200 + + He Read It, and Blinked in Amazement 208 + + He Might as Well Have Pointed Out the Marvels + of Kubla Khan's Pleasure-Dome to a Couple of + Guinea-Pigs 216 + + "I've Caught You! At Last, After Twenty Years, + I've Caught You" 234 + + There He Saw a Sight Which for a Moment Paralyzed Him 238 + + Mr. Ducksmith Seized Him by the Lapels of His Coat 242 + + + * * * * * + + + + + THE + JOYOUS ADVENTURES + OF + ARISTIDE PUJOL + + + * * * * * + + + + +#The Joyous Adventures of Aristide Pujol# + +I + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE FAIR PATRONNE + + +In narrating these few episodes in the undulatory, not to say +switchback, career of my friend Aristide Pujol, I can pretend to no +chronological sequence. Some occurred before he (almost literally) +crossed my path for the first time, some afterwards. They have been +related to me haphazard at odd times, together with a hundred other +incidents, just as a chance tag of association recalled them to his +swift and picturesque memory. He would, indeed, make a show of fixing +dates by reference to his temporary profession; but so Protean seem to +have been his changes of fortune in their number and rapidity that I +could never keep count of them or their order. Nor does it matter. The +man's life was as disconnected as a pack of cards. + +My first meeting with him happened in this wise. + +I had been motoring in a listless, solitary fashion about Languedoc. A +friend who had stolen a few days from anxious business in order to +accompany me from Boulogne through Touraine and Guienne had left me at +Toulouse; another friend whom I had arranged to pick up at Avignon on +his way from Monte Carlo was unexpectedly delayed. I was therefore +condemned to a period of solitude somewhat irksome to a man of a +gregarious temperament. At first, for company's sake, I sat in front +by my chauffeur, McKeogh. But McKeogh, an atheistical Scotch mechanic +with his soul in his cylinders, being as communicative as his own +differential, I soon relapsed into the equal loneliness and greater +comfort of the back. + +In this fashion I left Montpellier one morning on my leisurely eastward +journey, deciding to break off from the main road, striking due south, +and visit Aigues-Mortes on the way. + +Aigues-Mortes was once a flourishing Mediterranean town. St. Louis and +his Crusaders sailed thence twice for Palestine; Charles V. and Francis +I. met there and filled the place with glittering state. But now its +glory has departed. The sea has receded three or four miles, and left +it high and dry in the middle of bleak salt marshes, useless, dead and +desolate, swept by the howling mistral and scorched by the blazing sun. +The straight white ribbon of road which stretched for miles through the +plain, between dreary vineyards--some under water, the black shoots of +the vines appearing like symmetrical wreckage above the surface--was at +last swallowed up by the grim central gateway of the town, surmounted +by its frowning tower. On each side spread the brown machicolated +battlements that vainly defended the death-stricken place. A soft +northern atmosphere would have invested it in a certain mystery of +romance, but in the clear southern air, the towers and walls standing +sharply defined against the blue, wind-swept sky, it looked naked and +pitiful, like a poor ghost caught in the daylight. + +At some distance from the gate appeared the usual notice as to +speed-limit. McKeogh, most scrupulous of drivers, obeyed. As there was a +knot of idlers underneath and beyond the gate he slowed down to a crawl, +sounding a patient and monotonous horn. We advanced; the peasant folk +cleared the way sullenly and suspiciously. Then, deliberately, an +elderly man started to cross the road, and on the sound of the horn +stood stock still, with resentful defiance on his weather-beaten face. +McKeogh jammed on the brakes. The car halted. But the infinitesimal +fraction of a second before it came to a dead stop the wing over the +near front wheel touched the elderly person and down he went on the +ground. I leaped from the car, to be instantly surrounded by an +infuriated crowd, which seemed to gather from all the quarters of +the broad, decaying square. The elderly man, helped to his feet by +sympathetic hands, shook his knotted fists in my face. He was a dour and +ugly peasant, of splendid physique, as hard and discoloured as the walls +of Aigues-Mortes; his cunning eyes were as clear as a boy's, his lined, +clean-shaven face as rigid as a gargoyle; and the back of his neck, +above the low collar of his jersey, showed itself seamed into glazed +irregular lozenges, like the hide of a crocodile. He cursed me and my +kind healthily in very bad French and apostrophized his friends in +Provencal, who in Provencal and bad French made responsive clamour. I +had knocked him down on purpose. He was crippled for life. Who was I to +go tearing through peaceful towns with my execrated locomotive and +massacring innocent people? I tried to explain that the fault was his, +and that, after all, to judge by the strength of his lungs, no great +damage had been inflicted. But no. They would not let it go like that. +There were the gendarmes--I looked across the square and saw two +gendarmes striding portentously towards the scene--they would see +justice done. The law was there to protect poor folk. For a certainty I +would not get off easily. + + [Illustration: I HAD KNOCKED HIM DOWN ON PURPOSE. HE WAS CRIPPLED + FOR LIFE] + +I knew what would happen. The gendarmes would submit McKeogh and myself +to a _proces-verbal_. They would impound the car. I should have to go +to the Mairie and make endless depositions. I should have to wait, +Heaven knows how long, before I could appear before the _juge de paix_. +I should have to find a solicitor to represent me. In the end I should +be fined for furious driving--at the rate, when the accident happened, +of a mile an hour--and probably have to pay a heavy compensation to the +wilful and uninjured victim of McKeogh's impeccable driving. And all the +time, while waiting for injustice to take its course, I should be the +guest of a hostile population. I grew angry. The crowd grew angrier. The +gendarmes approached with an air of majesty and fate. But just before +they could be acquainted with the brutal facts of the disaster a +singularly bright-eyed man, wearing a hard felt hat and a blue serge +suit, flashed like a meteor into the midst of the throng, glanced with +an amazing swiftness at me, the car, the crowd, the gendarmes and the +victim, ran his hands up and down the person of the last mentioned, and +then, with a frenzied action of a figure in a bad cinematograph rather +than that of a human being, subjected the inhabitants to an infuriated +philippic in Provencal, of which I could not understand one word. The +crowd, with here and there a murmur of remonstrance, listened to him in +silence. When he had finished they hung their heads, the gendarmes +shrugged their majestic and fateful shoulders and lit cigarettes, and +the gargoyle-visaged ancient with the neck of crocodile hide turned +grumbling away. I have never witnessed anything so magical as the effect +produced by this electric personage. Even McKeogh, who during the +previous clamour had sat stiff behind his wheel, keeping expressionless +eyes fixed on the cap of the radiator, turned his head two degrees of a +circle and glanced at his surroundings. + +The instant peace was established our rescuer darted up to me with the +directness of a dragon-fly and shook me warmly by the hand. As he had +done me a service, I responded with a grateful smile; besides, his +aspect was peculiarly prepossessing. I guessed him to be about +five-and-thirty. He had a clear olive complexion, black moustache and +short silky vandyke beard, and the most fascinating, the most humorous, +the most mocking, the most astonishingly bright eyes I have ever seen in +my life. I murmured a few expressions of thanks, while he prolonged the +handshake with the fervour of a long-lost friend. + +"It's all right, my dear sir. Don't worry any more," he said in +excellent English, but with a French accent curiously tinged with +Cockney. "The old gentleman's as sound as a bell--not a bruise on his +body." He pushed me gently to the step of the car. "Get in and let me +guide you to the only place where you can eat in this accursed town." + +Before I could recover from my surprise, he was by my side in the car +shouting directions to McKeogh. + +"Ah! These people!" he cried, shaking his hands with outspread fingers +in front of him. "They have no manners, no decency, no self-respect. +It's a regular trade. They go and get knocked down by automobiles on +purpose, so that they can claim indemnity. They breed dogs especially +and train them to commit suicide under the wheels so that they can get +compensation. There's one now--_ah, sacree bete!_" He leaned over the +side of the car and exchanged violent objurgation with the dog. "But +never mind. So long as I am here you can run over anything you like with +impunity." + +"I'm very much obliged to you," said I. "You've saved me from a deal of +foolish unpleasantness. From the way you handled the old gentleman I +should guess you to be a doctor." + +"That's one of the few things I've never been," he replied. "No; I'm not +a doctor. One of these days I'll tell you all about myself." He spoke +as if our sudden acquaintance would ripen into life-long friendship. +"There's the hotel--the Hotel Saint-Louis," he pointed to the sign a +little way up the narrow, old-world, cobble-paved street we were +entering. "Leave it to me; I'll see that they treat you properly." + +The car drew up at the doorway. My electric friend leaped out and met +the emerging landlady. + +"_Bonjour, madame._ I've brought you one of my very good friends, +an English gentleman of the most high importance. He will have +_dejeuner--tout ce qu'il y a de mieux_. None of your cabbage-soup and +eels and _andouilles_, but a good omelette, some fresh fish, and a bit +of very tender meat. Will that suit you?" he asked, turning to me. + +"Excellently," said I, smiling. "And since you've ordered me so charming +a _dejeuner_, perhaps you'll do me the honour of helping me to eat it?" + +"With the very greatest pleasure," said he, without a second's +hesitation. + +We entered the small, stuffy dining-room, where a dingy waiter, with a +dingier smile, showed us to a small table by the window. At the long +table in the middle of the room sat the half-dozen frequenters of the +house, their napkins tucked under their chins, eating in gloomy silence +a dreary meal of the kind my new friend had deprecated. + +"What shall we drink?" I asked, regarding with some disfavour the thin +red and white wines in the decanters. + +"Anything," said he, "but this _piquette du pays_. It tastes like a +mixture of sea-water and vinegar. It produces the look of patient +suffering that you see on those gentlemen's faces. You, who are not +used to it, had better not venture. It would excoriate your throat. It +would dislocate your pancreas. It would play the very devil with you. +Adolphe"--he beckoned the waiter--"there's a little white wine of the +Cotes du Rhone----" He glanced at me. + +"I'm in your hands," said I. + +As far as eating and drinking went I could not have been in better. Nor +could anyone desire a more entertaining chance companion of travel. That +he had thrust himself upon me in the most brazen manner and taken +complete possession of me there could be no doubt. But it had all been +done in the most irresistibly charming manner in the world. One entirely +forgot the impudence of the fellow. I have since discovered that he did +not lay himself out to be agreeable. The flow of talk and anecdote, the +bright laughter that lit up a little joke, making it appear a very +brilliant joke indeed, were all spontaneous. He was a man, too, of some +cultivation. He knew France thoroughly, England pretty well; he had a +discriminating taste in architecture, and waxed poetical over the +beauties of Nature. + +"It strikes me as odd," said I at last, somewhat ironically, "that so +vital a person as yourself should find scope for your energies in this +dead-and-alive place." + +He threw up his hands. "I live here? I crumble and decay in +Aigues-Mortes? For whom do you take me?" + +I replied that, not having the pleasure of knowing his name and quality, +I could only take him for an enigma. + +He selected a card from his letter-case and handed it to me across the +table. It bore the legend:-- + + ARISTIDE PUJOL, + Agent. + 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honore, Paris. + +"That address will always find me," he said. + +Civility bade me give him my card, which he put carefully in his +letter-case. + +"I owe my success in life," said he, "to the fact that I have never lost +an opportunity or a visiting-card." + +"Where did you learn your perfect English?" I asked. + +"First," said he, "among English tourists at Marseilles. Then in +England. I was Professor of French at an academy for young ladies." + +"I hope you were a success?" said I. + +He regarded me drolly. + +"Yes--and no," said he. + +The meal over, we left the hotel. + +"Now," said he, "you would like to visit the towers on the ramparts. I +would dearly love to accompany you, but I have business in the town. I +will take you, however, to the _gardien_ and put you in his charge." + +He raced me to the gate by which I had entered. The _gardien des +remparts_ issued from his lodge at Aristide Pujol's summons and listened +respectfully to his exhortation in Provencal. Then he went for his keys. + +"I'll not say good-bye," Aristide Pujol declared, amiably. "I'll get +through my business long before you've done your sight-seeing, and +you'll find me waiting for you near the hotel. _Au revoir, cher ami._" + +He smiled, lifted his hat, waved his hand in a friendly way, and darted +off across the square. The old _gardien_ came out with the keys and took +me off to the Tour de Constance, where Protestants were imprisoned +pell-mell after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes; thence to the +Tour des Bourguignons, where I forget how many hundred Burgundians were +massacred and pickled in salt; and, after these cheery exhibitions, +invited me to walk round the ramparts and inspect the remaining eighteen +towers of the enceinte. As the mistral, however, had sprung up and was +shuddering across the high walls, I declined, and, having paid him his +fee, descended to the comparative shelter of the earth. + +There I found Aristide Pujol awaiting me at the corner of the narrow +street in which the hotel was situated. He was wearing--like most of +the young bloods of Provence in winter-time--a short, shaggy, yet natty +goat-skin coat, ornamented with enormous bone buttons, and a little cane +valise stood near by on the kerb of the square. + +He was not alone. Walking arm in arm with him was a stout, elderly woman +of swarthy complexion and forbidding aspect. She was attired in a +peasant's or small shopkeeper's rusty Sunday black and an old-fashioned +black bonnet prodigiously adorned with black plumes and black roses. +Beneath this bonnet her hair was tightly drawn up from her forehead; +heavy eyebrows overhung a pair of small, crafty eyes, and a tuft of hair +grew on the corner of a prognathous jaw. She might have been about +seven-and-forty. + +Aristide Pujol, unlinking himself from this unattractive female, +advanced and saluted me with considerable deference. + +"Monseigneur----" said he. + +As I am neither a duke nor an archbishop, but a humble member of the +lower automobiling classes, the high-flown title startled me. + +"Monseigneur, will you permit me," said he, in French, "to present to +you Mme. Gougasse? Madame is the _patronne_ of the Cafe de l'Univers, at +Carcassonne, which doubtless you have frequented, and she is going to do +me the honour of marrying me to-morrow." + + [Illustration: ANYTHING LESS CONGRUOUS AS THE BRIDE-ELECT OF THE + DEBONAIR ARISTIDE PUJOL IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE TO IMAGINE] + +The unexpectedness of the announcement took my breath away. + +"Good heavens!" said I, in a whisper. + +Anyone less congruous as the bride-elect of the debonair Aristide Pujol +it was impossible to imagine. However, it was none of my business. I +raised my hat politely to the lady. + +"Madame, I offer you my sincere felicitations. As an entertaining +husband I am sure you will find M. Aristide Pujol without a rival." + +"_Je vous remercie, monseigneur_," she replied, in what was obviously +her best company manner. "And if ever you will deign to come again to +the Cafe de l'Univers at Carcassonne we will esteem it a great honour." + +"And so you're going to get married to-morrow?" I remarked, by way of +saying something. To congratulate Aristide Pujol on his choice lay +beyond my power of hypocrisy. + +"To-morrow," said he, "my dear Amelie will make me the happiest of men." + +"We start for Carcassonne by the three-thirty train," said Mme. +Gougasse, pulling a great silver watch from some fold of her person. + +"Then there is time," said I, pointing to a little weather-beaten cafe +in the square, "to drink a glass to your happiness." + +"_Bien volontiers_," said the lady. + +"_Pardon, chere amie_," Aristide interposed, quickly. "Unless +monseigneur and I start at once for Montpellier, I shall not have time +to transact my little affairs before your train arrives there." + +Parenthetically, I must remark that all trains going from Aigues-Mortes +to Carcassonne must stop at Montpellier. + +"That's true," she agreed, in a hesitating manner. "But----" + +"But, idol of my heart, though I am overcome with grief at the idea of +leaving you for two little hours, it is a question of four thousand +francs. Four thousand francs are not picked up every day in the street. +It's a lot of money." + +Mme. Gougasse's little eyes glittered. + +"_Bien sur._ And it's quite settled?" + +"Absolutely." + +"And it will be all for me?" + +"Half," said Aristide. + +"You promised all to me for the redecoration of the ceiling of the +cafe." + +"Three thousand will be sufficient, dear angel. What? I know these +contractors and decorators. The more you pay them, the more abominable +will they make the ceiling. Leave it to me. I, Aristide, will guarantee +you a ceiling like that of the Sistine Chapel for two thousand francs." + +She smiled and bridled, so as to appear perfectly well-bred in my +presence. The act of smiling caused the tuft of hair on her jaw to +twitch horribly. A cold shiver ran down my back. + +"Don't you think, monseigneur," she asked, archly, "that M. Pujol should +give me the four thousand francs as a wedding-present?" + +"Most certainly," said I, in my heartiest voice, entirely mystified by +the conversation. + +"Well, I yield," said Aristide. "Ah, women, women! They hold up their +little rosy finger, and the bravest of men has to lie down with his chin +on his paws like a good old watch-dog. You agree, then, monseigneur, to +my giving the whole of the four thousand francs to Amelie?" + +"More than that," said I, convinced that the swarthy lady of the +prognathous jaw was bound to have her own way in the end where money was +concerned, and yet for the life of me not seeing how I had anything to +do with the disposal of Aristide Pujol's property--"More than that," +said I; "I command you to do it." + +"_C'est bien gentil de votre part_," said madame. + +"And now the cafe," I suggested, with chattering teeth. We had been +standing all the time at the corner of the square, while the mistral +whistled down the narrow street. The dust was driven stingingly into our +faces, and the women of the place who passed us by held their black +scarves over their mouths. + +"Alas, monseigneur," said Mme. Gougasse, "Aristide is right. You must +start now for Montpellier in the automobile. I will go by the train for +Carcassonne at three-thirty. It is the only train from Aigues-Mortes. +Aristide transacts his business and joins me in the train at +Montpellier. You have not much time to spare." + +I was bewildered. I turned to Aristide Pujol, who stood, hands on hips, +regarding his prospective bride and myself with humorous benevolence. + +"My good friend," said I in English, "I've not the remotest idea of what +the two of you are talking about; but I gather you have arranged that I +should motor you to Montpellier. Now, I'm not going to Montpellier. I've +just come from there, as I told you at _dejeuner_. I'm going in the +opposite direction." + +He took me familiarly by the arm, and, with a "_Pardon, chere amie_," to +the lady, led me a few paces aside. + +"I beseech you," he whispered; "it's a matter of four thousand francs, a +hundred and sixty pounds, eight hundred dollars, a new ceiling for the +Cafe de l'Univers, the dream of a woman's life, and the happiest omen +for my wedded felicity. The fair goddess Hymen invites you with uplifted +torch. You can't refuse." + +He hypnotized me with his bright eyes, overpowered my will by his +winning personality. He seemed to force me to desire his companionship. +I weakened. After all, I reflected, I was at a loose end, and where I +went did not matter to anybody. Aristide Pujol had also done me a +considerable service, for which I felt grateful. I yielded with good +grace. + +He darted back to Mme. Gougasse, alive with gaiety. + +"_Chere amie_, if you were to press monseigneur, I'm sure he would come +to Carcassonne and dance at our wedding." + +"Alas! That," said I, hastily, "is out of the question. But," I added, +amused by a humorous idea, "why should two lovers separate even for a +few hours? Why should not madame accompany us to Montpellier? There is +room in my auto for three, and it would give me the opportunity of +making madame's better acquaintance." + +"There, Amelie!" cried Aristide. "What do you say?" + +"Truly, it is too much honour," murmured Mme. Gougasse, evidently +tempted. + +"There's your luggage, however," said Aristide. "You would bring that +great trunk, for which there is no place in the automobile of +monseigneur." + +"That's true--my luggage." + +"Send it on by train, _chere amie_." + +"When will it arrive at Carcassonne?" + +"Not to-morrow," said Pujol, "but perhaps next week or the week after. +Perhaps it may never come at all. One is never certain with these +railway companies. But what does that matter?" + +"What do you say?" cried the lady, sharply. + +"It may arrive or it may not arrive; but you are rich enough, _chere +amie_, not to think of a few camisoles and bits of jewellery." + +"And my lace and my silk dress that I have brought to show your parents. +_Merci!_" she retorted, with a dangerous spark in her little eyes. "You +think one is made of money, eh? You will soon find yourself mistaken, my +friend. I would give you to understand----". She checked herself +suddenly. "Monseigneur"--she turned to me with a resumption of the +gracious manner of her bottle-decked counter at the Cafe de +l'Univers--"you are too amiable. I appreciate your offer infinitely; but +I am not going to entrust my luggage to the kind care of the railway +company. _Merci, non._ They are robbers and thieves. Even if it did +arrive, half the things would be stolen. Oh, I know them." + +She shook the head of an experienced and self-reliant woman. No doubt, +distrustful of banks as of railway companies, she kept her money hidden +in her bedroom. I pitied my poor young friend; he would need all his +gaiety to enliven the domestic side of the Cafe de l'Univers. + +The lady having declined my invitation, I expressed my regrets; and +Aristide, more emotional, voiced his sense of heart-rent desolation, +and in a resigned tone informed me that it was time to start. I left the +lovers and went to the hotel, where I paid the bill, summoned McKeogh, +and lit a companionable pipe. + +The car backed down the narrow street into the square and took up its +position. We entered. McKeogh took charge of Aristide's valise, tucked +us up in the rug, and settled himself in his seat. The car started and +we drove off, Aristide gallantly brandishing his hat and Mme. Gougasse +waving her lily hand, which happened to be hidden in an ill-fitting +black glove. + +"To Montpellier, as fast as you can!" he shouted at the top of his lungs +to McKeogh. Then he sighed as he threw himself luxuriously back. "Ah, +this is better than a train. Amelie doesn't know what a mistake she has +made!" + +The elderly victim of my furious entry was lounging, in spite of the +mistral, by the grim machicolated gateway. Instead of scowling at me he +raised his hat respectfully as we passed. I touched my cap, but Aristide +returned the salute with the grave politeness of royalty. + +"This is a place," said he, "which I would like never to behold again." + +In a few moments we were whirling along the straight, white road between +the interminable black vineyards, and past the dilapidated homesteads +of the vine-folk and wayside cafes that are scattered about this +unjoyous corner of France. + +"Well," said he, suddenly, "what do you think of my _fiancee_?" + +Politeness and good taste forbade expression of my real opinion. I +murmured platitudes to the effect that she seemed to be a most sensible +woman, with a head for business. + +"She's not what we in French call _jolie, jolie_; but what of that? +What's the good of marrying a pretty face for other men to make love to? +And, as you English say, there's none of your confounded sentiment about +her. But she has the most flourishing cafe in Carcassonne; and, when the +ceiling is newly decorated, provided she doesn't insist on too much gold +leaf and too many naked babies on clouds--it's astonishing how women +love naked babies on clouds--it will be the snuggest place in the world. +May I ask for one of your excellent cigarettes?" + +I handed him the case from the pocket of the car. + +"It was there that I made her acquaintance," he resumed, after having +lit the cigarette from my pipe. "We met, we talked, we fixed it up. She +is not the woman to go by four roads to a thing. She did me the honour +of going straight for me. Ah, but what a wonderful woman! She rules that +cafe like a kingdom; a Semiramis, a Queen Elizabeth, a Catherine de' +Medici. She sits enthroned behind the counter all day long and takes the +money and counts the saucers and smiles on rich clients, and if a waiter +in a far corner gives a bit of sugar to a dog she spots it, and the +waiter has a deuce of a time. That woman is worth her weight in +thousand-franc notes. She goes to bed every night at one, and gets up in +the morning at five. And virtuous! Didn't Solomon say that a virtuous +woman was more precious than rubies? That's the kind of wife the wise +man chooses when he gives up the giddy ways of youth. Ah, my dear sir, +over and over again these last two or three days my dear old parents--I +have been on a visit to them in Aigues-Mortes--have commended my wisdom. +Amelie, who is devoted to me, left her cafe in Carcassonne to make their +acquaintance and receive their blessing before our marriage, also to +show them the lace on her _dessous_ and her new silk dress. They are too +old to take the long journey to Carcassonne. 'My son,' they said, 'you +are making a marriage after our own hearts. We are proud of you. Now we +can die perfectly content.' I was wrong, perhaps, in saying that Amelie +has no sentiment," he continued, after a short pause. "She adores me. It +is evident. She will not allow me out of her sight. Ah, my dear friend, +you don't know what a happy man I am." + +For a brilliant young man of five-and-thirty, who was about to marry a +horrible Megaera ten or twelve years his senior, he looked unhealthily +happy. There was no doubt that his handsome roguery had caught the +woman's fancy. She was at the dangerous age, when even the most +ferro-concrete-natured of women are apt to run riot. She was +comprehensible, and pardonable. But the man baffled me. He was obviously +marrying her for her money; but how in the name of Diogenes and all the +cynics could he manage to look so confoundedly joyful about it? + +The mistral blew bitterly. I snuggled beneath the rug and hunched up my +shoulders so as to get my ears protected by my coat-collar. Aristide, +sufficiently protected by his goat's hide, talked like a shepherd on a +May morning. Why he took for granted my interest in his unromantic, not +to say sordid, courtship I knew not; but he gave me the whole history of +it from its modest beginnings to its now penultimate stage. From what I +could make out--for the mistral whirled many of his words away over +unheeding Provence--he had entered the Cafe de l'Univers one evening, a +human derelict battered by buffeting waves of Fortune, and, finding a +seat immediately beneath Mme. Gougasse's _comptoir_, had straightway +poured his grievances into a feminine ear and, figuratively speaking, +rested his weary heart upon a feminine bosom. And his buffetings and +grievances and wearinesses? Whence came they? I asked the question +point-blank. + + [Illustration: HAD STRAIGHTWAY POURED HIS GRIEVANCES INTO A + FEMININE EAR] + +"Ah, my dear friend," he answered, kissing his gloved finger-tips, "she +was adorable!" + +"Who?" I asked, taken aback. "Mme. Gougasse?" + +"_Mon Dieu_, no!" he replied. "Not Mme. Gougasse. Amelie is solid, she +is virtuous, she is jealous, she is capacious; but I should not call her +adorable. No; the adorable one was twenty--delicious and English; a +peach-blossom, a zephyr, a summer night's dream, and the most provoking +little witch you ever saw in your life. Her father and herself and six +of her compatriots were touring through France. They had circular +tickets. So had I. In fact, I was a miniature Thomas Cook and Son to the +party. I provided them with the discomforts of travel and supplied +erroneous information. _Que voulez-vous?_ If people ask you for the +history of a pair of Louis XV. corsets, in a museum glass case, it's +much better to stimulate their imagination by saying that they were worn +by Joan of Arc at the Battle of Agincourt than to dull their minds by +your ignorance. _Eh bien_, we go through the chateaux of the Loire, +through Poitiers and Angouleme, and we come to Carcassonne. You know +Carcassonne? The great grim _cite_, with its battlements and bastions +and barbicans and fifty towers on the hill looking over the rubbishy +modern town? We were there. The rest of the party were buying picture +postcards of the _gardien_ at the foot of the Tour de l'Inquisition. The +man who invented picture postcards ought to have his statue on the top +of the Eiffel Tower. The millions of headaches he has saved! People go +to places now not to exhaust themselves by seeing them, but to buy +picture postcards of them. The rest of the party, as I said, were deep +in picture postcards. Mademoiselle and I promenaded outside. We often +promenaded outside when the others were buying picture postcards," he +remarked, with an extra twinkle in his bright eyes. "And the result? Was +it my fault? We leaned over the parapet. The wind blew a confounded +_meche_--what do you call it----?" + +"Strand?" + +"Yes--strand of her hair across her face. She let it blow and laughed +and did not move. Didn't I say she was a little witch? If there's a +Provencal ever born who would not have kissed a girl under such +provocation I should like to have his mummy. I kissed her. She kept on +laughing. I kissed her again. I kissed her four times. At the beginning +of the fourth kiss out came her father from the postcard shop. He waited +till the end of it and then announced himself. He announced himself in +such ungentlemanly terms that I was forced to let the whole party, +including the adorable little witch, go on to Pau by themselves, while +I betook my broken heart to the Cafe de l'Univers." + +"And there you found consolation?" + +"I told my sad tale. Amelie listened and called the manager to take +charge of the _comptoir_, and poured herself out a glass of Frontignan. +Amelie always drinks Frontignan when her heart is touched. I came the +next day and the next. It was pouring with rain day and night--and +Carcassonne in rain is like Hades with its furnaces put out by human +tears--and the Cafe de l'Univers like a little warm corner of Paradise +stuck in the midst of it." + +"And so that's how it happened?" + +"That's how it happened. _Ma foi!_ When a lady asks a _galant homme_ to +marry her, what is he to do? Besides, did I not say that the Cafe de +l'Univers was the most prosperous one in Carcassonne? I'm afraid you +English, my dear friend, have such sentimental ideas about marriage. +Now, we in France----_Attendez, attendez!_" He suddenly broke off his +story, lurched forward, and gripped the back of the front seat. + +"To the right, man, to the right!" he cried excitedly to McKeogh. + +We had reached the point where the straight road from Aigues-Mortes +branches into a fork, one road going to Montpellier, the other to Nimes. +Montpellier being to the west, McKeogh had naturally taken the left +fork. + +"To the right!" shouted Aristide. + +McKeogh pulled up and turned his head with a look of protesting inquiry. +I intervened with a laugh. + +"You're wrong in your geography, M. Pujol. Besides, there is the +signpost staring you in the face. This is the way to Montpellier." + +"But, my dear, heaven-sent friend, I no more want to go to Montpellier +than you do!" he cried. "Montpellier is the last place on earth I desire +to visit. You want to go to Nimes, and so do I. To the right, +chauffeur." + +"What shall I do, sir?" asked McKeogh. + +I was utterly bewildered. I turned to the goat-skin-clad, +pointed-bearded, bright-eyed Aristide, who, sitting bolt upright in the +car, with his hands stretched out, looked like a parody of the god Pan +in a hard felt hat. + +"You don't want to go to Montpellier?" I asked, stupidly. + +"No--ten thousand times no; not for a king's ransom." + +"But your four thousand francs--your meeting Mme. Gougasse's train--your +getting on to Carcassonne?" + +"If I could put twenty million continents between myself and Carcassonne +I'd do it," he explained, with frantic gestures. "Don't you understand? +The good Lord who is always on my side sent you especially to deliver +me out of the hands of that unspeakable Xantippe. There are no four +thousand francs. I'm not going to meet her train at Montpellier, and if +she marries anyone to-morrow at Carcassonne it will not be Aristide +Pujol." + +I shrugged my shoulders. + +"We'll go to Nimes." + +"Very good, sir," said McKeogh. + +"And now," said I, as soon as we had started on the right-hand road, +"will you have the kindness to explain?" + +"There's nothing to explain," he cried, gleefully. "Here am I delivered. +I am free. I can breathe God's good air again. I'm not going to marry +Yum-Yum, Yum-Yum. I feel ten years younger. Oh, I've had a narrow +escape. But that's the way with me. I always fall on my feet. Didn't I +tell you I've never lost an opportunity? The moment I saw an Englishman +in difficulties, I realized my opportunity of being delivered out of the +House of Bondage. I took it, and here I am! For two days I had been +racking my brains for a means of getting out of Aigues-Mortes, when +suddenly you--a _Deus ex machina_--a veritable god out of the +machine--come to my aid. Don't say there isn't a Providence watching +over me." + +I suggested that his mode of escape seemed somewhat elaborate and +fantastic. Why couldn't he have slipped quietly round to the railway +station and taken a ticket to any haven of refuge he might have +fancied? + +"For the simple reason," said he, with a gay laugh, "that I haven't a +single penny piece in the world." + +He looked so prosperous and untroubled that I stared incredulously. + +"Not one tiny bronze sou," said he. + +"You seem to take it pretty philosophically," said I. + +"_Les gueux, les gueux, sont des gens heureux_," he quoted. + +"You're the first person who has made me believe in the happiness of +beggars." + +"In time I shall make you believe in lots of things," he retorted. "No. +I hadn't one sou to buy a ticket, and Amelie never left me. I spent my +last franc on the journey from Carcassonne to Aigues-Mortes. Amelie +insisted on accompanying me. She was taking no chances. Her eyes never +left me from the time we started. When I ran to your assistance she was +watching me from a house on the other side of the _place_. She came to +the hotel while we were lunching. I thought I would slip away unnoticed +and join you after you had made the _tour des remparts_. But no. I must +present her to my English friend. And then--_voyons_--didn't I tell you +I never lost a visiting-card? Look at this?" + +He dived into his pocket, produced the letter-case, and extracted a +card. + +"_Voila._" + +I read: "The Duke of Wiltshire." + +"But, good heavens, man," I cried, "that's not the card I gave you." + +"I know it isn't," said he; "but it's the one I showed to Amelie." + +"How on earth," I asked, "did you come by the Duke of Wiltshire's +visiting-card?" + +He looked at me roguishly. + +"I am--what do you call it?--a--a 'snapper up of unconsidered trifles.' +You see I know my Shakespeare. I read 'The Winter's Tale' with some +French pupils to whom I was teaching English. I love Autolycus. _C'est +un peu moi, hein?_ Anyhow, I showed the Duke's card to Amelie." + +I began to understand. "That was why you called me 'monseigneur'?" + +"Naturally. And I told her that you were my English patron, and would +give me four thousand francs as a wedding present if I accompanied you +to your agent's at Montpellier, where you could draw the money. Ah! But +she was suspicious! Yesterday I borrowed a bicycle. A friend left it in +the courtyard. I thought, 'I will creep out at dead of night, when +everyone's asleep, and once on my _petite bicyclette, bonsoir la +compagnie_.' But, would you believe it? When I had dressed and crept +down, and tried to mount the bicycle, I found both tyres had been +punctured in a hundred places with the point of a pair of scissors. What +do you think of that, eh? Ah, _la, la!_ it has been a narrow escape. +When you invited her to accompany us to Montpellier my heart was in my +mouth." + +"It would have served you right," I said, "if she had accepted." + +He laughed as though, instead of not having a penny, he had not a care +in the world. Accustomed to the geometrical conduct of my well-fed +fellow-Britons, who map out their lives by rule and line, I had no +measure whereby to gauge this amazing and inconsequential person. In one +way he had acted abominably. To leave an affianced bride in the lurch in +this heartless manner was a most ungentlemanly proceeding. On the other +hand, an unscrupulous adventurer would have married the woman for her +money and chanced the consequences. In the tussle between Perseus and +the Gorgon the odds are all in favour of Perseus. Mercury and Minerva, +the most sharp-witted of the gods, are helping him all the time--to say +nothing of the fact that Perseus starts out by being a notoriously +handsome fellow. So a handsome rogue can generally wheedle an elderly, +ugly wife into opening her money-bags, and, if successful, leads the +enviable life of a fighting-cock. It was very much to his credit that +this kind of life was not to the liking of Aristide Pujol. + + [Illustration: "I FOUND BOTH TYRES HAD BEEN PUNCTURED IN A + HUNDRED PLACES"] + +Indeed, speaking from affectionate knowledge of the man, I can declare +that the position in which he, like many a better man, had placed +himself was intolerable. Other men of equal sensitiveness would have +extricated themselves in a more commonplace fashion; but the dramatic +appealed to my rascal, and he has often plumed himself on his calculated +_coup de theatre_ at the fork of the roads. He was delighted with it. +Even now I sometimes think that Aristide Pujol will never grow up. + +"There's one thing I don't understand," said I, "and that is your +astonishing influence over the populace at Aigues-Mortes. You came upon +them like a firework--a devil-among-the-tailors--and everybody, +gendarmes and victim included, became as tame as sheep. How was it?" + +He laughed. "I said you were my very old and dear friend and patron, a +great English duke." + +"I don't quite see how that explanation satisfied the pig-headed old +gentleman whom I knocked down." + +"Oh, that," said Aristide Pujol, with a look of indescribable +drollery--"that was my old father." + + + + +II + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE ARLESIENNE + + +Aristide Pujol bade me a sunny farewell at the door of the Hotel du +Luxembourg at Nimes, and, valise in hand, darted off, in his impetuous +fashion, across the Place de l'Esplanade. I felt something like a pang +at the sight of his retreating figure, as, on his own confession, he had +not a penny in the world. I wondered what he would do for food and +lodging, to say nothing of tobacco, _aperitifs_, and other such +necessaries of life. The idea of so gay a creature starving was +abhorrent. Yet an invitation to stay as my guest at the hotel until +he saw an opportunity of improving his financial situation he had +courteously declined. + +Early next morning I found him awaiting me in the lounge and smoking an +excellent cigar. He explained that so dear a friend as myself ought to +be the first to hear the glad tidings. Last evening, by the grace of +Heaven, he had run across a bare acquaintance, a manufacturer of nougat +at Montelimar; had spent several hours in his company, with the result +that he had convinced him of two things: first, that the dry, +crumbling, shortbread-like nougat of Montelimar was unknown in England, +where the population subsisted on a sickly, glutinous mess whereto the +medical faculty had ascribed the prevalent dyspepsia of the population; +and, secondly, that the one Heaven-certified apostle who could spread +the glorious gospel of Montelimar nougat over the length and breadth of +Great Britain and Ireland was himself, Aristide Pujol. A handsome +salary had been arranged, of which he had already drawn something on +account--_hinc ille Colorado_--and he was to accompany his principal the +next day to Montelimar, _en route_ for the conquest of Britain. In the +meantime he was as free as the winds, and would devote the day to +showing me the wonders of the town. + +I congratulated him on his almost fantastic good fortune and gladly +accepted his offer. + +"There is one thing I should like to ask you," said I, "and it is this. +Yesterday afternoon you refused my cordially-offered hospitality, and +went away without a sou to bless yourself with. What did you do? I ask +out of curiosity. How does a man set about trying to subsist on nothing +at all?" + +"It's very simple," he replied. "Haven't I told you, and haven't you +seen for yourself, that I never lose an opportunity? More than that. It +has been my rule in life either to make friends with the Mammon of +Unrighteousness--he's a muddle-headed ass is Mammon, and you can steer +clear of his unrighteousness if you're sharp enough--or else to cast my +bread upon the waters in the certainty of finding it again after many +days. In the case in question I took the latter course. I cast my bread +a year or two ago upon the waters of the Roman baths, which I will have +the pleasure of showing you this morning, and I found it again last +night at the Hotel de la Curatterie." + +In the course of the day he related to me the following artless history. + + * * * * * + +Aristide Pujol arrived at Nimes one blazing day in July. He had money in +his pocket and laughter in his soul. He had also deposited his valise at +the Hotel du Luxembourg, which, as all the world knows, is the most +luxurious hotel in the town. Joyousness of heart impelled him to a +course of action which the good Nimois regard as maniacal in the +sweltering July heat--he walked about the baking streets for his own +good pleasure. + +Aristide Pujol was floating a company, a process which afforded him as +much delirious joy as the floating, for the first time, of a toy yacht +affords a child. It was a company to build an hotel in Perpignan, where +the recent demolition of the fortifications erected by the Emperor +Charles V. had set free a vast expanse of valuable building ground on +the other side of the little river on which the old town is situated. +The best hotel in Perpignan being one to get away from as soon as +possible, owing to restriction of site, Aristide conceived the idea of +building a spacious and palatial hostelry in the new part of the town, +which should allure all the motorists and tourists of the globe to that +Pyrenean Paradise. By sheer audacity he had contrived to interest an +eminent Paris architect in his project. Now the man who listened to +Aristide Pujol was lost. With the glittering eye of the Ancient Mariner +he combined the winning charm of a woman. For salvation, you either had +to refuse to see him, as all the architects to the end of the R's in the +alphabetical list had done, or put wax, Ulysses-like, in your ears, a +precaution neglected by the eminent M. Say. M. Say went to Perpignan and +returned in a state of subdued enthusiasm. + +A limited company was formed, of which Aristide Pujol, man of vast +experience in affairs, was managing director. But money came in slowly. +A financier was needed. Aristide looked through his collection of +visiting-cards, and therein discovered that of a deaf ironmaster at St. +Etienne whose life he had once saved at a railway station by dragging +him, as he was crossing the line, out of the way of an express train +that came thundering through. Aristide, man of impulse, went straight +to St. Etienne, to work upon the ironmaster's sense of gratitude. +Meanwhile, M. Say, man of more sober outlook, bethought him of a client, +an American millionaire, passing through Paris, who had speculated +considerably in hotels. The millionaire, having confidence in the +eminent M. Say, thought well of the scheme. He was just off to Japan, +but would drop down to the Pyrenees the next day and look at the +Perpignan site before boarding his steamer at Marseilles. If his +inquiries satisfied him, and he could arrange matters with the managing +director, he would not mind putting a million dollars or so into the +concern. You must kindly remember that I do not vouch for the literal +accuracy of everything told me by Aristide Pujol. + +The question of the all-important meeting between the millionaire and +the managing director then arose. As Aristide was at St. Etienne it +was arranged that they should meet at a halfway stage on the latter's +journey from Perpignan to Marseilles. The Hotel du Luxembourg at Nimes +was the place, and two o'clock on Thursday the time appointed. + +Meantime Aristide had found that the deaf ironmaster had died months +ago. This was a disappointment, but fortune compensated him. This part +of his adventure is somewhat vague, but I gathered that he was lured +by a newly made acquaintance into a gambling den, where he won the +prodigious sum of two thousand francs. With this wealth jingling and +crinkling in his pockets he fled the town and arrived at Nimes on +Wednesday morning, a day before his appointment. + +That was why he walked joyously about the blazing streets. The tide had +turned at last. Of the success of his interview with the millionaire he +had not the slightest doubt. He walked about building gorgeous castles +in Perpignan--which, by the way, is not very far from Spain. Besides, as +you shall hear later, he had an account to settle with the town of +Perpignan. At last he reached the Jardin de la Fontaine, the great, +stately garden laid out in complexity of terrace and bridge and +balustraded parapet over the waters of the old Roman baths by the master +hand to which Louis XIV. had entrusted the Garden of Versailles. + +Aristide threw himself on a bench and fanned himself with his straw hat. + +"_Mon Dieu!_ it's hot!" he remarked to another occupant of the seat. + +This was a woman, and, as he saw when she turned her face towards him, +an exceedingly handsome woman. Her white lawn and black silk headdress, +coming to a tiny crown just covering the parting of her full, wavy hair, +proclaimed her of the neighboring town of Arles. She had all the +Arlesienne's Roman beauty--the finely chiselled features, the calm, +straight brows, the ripe lips, the soft oval contour, the clear olive +complexion. She had also lustrous brown eyes; but these were full of +tears. She only turned them on him for a moment; then she resumed her +apparently interrupted occupation of sobbing. Aristide was a +soft-hearted man. He drew nearer. + +"Why, you're crying, madame!" said he. + +"Evidently," murmured the lady. + +"To cry scalding tears in this weather! It's too hot! Now, if you could +only cry iced water there would be something refreshing in it." + +"You jest, monsieur," said the lady, drying her eyes. + +"By no means," said he. "The sight of so beautiful a woman in distress +is painful." + +"Ah!" she sighed. "I am very unhappy." + +Aristide drew nearer still. + +"Who," said he, "is the wretch that has dared to make you so?" + +"My husband," replied the lady, swallowing a sob. + +"The scoundrel!" said Aristide. + +The lady shrugged her shoulders and looked down at her wedding-ring, +which gleamed on a slim, brown, perfectly kept hand. Aristide prided +himself on being a connoisseur in hands. + +"There never was a husband yet," he added, "who appreciated a beautiful +wife. Husbands only deserve harridans." + +"That's true," said the Arlesienne, "for when the wife is good-looking +they are jealous." + +"Ah, that is the trouble, is it?" said Aristide. "Tell me all about it." + +The beautiful Arlesienne again contemplated her slender fingers. + +"I don't know you, monsieur." + +"But you soon will," said Aristide, in his pleasant voice and with a +laughing, challenging glance in his bright eyes. She met it swiftly and +sidelong. + +"Monsieur," she said, "I have been married to my husband for four years, +and have always been faithful to him." + +"That's praiseworthy," said Aristide. + +"And I love him very much." + +"That's unfortunate!" said Aristide. + +"Unfortunate?" + +"Evidently!" said Aristide. + +Their eyes met. They burst out laughing. The lady quickly recovered and +the tears sprang again. + +"One can't jest with a heavy heart; and mine is very heavy." She broke +down through self-pity. "Oh, I am ashamed!" she cried. + +She turned away from him, burying her face in her hands. Her dress, +cut low, showed the nape of her neck as it rose gracefully from her +shoulders. Two little curls had rebelled against being drawn up with the +rest of her hair. The back of a dainty ear, set close to the head, was +provoking in its pink loveliness. Her attitude, that of a youthful +Niobe, all tears, but at the same time all curves and delicious +contours, would have played the deuce with an anchorite. + +Aristide, I would have you remember, was a child of the South. A child +of the North, regarding a bewitching woman, thinks how nice it would be +to make love to her, and wastes his time in wondering how he can do it. +A child of the South neither thinks nor wonders; he makes love straight +away. + +"Madame," said Aristide, "you are adorable, and I love you to +distraction." + +She started up. "Monsieur, you forget yourself!" + +"If I remember anything else in the wide world but you, it would be a +poor compliment. I forget everything. You turn my head, you ravish my +heart, and you put joy into my soul." + +He meant it--intensely--for the moment. + +"I ought not to listen to you," said the lady, "especially when I am so +unhappy." + +"All the more reason to seek consolation," replied Aristide. + +"Monsieur," she said, after a short pause, "you look good and loyal. I +will tell you what is the matter. My husband accuses me wrongfully, +although I know that appearances are against me. He only allows me in +the house on sufferance, and is taking measures to procure a divorce." + + [Illustration: "MADAME," SAID ARISTIDE, "YOU ARE ADORABLE, AND I + LOVE YOU TO DISTRACTION"] + +"_A la bonne heure!_" cried Aristide, excitedly casting away his +straw hat, which an unintentional twist of the wrist caused to skim +horizontally and nearly decapitate a small and perspiring soldier who +happened to pass by. "_A la bonne heure!_ Let him divorce you. You are +then free. You can be mine without any further question." + +"But I love my husband," she smiled, sadly. + +"Bah!" said he, with the scepticism of the lover and the Provencal. +"And, by the way, who is your husband?" + +"He is M. Emile Bocardon, proprietor of the Hotel de la Curatterie." + +"And you?" + +"I am Mme. Bocardon," she replied, with the faintest touch of roguery. + +"But your Christian name? How is it possible for me to think of you as +Mme. Bocardon?" + +They argued the question. Eventually she confessed to the name of Zette. + +Her confidence not stopping there, she told him how she came by the +name; how she was brought up by her Aunt Leonie at Raphele, some five +miles from Arles, and many other unexciting particulars of her early +years. Her baptismal name was Louise. Her mother, who died when she was +young, called her Louisette. Aunt Leonie, a very busy woman, with no +time for superfluous syllables, called her Zette. + +"Zette!" He cast up his eyes as if she had been canonized and he was +invoking her in rapt worship. "Zette, I adore you!" + +Zette was extremely sorry. She, on her side, adored the cruel M. +Bocardon. Incidentally she learned Aristide's name and quality. He was +an _agent d'affaires_, extremely rich--had he not two thousand francs +and an American millionaire in his pocket? + +"M. Pujol," she said, "the earth holds but one thing that I desire, the +love and trust of my husband." + +"The good Bocardon is becoming tiresome," said Aristide. + +Zette's lips parted, as she pointed to a black speck at the iron +entrance gates. + +"_Mon Dieu!_ there he is!" + +"He has become tiresome," said Aristide. + +She rose, displaying to its full advantage her supple and stately +figure. She had a queenly poise of the head. Aristide contemplated her +with the frankest admiration. + +"One would say Juno was walking the earth again." + +Although Zette had never heard of Juno, and was as miserable and heavy +hearted a woman as dwelt in Nimes, a flush of pleasure rose to her +cheeks. She too was a child of the South, and female children of the +South love to be admired, no matter how frankly. I have heard of +Daughters of the Snows not quite averse to it. She sighed. + +"I must go now, monsieur. He must not find me here with you. I am +suffering enough already from his reproaches. Ah! it is unjust--unjust!" +she cried, clenching her hands, while the tears again started into her +eyes, and the corners of her pretty lips twitched with pain. "Indeed," +she added, "I know it has been wrong of me to talk to you like this. But +_que voulez-vous?_ It was not my fault. Adieu, monsieur." + +At the sight of her standing before him in her woeful beauty, Aristide's +pulses throbbed. + +"It is not adieu--it is _au revoir_, Mme. Zette," he cried. + +She protested tearfully. It was farewell. Aristide darted to his +rejected hat and clapped it on the back of his head. He joined her and +swore that he would see her again. It was not Aristide Pujol who would +allow her to be rent in pieces by the jaws of that crocodile, M. +Bocardon. Faith, he would defend her to the last drop of his blood. He +would do all manner of gasconading things. + +"But what can you do, my poor M. Pujol?" she asked. + +"You will see," he replied. + +They parted. He watched her until she became a speck and, having joined +the other speck, her husband, passed out of sight. Then he set out +through the burning gardens towards the Hotel du Luxembourg, at the +other end of the town. + +Aristide had fallen in love. He had fallen in love with Provencal fury. +He had done the same thing a hundred times before; but this, he told +himself, was the _coup de foudre_--the thunderbolt. The beautiful +Arlesienne filled his brain and his senses. Nothing else in the wide +world mattered. Nothing else in the wide world occupied his mind. He +sped through the hot streets like a meteor in human form. A stout man, +sipping syrup and water in the cool beneath the awning of the Cafe de la +Bourse, rose, looked wonderingly after him, and resumed his seat, wiping +a perspiring brow. + +A short while afterwards Aristide, valise in hand, presented himself at +the bureau of the Hotel de la Curatterie. It was a shabby little hotel, +with a shabby little oval sign outside, and was situated in the narrow +street of the same name. Within, it was clean and well kept. On the +right of the little dark entrance-hall was the _salle a manger_, on +the left the bureau and an unenticing hole labelled _salon de +correspondance_. A very narrow passage led to the kitchen, and the rest +of the hall was blocked by the staircase. An enormous man with a simple, +woe-begone fat face and a head of hair like a circular machine-brush was +sitting by the bureau window in his shirt-sleeves. Aristide addressed +him. + +"M. Bocardon?" + +"At your service, monsieur." + +"Can I have a bedroom?" + +"Certainly." He waved a hand towards a set of black sample boxes studded +with brass nails and bound with straps that lay in the hall. "The +omnibus has brought your boxes. You are M. Lambert?" + +"M. Bocardon," said Aristide, in a lordly way, "I am M. Aristide Pujol, +and not a commercial traveller. I have come to see the beauties of +Nimes, and have chosen this hotel because I have the honour to be a +distant relation of your wife, Mme. Zette Bocardon, whom I have not seen +for many years. How is she?" + +"Her health is very good," replied M. Bocardon, shortly. He rang a bell. + +A dilapidated man in a green baize apron emerged from the dining-room +and took Aristide's valise. + +"No. 24," said M. Bocardon. Then, swinging his massive form halfway +through the narrow bureau door, he called down the passage, "Euphemie!" + +A woman's voice responded, and in a moment the woman herself appeared, a +pallid, haggard, though more youthful, replica of Zette, with the dark +rings of sleeplessness or illness beneath her eyes which looked +furtively at the world. + +"Tell your sister," said M. Bocardon, "that a relation of yours has +come to stay in the hotel." + +He swung himself back into the bureau and took no further notice of the +guest. + +"A relation?" echoed Euphemie, staring at the smiling, lustrous-eyed +Aristide, whose busy brain was wondering how he could mystify this +unwelcome and unexpected sister. + +"Why, yes. Aristide, cousin to your good Aunt Leonie at Raphele. Ah--but +you are too young to remember me." + +"I will tell Zette," she said, disappearing down the narrow passage. + +Aristide went to the doorway, and stood there looking out into the not +too savoury street. On the opposite side, which was in the shade, the +tenants of the modest little shops sat by their doors or on chairs on +the pavement. There was considerable whispering among them and various +glances were cast at him. Presently footsteps behind caused him to turn. +There was Zette. She had evidently been weeping since they had parted, +for her eyelids were red. She started on beholding him. + +"You?" + +He laughed and shook her hesitating hands. + +"It is I, Aristide. But you have grown! _Pecaire!_ How you have grown!" +He swung her hands apart and laughed merrily in her bewildered eyes. +"To think that the little Zette in pigtails and short check skirt +should have grown into this beautiful woman! I compliment you on your +wife, M. Bocardon." + +M. Bocardon did not reply, but Aristide's swift glance noticed a spasm +of pain shoot across his broad face. + +"And the good Aunt Leonie? Is she well? And does she still make her +_matelotes_ of eels? Ah, they were good, those _matelotes_." + +"Aunt Leonie died two years ago," said Zette. + +"The poor woman! And I who never knew. Tell me about her." + +The _salle a manger_ door stood open. He drew her thither by his curious +fascination. They entered, and he shut the door behind them. + +"_Voila!_" said he. "Didn't I tell you I should see you again?" + +"_Vous avez un fameux toupet, vous!_" said Zette, half angrily. + +He laughed, having been accused of confounded impudence many times +before in the course of his adventurous life. + +"If I told my husband he would kill you." + +"Precisely. So you're not going to tell him. I adore you. I have come to +protect you. _Foi de Provencal._" + +"The only way to protect me is to prove my innocence." + +"And then?" + +She drew herself up and looked him straight between the eyes. + +"I'll recognize that you have a loyal heart, and will be your very good +friend." + +"Mme. Zette," cried Aristide, "I will devote my life to your service. +Tell me the particulars of the affair." + +"Ask M. Bocardon." She left him, and sailed out of the room and past the +bureau with her proud head in the air. + +If Aristide Pujol had the rapturous idea of proving the innocence of +Mme. Zette, triumphing over the fat pig of a husband, and eventually, in +a fantastic fashion, carrying off the insulted and spotless lady to some +bower of delight (the castle in Perpignan--why not?), you must blame, +not him, but Provence, whose sons, if not devout, are frankly pagan. +Sometimes they are both. + +M. Bocardon sat in his bureau, pretending to do accounts and tracing +columns of figures with a huge, trembling forefinger. He looked the +picture of woe. Aristide decided to bide his opportunity. He went out +into the streets again, now with the object of killing time. The +afternoon had advanced, and trees and buildings cast cool shadows in +which one could walk with comfort; and Nimes, clear, bright city of wide +avenues and broad open spaces, instinct too with the grandeur that was +Rome's, is an idler's Paradise. Aristide knew it well; but he never +tired of it. He wandered round the Maison Carree, his responsive nature +delighting in the splendour of the Temple, with its fluted Corinthian +columns, its noble entablature, its massive pediment, its perfect +proportions; reluctantly turned down the Boulevard Victor Hugo, past the +Lycee and the Bourse, made the circuit of the mighty, double-arched oval +of the Arena, and then retraced his steps. As he expected, M. Bocardon +had left the bureau. It was the hour of absinthe. The porter named M. +Bocardon's habitual cafe. There, in a morose corner of the terrace, +Aristide found the huge man gloomily contemplating an absurdly small +glass of the bitters known as Dubonnet. Aristide raised his hat, asked +permission to join him, and sat down. + +"M. Bocardon," said he, carefully mixing the absinthe which he had +ordered, "I learn from my fair cousin that there is between you a +regrettable misunderstanding, for which I am sincerely sorry." + +"She calls it a misunderstanding?" He laughed mirthlessly. "Women have +their own vocabulary. Listen, my good sir. There is infamy between us. +When a wife betrays a man like me--kind, indulgent, trustful, who +has worshipped the ground she treads on--it is not a question of +misunderstanding. It is infamy. If she had anywhere to lay her head, I +would turn her out of doors to-night. But she has not. You, who are her +relative, know I married her without a dowry. You alone of her family +survive." + +It was on the tip of Aristide's impulsive tongue to say that he would be +only too willing to shelter her, but prudently he refrained. + +"She has broken my heart," continued Bocardon. + +Aristide asked for details of the unhappy affair. The large man +hesitated for a moment and glanced suspiciously at his companion; but, +fascinated by the clear, luminous eyes, he launched with Southern +violence into a whirling story. The villain was a traveller in +buttons--_buttons!_ To be wronged by a traveller in diamonds might have +its compensations--but buttons! Linen buttons, bone buttons, brass +buttons, _trouser buttons!_ To be a traveller in the inanity of +buttonholes was the only lower degradation. His name was Bondon--he +uttered it scathingly, as if to decline from a Bocardon to a Bondon was +unthinkable. This Bondon was a regular client of the hotel, and such a +client!--who never ordered a bottle of _vin cachete_ or coffee or +cognac. A contemptible creature. For a long time he had his suspicions. +Now he was certain. He tossed off his glass of Dubonnet, ordered +another, and spoke incoherently of the opening and shutting of doors, +whisperings, of a dreadful incident, the central fact of which was a +glimpse of Zette gliding wraith-like down a corridor. Lastly, there was +the culminating proof, a letter found that morning in Zette's room. +He drew a crumpled sheet from his pocket and handed it to Aristide. + + [Illustration: "THE VILLAIN WAS A TRAVELLER IN BUTTONS--BUTTONS!"] + +It was a crude, flaming, reprehensible, and entirely damning epistle. +Aristide turned cold, shivering at the idea of the superb and dainty +Zette coming in contact with such abomination. He hated Bondon with a +murderous hate. He drank a great gulp of absinthe and wished it were +Bondon's blood. Great tears rolled down Bocardon's face, and gathering +at the ends of his scrubby moustache dripped in splashes on the marble +table. + +"I loved her so tenderly, monsieur," said he. + +The cry, so human, went straight to Aristide's heart. A sympathetic tear +glistened in his bright eyes. He was suddenly filled with an immense +pity for this grief-stricken, helpless giant. An odd feminine streak ran +through his nature and showed itself in queer places. Impulsively he +stretched out his hand. + +"You're going?" asked Bocardon. + +"No. A sign of good friendship." + +They gripped hands across the table. A new emotion thrilled through the +facile Aristide. + +"Bocardon, I devote myself to you," he cried, with a flamboyant gesture. +"What can I do?" + +"Alas, nothing," replied the other, miserably. + +"And Zette? What does she say to it all?" + +The mountainous shoulders heaved with a shrug. "She denies everything. +She had never seen the letter until I showed it to her. She did not +know how it came into her room. As if that were possible!" + +"It's improbable," said Aristide, gloomily. + +They talked. Bocardon, in a choking voice, told the simple tale of their +married happiness. It had been a love-match, different from the ordinary +marriages of reason and arrangement. Not a cloud since their +wedding-day. They were called the turtle-doves of the Rue de la +Curatterie. He had not even manifested the jealousy justifiable in the +possessor of so beautiful a wife. He had trusted her implicitly. He was +certain of her love. That was enough. They had had one child, who died. +Grief had brought them even nearer each other. And now this stroke had +been dealt. It was a knife being turned round in his heart. It was +agony. + +They walked back to the hotel together. Zette, who was sitting by the +desk in the bureau, rose and, without a word or look, vanished down +the passage. Bocardon, with a great sigh, took her place. It was +dinner-time. The half-dozen guests and frequenters filled for a moment +the little hall, some waiting to wash their hands at the primitive +_lavabo_ by the foot of the stairs. Aristide accompanied them into the +_salle a manger_, where he dined in solemn silence. The dinner over he +went out again, passing by the bureau where Bocardon, in its dim +recesses, was eating a sad meal brought to him by the melancholy +Euphemie. Zette, he conjectured, was dining in the kitchen. An +atmosphere of desolation impregnated the place, as though a corpse were +somewhere in the house. + +Aristide drank his coffee at the nearest cafe in a complicated state of +mind. He had fallen furiously in love with the lady, believing her to be +the victim of a jealous husband. In an outburst of generous emotion he +had taken the husband to his heart, seeing that he was a good man +stricken to death. Now he loved the lady, loved the husband, and hated +the villain Bondon. What Aristide felt, he felt fiercely. He would +reconcile these two people he loved, and then go and, if not assassinate +Bondon, at least do him some bodily injury. With this idea in his head, +he paid for his coffee and went back to the hotel. + +He found Zette taking her turn at the bureau, for clients have to be +attended to, even in the most distressing circumstances. She was talking +to a new arrival, trying to smile a welcome. Aristide, loitering near, +watched her beautiful face, to which the perfect classic features gave +an air of noble purity. His soul revolted at the idea of her mixing +herself up with a sordid wretch like Bondon. It was unbelievable. + +"_Eh bien_?" she said as soon as they were alone. + +"Mme. Zette, to-day I called your husband a scoundrel and a crocodile. I +was wrong. I find him a man with a beautiful nature." + +"You needn't tell me that, M. Aristide." + +"You are breaking his heart, Mme. Zette." + +"And is he not breaking mine? He has told you, I suppose. Am I +responsible for what I know nothing more about than a babe unborn? You +don't believe I am speaking the truth? Bah! And your professions this +afternoon? Wind and gas, like the words of all men." + +"Mme. Zette," cried Aristide, "I said I would devote my life to your +service, and so I will. I'll go and find Bondon and kill him." + +He watched her narrowly, but she did not grow pale like a woman whose +lover is threatened with mortal peril. She said dryly:-- + +"You had better have some conversation with him first." + +"Where is he to be found?" + +She shrugged her shoulders. "How do I know? He left by the early train +this morning that goes in the direction of Tarascon." + +"Then to-morrow," said Aristide, who knew the ways of commercial +travellers, "he will be at Tarascon, or at Avignon, or at Arles." + +"I heard him say that he had just done Arles." + +"_Tant mieux._ I shall find him either at Tarascon or Avignon. And by +the Tarasque of Sainte-Marthe, I'll bring you his head and you can +put it up outside as a sign and call the place the 'Hotel de la Tete +Bondon.'" + + [Illustration: HE BURST INTO SHRIEKS OF LAUGHTER] + +Early the next morning Aristide started on his quest, without informing +the good Bocardon of his intentions. He would go straight to Avignon, as +the more likely place. Inquiries at the various hotels would soon enable +him to hunt down his quarry; and then--he did not quite know what would +happen then--but it would be something picturesque, something entirely +unforeseen by Bondon, something to be thrillingly determined by the +inspiration of the moment. In any case he would wipe the stain from the +family escutcheon. By this time he had convinced himself that he +belonged to the Bocardon family. + +The only other occupant of the first-class compartment was an elderly +Englishwoman of sour aspect. Aristide, his head full of Zette and +Bondon, scarcely noticed her. The train started and sped through the +sunny land of vine and olive. + +They had almost reached Tarascon when a sudden thought hit him between +the eyes, like the blow of a fist. He gasped for a moment, then he burst +into shrieks of laughter, kicking his legs up and down and waving his +arms in maniacal mirth. After that he rose and danced. The sour-faced +Englishwoman, in mortal terror, fled into the corridor. She must have +reported Aristide's behaviour to the guard, for in a minute or two that +official appeared at the doorway. + +"_Qu'est-ce qu'il y a?_" + +Aristide paused in his demonstrations of merriment. "Monsieur," said he, +"I have just discovered what I am going to do to M. Bondon." + +Delight bubbled out of him as he walked from the Avignon Railway Station +up the Cours de la Republique. The wretch Bondon lay at his mercy. He +had not proceeded far, however, when his quick eye caught sight of an +object in the ramshackle display of a curiosity dealer's. He paused in +front of the window, fascinated. He rubbed his eyes. + +"No," said he; "it is not a dream. The _bon Dieu_ is on my side." + +He went into the shop and bought the object. It was a pair of handcuffs. + +At a little after three o'clock the small and dilapidated hotel omnibus +drove up before the Hotel de la Curatterie, and from it descended +Aristide Pujol, radiant-eyed, and a scrubby little man with a goatee +beard, pince-nez, and a dome-like forehead, who, pale and trembling, +seemed stricken with a great fear. It was Bondon. Together they entered +the little hall. As soon as Bocardon saw his enemy his eyes blazed with +fury, and, uttering an inarticulate roar, he rushed out of the bureau +with clenched fists murderously uplifted. The terrified Bondon shrank +into a corner, protected by Aristide, who, smiling like an angel of +peace, intercepted the onslaught of the huge man. + +"Be calm, my good Bocardon, be calm." + +But Bocardon would not be calm. He found his voice. + +"Ah, scoundrel! Miscreant! Wretch! Traitor!" When his vocabulary of +vituperation and his breath failed him, he paused and mopped his +forehead. + +Bondon came a step or two forward. + +"I know, monsieur, I have all the wrong on my side. Your anger is +justifiable. But I never dreamt of the disastrous effect of my acts. Let +me see her, my good M. Bocardon, I beseech you." + +"Let you see her?" said Bocardon, growing purple in the face. + +At this moment Zette came running up the passage. + +"What is all this noise about?" + +"Ah, madame!" cried Bondon, eagerly, "I am heart-broken. You who are so +kind--let me see her." + +"_Hein_?" exclaimed Bocardon, in stupefaction. + +"See whom?" asked Zette. + +"My dear dead one. My dear Euphemie, who has committed suicide." + +"But he's mad!" shouted Bocardon, in his great voice. "Euphemie! +Euphemie! Come here!" + +At the sight of Euphemie, pale and shivering with apprehension, Bondon +sank upon a bench by the wall. He stared at her as if she were a ghost. + +"I don't understand," he murmured, faintly, looking like a trapped hare +at Aristide Pujol, who, debonair, hands on hips, stood a little way +apart. + +"Nor I, either," cried Bocardon. + +A great light dawned on Zette's beautiful face. "I do understand." She +exchanged glances with Aristide. He came forward. + +"It's very simple," said he, taking the stage with childlike exultation. +"I go to find Bondon this morning to kill him. In the train I have a +sudden inspiration, a revelation from Heaven. It is not Zette but +Euphemie that is the _bonne amie_ of Bondon. I laugh, and frighten a +long-toothed English old maid out of her wits. Shall I get out at +Tarascon and return to Nimes and tell you, or shall I go on? I decide to +go on. I make my plan. Ah, but when I make a plan, it's all in a second, +a flash, _pfuit!_ At Avignon I see a pair of handcuffs. I buy them. I +spend hours tracking that animal there. At last I find him at the +station about to start for Lyon. I tell him I am a police agent. I let +him see the handcuffs, which convince him. I tell him Euphemie, in +consequence of the discovery of his letter, has committed suicide. There +is a _proces-verbal_ at which he is wanted. I summon him to accompany me +in the name of the law--and there he is." + + [Illustration: "AND YOU!" SHOUTED BOCARDON, FALLING ON ARISTIDE; "I MUST + EMBRACE YOU ALSO"] + +"Then that letter was not for my wife?" said Bocardon, who was not +quick-witted. + +"But, no, imbecile!" cried Aristide. + +Bocardon hugged his wife in his vast embrace. The tears ran down his +cheeks. + +"Ah, my little Zette, my little Zette, will you ever pardon me?" + +"_Oui, je te pardonne, gros jaloux_," said Zette. + +"And you!" shouted Bocardon, falling on Aristide; "I must embrace you +also." He kissed him on both cheeks, in his expansive way, and thrust +him towards Zette. + +"You can also kiss my wife. It is I, Bocardon, who command it." + +The fire of a not ignoble pride raced through Aristide's veins. He was a +hero. He knew it. It was a moment worth living. + +The embraces and other expressions of joy and gratitude being +temporarily suspended, attention was turned to the unheroic couple who +up to then had said not one word to each other. The explanation of their +conduct, too, was simple, apparently. They were in love. She had no +dowry. He could not marry her, as his parents would not give their +consent. She, for her part, was frightened to death by the discovery of +the letter, lest Bocardon should turn her out of the house. + +"What dowry will satisfy your parents?" + +"Nothing less than twelve thousand francs." + +"I give it," said Bocardon, reckless in his newly-found happiness. +"Marry her." + +The clock in the bureau struck four. Aristide pulled out his watch. + +"_Saperlipopette!_" he cried, and disappeared like a flash into the +street. + +"But what's the matter with him?" shouted Bocardon, in amazement. + +Zette went to the door. "He's running as if he had the devil at his +heels." + +"Was he always like that?" asked her husband. + +"How always?" + +"_Parbleu!_ When you used to see him at your Aunt Leonie's." + +Zette flushed red. To repudiate the saviour of her entire family were an +act of treachery too black for her ingenuous heart. + +"Ah, yes," she replied, calmly, coming back into the hall. "We used to +call him Cousin Quicksilver." + +In the big avenue Aristide hailed a passing cab. + +"To the Hotel du Luxembourg--at a gallop!" + +In the joyous excitement of the past few hours this child of impulse +and sunshine, this dragon-fly of a man, had entirely forgotten the +appointment at two o'clock with the American millionaire and the fortune +that depended on it. He would be angry at being kept waiting. Aristide +had met Americans before. His swift brain invented an elaborate excuse. + +He leaped from the cab and entered the vestibule of the hotel. + +"Can I see M. Congleton?" he asked at the bureau. + +"An American gentleman? He has gone, monsieur. He left by the +three-thirty train. Are you M. Pujol? There is a letter for you." + +With a sinking heart he opened it and read:-- + + DEAR SIR,--I was in this hotel at two o'clock, according to + arrangement. As my last train to Japan leaves at three-thirty, I + regret I cannot await your convenience. The site of the hotel is + satisfactory. Your business methods are not. I am sorry, therefore, + not to be able to entertain the matter further.--Faithfully, + + WILLIAM B. CONGLETON. + +He stared at the words for a few paralyzed moments. Then he stuffed the +letter into his pocket and broke into a laugh. + +"_Zut!_" said he, using the inelegant expletive whereby a Frenchman most +adequately expresses his scorn of circumstance. "_Zut!_ If I have lost a +fortune, I have gained two devoted friends, so I am the winner on the +day's work." + +Whereupon he returned gaily to the bosom of the Bocardon family and +remained there, its Cousin Quicksilver and its entirely happy and +idolized hero, until the indignation of the eminent M. Say summoned him +to Paris. + +And that is how Aristide Pujol could live thenceforward on nothing at +all at Nimes, whenever it suited him to visit that historic town. + + + + +III + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE KIND MR. SMITH + + +Aristide Pujol started life on his own account as a _chasseur_ in a Nice +cafe--one of those luckless children tightly encased in bottle-green +cloth by means of brass buttons, who earn a sketchy livelihood by +enduring with cherubic smiles the continuous maledictions of the +establishment. There he soothed his hours of servitude by dreams of +vast ambitions. He would become the manager of a great hotel--not a +contemptible hostelry where commercial travellers and seedy Germans were +indifferently bedded, but one of those white palaces where milords +(English) and millionaires (American) paid a thousand francs a night +for a bedroom and five louis for a glass of beer. Now, in order to +derive such profit from the Anglo-Saxon a knowledge of English was +indispensable. He resolved to learn the language. How he did so, except +by sheer effrontery, taking linguistic toll of frequenters of the cafe, +would be a mystery to anyone unacquainted with Aristide. But to his +friends his mastery of the English tongue in such circumstances is +comprehensible. To Aristide the impossible was ever the one thing easy +of attainment; the possible the one thing he never could achieve. +That was the paradoxical nature of the man. Before his days of +hunted-little-devildom were over he had acquired sufficient knowledge of +English to carry him, a few years later, through various vicissitudes in +England, until, fired by new social ambitions and self-educated in a +haphazard way, he found himself appointed Professor of French in an +academy for young ladies. + +One of these days, when I can pin my dragon-fly friend down to a plain, +unvarnished autobiography, I may be able to trace some chronological +sequence in the kaleidoscopic changes in his career. But hitherto, in +his talks with me, he flits about from any one date to any other during +a couple of decades, in a manner so confusing that for the present I +abandon such an attempt. All I know of the date of the episode I am +about to chronicle is that it occurred immediately after the termination +of his engagement at the academy just mentioned. Somehow, Aristide's +history is a category of terminations. + +If the head mistress of the academy had herself played dragon at his +classes, all would have gone well. He would have made his pupils +conjugate irregular verbs, rendered them adepts in the mysteries of the +past participle and the subjunctive mood, and turned them out quite +innocent of the idiomatic quaintnesses of the French tongue. But _dis +aliter visum_. The gods always saw wrong-headedly otherwise in the case +of Aristide. A weak-minded governess--and in a governess a sense of +humour and of novelty is always a sign of a weak mind--played dragon +during Aristide's lessons. She appreciated his method, which was +colloquial. The colloquial Aristide was jocular. His lessons therefore +were a giggling joy from beginning to end. He imparted to his pupils +delicious knowledge. _En avez-vous des-z-homards? Oh, les sales betes, +elles ont du poil aux pattes_, which, being translated, is: "Have you +any lobsters? Oh, the dirty animals, they have hair on their feet"--a +catch phrase which, some years ago, added greatly to the gaiety of +Paris, but in which I must confess to seeing no gleam of wit--became the +historic property of the school. He recited to them, till they were +word-perfect, a music-hall ditty of the early 'eighties--_Sur le bi, +sur le banc, sur le bi du bout du banc_, and delighted them with +dissertations on Mme. Yvette Guilbert's earlier repertoire. But for him +they would have gone to their lives' end without knowing that _pognon_ +meant money; _rouspetance_, assaulting the police; _thune_, a five-franc +piece; and _bouffer_, to take nourishment. He made (according to his own +statement) French a living language. There was never a school in Great +Britain, the Colonies, or America on which the Parisian accent was so +electrically impressed. The retort, _Eh! ta soeur_, was the purest +Montmartre; also _Fich'-moi la paix, mon petit_, and _Tu as un toupet, +toi_; and the delectable locution, _Allons etrangler un perroquet_ (let +us strangle a parrot), employed by Apaches when inviting each other to +drink a glass of absinthe, soon became current French in the school for +invitations to surreptitious cocoa-parties. + +The progress that academy made in a real grip of the French language was +miraculous; but the knowledge it gained in French grammar and syntax was +deplorable. A certain mid-term examination--the paper being set by a +neighbouring vicar--produced awful results. The phrase, "How do you do, +dear?" which ought, by all the rules of Stratford-atte-Bowe, to be +translated by _Comment vous portez-vous, ma chere?_ was rendered by most +of the senior scholars _Eh, ma vieille, ca boulotte?_ One innocent and +anachronistic damsel, writing on the execution of Charles I., declared +that he _cracha dans le panier_ in 1649, thereby mystifying the good +vicar, who was unaware that "to spit into the basket" is to be +guillotined. This wealth of vocabulary was discounted by abject poverty +in other branches of the language. No one could give a list of the words +in "_al_" that took "_s_" in the plural, no one knew anything at all +about the defective verb _echoir_, and the orthography of the school +would have disgraced a kindergarten. The head mistress suspected a lack +of method in the teaching of M. Pujol, and one day paid his class a +surprise visit. + +The sight that met her eyes petrified her. The class, including the +governess, bubbled and gurgled and shrieked with laughter. M. Pujol, his +bright eyes agleam with merriment and his arms moving in frantic +gestures, danced about the platform. He was telling them a story--and +when Aristide told a story, he told it with the eloquence of his entire +frame. He bent himself double and threw out his hands. + +"_Il etait saoul comme un porc_," he shouted. + +And then came the hush of death. The rest of the artless tale about the +man as drunk as a pig was never told. The head mistress, indignant +majesty, strode up the room. + +"M. Pujol, you have a strange way of giving French lessons." + +"I believe, madame," said he, with a polite bow, "in interesting my +pupils in their studies." + +"Pupils have to be taught, not interested," said the head mistress. +"Will you kindly put the class through some irregular verbs." + +So for the remainder of the lesson Aristide, under the freezing eyes of +the head mistress, put his sorrowful class through irregular verbs, of +which his own knowledge was singularly inexact, and at the end received +his dismissal. In vain he argued. Outraged Minerva was implacable. Go he +must. + + * * * * * + +We find him, then, one miserable December evening, standing on the +arrival platform of Euston Station (the academy was near Manchester), an +unwonted statue of dubiety. At his feet lay his meagre valise; in his +hand was an enormous bouquet, a useful tribute of esteem from his +disconsolate pupils; around him luggage-laden porters and passengers +hurried; in front were drawn up the long line of cabs, their drivers' +waterproofs glistening with wet; and in his pocket rattled the few +paltry coins that, for Heaven knew how long, were to keep him from +starvation. Should he commit the extravagance of taking a cab or should +he go forth, valise in hand, into the pouring rain? He hesitated. + +"_Sacre mille cochons! Quel chien de climat!_" he muttered. + +A smart footman standing by turned quickly and touched his hat. + +"Beg pardon, sir; I'm from Mr. Smith." + +"I'm glad to hear it, my friend," said Aristide. + +"You're the French gentleman from Manchester?" + +"Decidedly," said Aristide. + + [Illustration: STANDING ON THE ARRIVAL PLATFORM OF EUSTON STATION] + +"Then, sir, Mr. Smith has sent the carriage for you." + +"That's very kind of him," said Aristide. + +The footman picked up the valise and darted down the platform. Aristide +followed. The footman held invitingly open the door of a cosy brougham. +Aristide paused for the fraction of a second. Who was this hospitable +Mr. Smith? + +"Bah!" said he to himself, "the best way of finding out is to go and +see." + +He entered the carriage, sank back luxuriously on the soft cushions, and +inhaled the warm smell of leather. They started, and soon the pelting +rain beat harmlessly against the windows. Aristide looked out at the +streaming streets, and, hugging himself comfortably, thanked Providence +and Mr. Smith. But who was Mr. Smith? _Tiens_, thought he, there were +two little Miss Smiths at the academy; he had pitied them because they +had chilblains, freckles, and perpetual colds in their heads; possibly +this was their kind papa. But, after all, what did it matter whose papa +he was? He was expecting him. He had sent the carriage for him. +Evidently a well-bred and attentive person. And _tiens!_ there was even +a hot-water can on the floor of the brougham. "He thinks of everything, +that man," said Aristide. "I feel I am going to like him." + +The carriage stopped at a house in Hampstead, standing, as far as he +could see in the darkness, in its own grounds. The footman opened the +door for him to alight and escorted him up the front steps. A neat +parlour-maid received him in a comfortably-furnished hall and took his +hat and greatcoat and magnificent bouquet. + +"Mr. Smith hasn't come back yet from the City, sir; but Miss Christabel +is in the drawing-room." + +"Ah!" said Aristide. "Please give me back my bouquet." + +The maid showed him into the drawing-room. A pretty girl of +three-and-twenty rose from a fender-stool and advanced smilingly to meet +him. + +"Good afternoon, M. le Baron. I was wondering whether Thomas would spot +you. I'm so glad he did. You see, neither father nor I could give him +any description, for we had never seen you." + +This fitted in with his theory. But why Baron? After all, why not? The +English loved titles. + +"He seems to be an intelligent fellow, mademoiselle." + +There was a span of silence. The girl looked at the bouquet, then at +Aristide, who looked at the girl, then at the bouquet, then at the girl +again. + +"Mademoiselle," said he, "will you deign to accept these flowers as a +token of my respectful homage?" + +Miss Christabel took the flowers and blushed prettily. She had dark hair +and eyes and a fascinating, upturned little nose, and the kindest +little mouth in the world. + +"An Englishman would not have thought of that," she said. + +Aristide smiled in his roguish way and raised a deprecating hand. + +"Oh, yes, he would. But he would not have had--what you call the cheek +to do it." + +Miss Christabel laughed merrily, invited him to a seat by the fire, +and comforted him with tea and hot muffins. The frank charm of his +girl-hostess captivated Aristide and drove from his mind the riddle of +his adventure. Besides, think of the Arabian Nights' enchantment of the +change from his lonely and shabby bed-sitting-room in the Rusholme Road +to this fragrant palace with princess and all to keep him company! He +watched the firelight dancing through her hair, the dainty play of +laughter over her face, and decided that the brougham had transported +him to Bagdad instead of Hampstead. + +"You have the air of a veritable princess," said he. + +"I once met a princess--at a charity bazaar--and she was a most +matter-of-fact, businesslike person." + +"Bah!" said Aristide. "A princess of a charity bazaar! I was talking of +the princess in a fairytale. They are the only real ones." + +"Do you know," said Miss Christabel, "that when men pay such compliments +to English girls they are apt to get laughed at?" + +"Englishmen, yes," replied Aristide, "because they think over a +compliment for a week, so that by the time they pay it, it is addled, +like a bad egg. But we of Provence pay tribute to beauty straight out of +our hearts. It is true. It is sincere. And what comes out of the heart +is not ridiculous." + +Again the girl coloured and laughed. "I've always heard that a Frenchman +makes love to every woman he meets." + +"Naturally," said Aristide. "If they are pretty. What else are pretty +women for? Otherwise they might as well be hideous." + +"Oh!" said the girl, to whom this Provencal point of view had not +occurred. + +"So, if I make love to you, it is but your due." + +"I wonder what my fiance would say if he heard you?" + +"Your----?" + +"My fiance! There's his photograph on the table beside you. He is six +foot one, and so jealous!" she laughed again. + +"The Turk!" cried Aristide, his swiftly-conceived romance crumbling into +dust. Then he brightened up. "But when this six feet of muscle and +egotism is absent, surely other poor mortals can glean a smile?" + +"You will observe that I'm not frowning," said Miss Christabel. "But you +must not call my fiance a Turk, for he's a very charming fellow whom I +hope you'll like very much." + +Aristide sighed. "And the name of this thrice-blessed mortal?" + +Miss Christabel told his name--one Harry Ralston--and not only his name, +but, such was the peculiar, childlike charm of Aristide Pujol, also many +other things about him. He was the Honourable Harry Ralston, the heir +to a great brewery peerage, and very wealthy. He was a member of +Parliament, and but for Parliamentary duties would have dined there that +evening; but he was to come in later, as soon as he could leave the +House. He also had a house in Hampshire, full of the most beautiful +works of art. It was through their common hobby that her father and +Harry had first made acquaintance. + +"We're supposed to have a very fine collection here," she said, with a +motion of her hand. + +Aristide looked round the walls and saw them hung with pictures in gold +frames. In those days he had not acquired an extensive culture. Besides, +who having before him the firelight gleaming through Miss Christabel's +hair could waste his time over painted canvas? She noted his cursory +glance. + +"I thought you were a connoisseur?" + +"I am," said Aristide, his bright eyes fixed on her in frank admiration. + +She blushed again; but this time she rose. + +"I must go and dress for dinner. Perhaps you would like to be shown your +room?" + +He hung his head on one side. + +"Have I been too bold, mademoiselle?" + +"I don't know," she said. "You see, I've never met a Frenchman before." + +"Then a world of undreamed-of homage is at your feet," said he. + +A servant ushered him up broad, carpeted staircases into a bedroom such +as he had never seen in his life before. It was all curtains and +hangings and rugs and soft couches and satin quilts and dainty +writing-tables and subdued lights, and a great fire glowed red and +cheerful, and before it hung a clean shirt. His poor little toilet +apparatus was laid on the dressing-table, and (with a tact which he did +not appreciate, for he had, sad to tell, no dress-suit) the servant had +spread his precious frock-coat and spare pair of trousers on the bed. On +the pillow lay his night-shirt, neatly folded. + +"Evidently," said Aristide, impressed by these preparations, "it is +expected that I wash myself now and change my clothes, and that I sleep +here for the night. And for all that the ravishing Miss Christabel is +engaged to her honourable Harry, this is none the less a corner of +Paradise." + +So Aristide attired himself in his best, which included a white tie and +a pair of nearly new brown boots--a long task, as he found that his +valise had been spirited away and its contents, including the white +tie of ceremony (he had but one), hidden in unexpected drawers and +wardrobes--and eventually went downstairs into the drawing-room. There +he found Miss Christabel and, warming himself on the hearthrug, a +bald-headed, beefy-faced Briton, with little pig's eyes and a hearty +manner, attired in a dinner-suit. + +"My dear fellow," said this personage, with outstretched hand, "I'm +delighted to have you here. I've heard so much about you; and my little +girl has been singing your praises." + +"Mademoiselle is too kind," said Aristide. + +"You must take us as you find us," said Mr. Smith. "We're just ordinary +folk, but I can give you a good bottle of wine and a good cigar--it's +only in England, you know, that you can get champagne fit to drink and +cigars fit to smoke--and I can give you a glimpse of a modest English +home. I believe you haven't a word for it in French." + +"_Ma foi_, no," said Aristide, who had once or twice before heard this +lunatic charge brought against his country. "In France the men all live +in cafes, the children are all put out to nurse, and the women, saving +the respect of mademoiselle--well, the less said about them the better." + +"England is the only place, isn't it?" Mr. Smith declared, heartily. "I +don't say that Paris hasn't its points. But after all--the Moulin Rouge +and the Folies Bergeres and that sort of thing soon pall, you know--soon +pall." + +"Yet Paris has its serious side," argued Aristide. "There is always the +tomb of Napoleon." + +"Papa will never take me to Paris," sighed the girl. + +"You shall go there on your honeymoon," said Mr. Smith. + +Dinner was announced. Aristide gave his arm to Miss Christabel, and +proud not only of his partner, but also of his frock-coat, white tie, +and shiny brown boots, strutted into the dining-room. The host sat at +the end of the beautifully set table, his daughter on his right, +Aristide on his left. The meal began gaily. The kind Mr. Smith was in +the best of humours. + +"And how is our dear old friend, Jules Dancourt?" he asked. + +"_Tiens!_" said Aristide, to himself, "we have a dear friend Jules +Dancourt. Wonderfully well," he replied at a venture, "but he suffers +terribly at times from the gout." + +"So do I, confound it!" said Mr. Smith, drinking sherry. + +"You and the good Jules were always sympathetic," said Aristide. "Ah! he +has spoken to me so often about you, the tears in his eyes." + +"Men cry, my dear, in France," Mr. Smith explained. "They also kiss each +other." + +"_Ah, mais c'est un beau pays, mademoiselle!_" cried Aristide, and he +began to talk of France and to draw pictures of his country which set +the girl's eyes dancing. After that he told some of the funny little +stories which had brought him disaster at the academy. Mr. Smith, with +jovial magnanimity, declared that he was the first Frenchman he had ever +met with a sense of humour. + +"But I thought, Baron," said he, "that you lived all your life shut up +in that old chateau of yours?" + +"_Tiens!_" thought Aristide. "I am still a Baron, and I have an old +chateau." + +"Tell us about the chateau. Has it a fosse and a drawbridge and a Gothic +chapel?" asked Miss Christabel. + +"Which one do you mean?" inquired Aristide, airily. "For I have two." + +When relating to me this Arabian Nights' adventure, he drew my special +attention to his astuteness. + +His host's eye quivered in a wink. "The one in Languedoc," said he. + +Languedoc! Almost Pujol's own country! With entire lack of morality, but +with picturesque imagination, Aristide plunged into a description of +that non-existent baronial hall. Fosse, drawbridge, Gothic chapel were +but insignificant features. It had tourelles, emblazoned gateways, +bastions, donjons, barbicans; it had innumerable rooms; in the _salle +des chevaliers_ two hundred men-at-arms had his ancestors fed at a +sitting. There was the room in which Francois Premier had slept, and one +in which Joan of Arc had almost been assassinated. What the name of +himself or of his ancestors was supposed to be Aristide had no ghost of +an idea. But as he proceeded with the erection of his airy palace he +gradually began to believe in it. He invested the place with a living +atmosphere; conjured up a staff of family retainers, notably one +Marie-Joseph Loufoque, the wizened old major-domo, with his long white +whiskers and blue and silver livery. There were also Madeline Mioulles, +the cook, and Bernadet the groom, and La Petite Fripette the goose girl. +Ah! they should see La Petite Fripette! And he kept dogs and horses and +cows and ducks and hens--and there was a great pond whence frogs were +drawn to be fed for the consumption of the household. + +Miss Christabel shivered. "I should not like to eat frogs." + +"They also eat snails," said her father. + +"I have a snail farm," said Aristide. "You never saw such interesting +little animals. They are so intelligent. If you're kind to them they +come and eat out of your hand." + + [Illustration: "AH! THE PICTURES," CRIED ARISTIDE, WITH A WIDE SWEEP + OF HIS ARMS] + +"You've forgotten the pictures," said Mr. Smith. + +"Ah! the pictures," cried Aristide, with a wide sweep of his arms. +"Galleries full of them. Raphael, Michael Angelo, Wiertz, Reynolds----" + +He paused, not in order to produce the effect of a dramatic aposiopesis, +but because he could not for the moment remember other names of +painters. + +"It is a truly historical chateau," said he. + +"I should love to see it," said the girl. + +Aristide threw out his arms across the table. "It is yours, +mademoiselle, for your honeymoon," said he. + +Dinner came to an end. Miss Christabel left the gentlemen to their wine, +an excellent port whose English qualities were vaunted by the host. +Aristide, full of food and drink and the mellow glories of the castle in +Languedoc, and smoking an enormous cigar, felt at ease with all the +world. He knew he should like the kind Mr. Smith, hospitable though +somewhat insular man. He could stay with him for a week--or a month--why +not a year? + +After coffee and liqueurs had been served Mr. Smith rose and switched on +a powerful electric light at the end of the large room, showing a +picture on an easel covered by a curtain. He beckoned to Aristide to +join him and, drawing the curtain, disclosed the picture. + +"There!" said he. "Isn't it a stunner?" + +It was a picture all grey skies and grey water and grey feathery trees, +and a little man in the foreground wore a red cap. + +"It is beautiful, but indeed it is magnificent!" cried Aristide, always +impressionable to things of beauty. + +"Genuine Corot, isn't it?" + +"Without doubt," said Aristide. + +His host poked him in the ribs. "I thought I'd astonish you. You +wouldn't believe Gottschalk could have done it. There it is--as large as +life and twice as natural. If you or anyone else can tell it from a +genuine Corot I'll eat my hat. And all for eight pounds." + +Aristide looked at the beefy face and caught a look of cunning in the +little pig's eyes. + +"Now are you satisfied?" asked Mr. Smith. + +"More than satisfied," said Aristide, though what he was to be satisfied +about passed, for the moment, his comprehension. + +"If it was a copy of an existing picture, you know--one might have +understood it--that, of course, would be dangerous--but for a man to go +and get bits out of various Corots and stick them together like this is +miraculous. If it hadn't been for a matter of business principle I'd +have given the fellow eight guineas instead of pounds--hanged if I +wouldn't! He deserves it." + +"He does indeed," said Aristide Pujol. + +"And now that you've seen it with your own eyes, what do you think you +might ask me for it? I suggested something between two and three +thousand--shall we say three? You're the owner, you know." Again the +process of rib-digging. "Came out of that historic chateau of yours. My +eye! you're a holy terror when you begin to talk. You almost persuaded +me it was real." + +"_Tiens!_" said Aristide to himself. "I don't seem to have a chateau +after all." + +"Certainly three thousand," said he, with a grave face. + +"That young man thinks he knows a lot, but he doesn't," said Mr. Smith. + +"Ah!" said Aristide, with singular laconicism. + +"Not a blooming thing," continued his host. "But he'll pay three +thousand, which is the principal, isn't it? He's partner in the show, +you know, Ralston, Wiggins, and Wix's Brewery"--Aristide pricked up his +ears--"and when his doddering old father dies he'll be Lord Ranelagh and +come into a million of money." + +"Has he seen the picture?" asked Aristide. + +"Oh, yes. Regards it as a masterpiece. Didn't Brauneberger tell you of +the Lancret we planted on the American?" Mr. Smith rubbed hearty hands +at the memory of the iniquity. "Same old game. Always easy. I have +nothing to do with the bargaining or the sale. Just an old friend of +the ruined French nobleman with the historic chateau and family +treasures. He comes along and fixes the price. I told our friend +Harry----" + +"Good," thought Aristide. "This is the same Honourable Harry, M.P., who +is engaged to the ravishing Miss Christabel." + +"I told him," said Mr. Smith, "that it might come to three or four +thousand. He jibbed a bit--so when I wrote to you I said two or three. +But you might try him with three to begin with." + +Aristide went back to the table and poured himself out a fresh glass of +his kind host's 1865 brandy and drank it off. + +"Exquisite, my dear fellow," said he. "I've none finer in my historic +chateau." + +"Don't suppose you have," grinned the host, joining him. He slapped him +on the back. "Well," said he, with a shifty look in his little pig's +eyes, "let us talk business. What do you think would be your fair +commission? You see, all the trouble and invention have been mine. What +do you say to four hundred pounds?" + +"Five," said Aristide, promptly. + +A sudden gleam came into the little pig's eyes. + +"Done!" said Mr. Smith, who had imagined that the other would demand a +thousand and was prepared to pay eight hundred. "Done!" said he again. + +They shook hands to seal the bargain and drank another glass of old +brandy. At that moment, a servant, entering, took the host aside. + +"Please excuse me a moment," said he, and went with the servant out of +the room. + +Aristide, left alone, lighted another of his kind host's fat cigars +and threw himself into a great leathern arm-chair by the fire, and +surrendered himself deliciously to the soothing charm of the moment. Now +and then he laughed, finding a certain comicality in his position. And +what a charming father-in-law, this kind Mr. Smith! + +His cheerful reflections were soon disturbed by the sudden irruption of +his host and a grizzled, elderly, foxy-faced gentleman with a white +moustache, wearing the ribbon of the Legion of Honour in the buttonhole +of his overcoat. + +"Here, you!" cried the kind Mr. Smith, striding up to Aristide, with a +very red face. "Will you have the kindness to tell me who the devil you +are?" + +Aristide rose, and, putting his hands behind the tails of his +frock-coat, stood smiling radiantly on the hearthrug. A wit much less +alert than my irresponsible friend's would have instantly appreciated +the fact that the real Simon Pure had arrived on the scene. + +"I, my dear friend," said he, "am the Baron de Je ne Sais Plus." + +"You're a confounded impostor," spluttered Mr. Smith. + +"And this gentleman here to whom I have not had the pleasure of being +introduced?" asked Aristide, blandly. + +"I am M. Poiron, monsieur, the agent of Messrs. Brauneberger and +Compagnie, art dealers, of the Rue Notre Dame des Petits Champs of +Paris," said the new-comer, with an air of defiance. + +"Ah, I thought you were the Baron," said Aristide. + +"There's no blooming Baron at all about it!" screamed Mr. Smith. "Are +you Poiron, or is he?" + +"I would not have a name like Poiron for anything in the world," said +Aristide. "My name is Aristide Pujol, soldier of fortune, at your +service." + +"How the blazes did you get here?" + +"Your servant asked me if I was a French gentleman from Manchester. I +was. He said that Mr. Smith had sent his carriage for me. I thought it +hospitable of the kind Mr. Smith. I entered the carriage--_et voila!_" + +"Then clear out of here this very minute," said Mr. Smith, reaching +forward his hand to the bell-push. + +Aristide checked his impulsive action. + +"Pardon me, dear host," said he. "It is raining dogs and cats outside. I +am very comfortable in your luxurious home. I am here, and here I +stay." + +"I'm shot if you do," said the kind Mr. Smith, his face growing redder +and uglier. "Now, will you go out, or will you be thrown out?" + +Aristide, who had no desire whatever to be ejected from this snug nest +into the welter of the wet and friendless world, puffed at his cigar, +and looked at his host with the irresistible drollery of his eyes. + +"You forget, _mon cher ami_," said he, "that neither the beautiful Miss +Christabel nor her affianced, the Honourable Harry, M.P., would care to +know that the talented Gottschalk got only eight pounds, not even +guineas, for painting that three-thousand-pound picture." + +"So it's blackmail, eh?" + +"Precisely," said Aristide, "and I don't blush at it." + +"You infernal little blackguard!" + +"I seem to be in congenial company," said Aristide. "I don't think our +friend M. Poiron has more scruples than he has right to the ribbon of +the Legion of Honour which he is wearing." + +"How much will you take to go out? I have a cheque-book handy." + +Mr. Smith moved a few steps from the hearthrug. Aristide sat down in the +arm-chair. An engaging, fantastic impudence was one of the charms of +Aristide Pujol. + +"I'll take five hundred pounds," said he, "to stay in." + +"Stay in?" Mr. Smith grew apoplectic. + +"Yes," said Aristide. "You can't do without me. Your daughter and your +servants know me as M. le Baron--by the way, what is my name? And where +is my historic chateau in Languedoc?" + +"Mireilles," said M. Poiron, who was sitting grim and taciturn on one of +the dining-room chairs. "And the place is the same, near Montpellier." + +"I like to meet an intelligent man," said Aristide. + +"I should like to wring your infernal neck," said the kind Mr. Smith. +"But, by George, if we do let you in you'll have to sign me a receipt +implicating yourself up to the hilt. I'm not going to be put into the +cart by you, you can bet your life." + +"Anything you like," said Aristide, "so long as we all swing together." + + * * * * * + +Now, when Aristide Pujol arrived at this point in his narrative I, his +chronicler, who am nothing if not an eminently respectable, law-abiding +Briton, took him warmly to task for his sheer absence of moral sense. +His eyes, as they sometimes did, assumed a luminous pathos. + + [Illustration: "I'LL TAKE FIVE HUNDRED POUNDS," SAID HE, "TO STAY IN"] + +"My dear friend," said he, "have you ever faced the world in a foreign +country in December with no character and fifteen pounds five and +three-pence in your pocket? Five hundred pounds was a fortune. It is +one now. And to be gained just by lending oneself to a good farce, which +didn't hurt anybody. You and your British morals! Bah!" said he, with a +fine flourish. + + * * * * * + +Aristide, after much parleying, was finally admitted into the nefarious +brotherhood. He was to retain his rank as the Baron de Mireilles, and +play the part of the pecuniarily inconvenienced nobleman forced to sell +some of his rare collection. Mr. Smith had heard of the Corot through +their dear old common friend, Jules Dancourt of Rheims, had mentioned it +alluringly to the Honourable Harry, had arranged for the Baron, who was +visiting England, to bring it over and dispatch it to Mr. Smith's house, +and on his return from Manchester to pay a visit to Mr. Smith, so that +he could meet the Honourable Harry in person. In whatever transaction +ensued Mr. Smith, so far as his prospective son-in-law was concerned, +was to be the purely disinterested friend. It was Aristide's wit which +invented a part for the supplanted M. Poiron. He should be the eminent +Parisian expert who, chancing to be in London, had been telephoned for +by the kind Mr. Smith. + +"It would not be wise for M. Poiron," said Aristide, chuckling inwardly +with puckish glee, "to stay here for the night--or for two or three +days--or a week--like myself. He must go back to his hotel when the +business is concluded." + +"_Mais, pardon!_" cried M. Poiron, who had been formally invited, and +had arrived late solely because he had missed his train at Manchester, +and come on by the next one. "I cannot go out into the wet, and I have +no hotel to go to." + +Aristide appealed to his host. "But he is unreasonable, _cher ami_. He +must play his _role_. M. Poiron has been telephoned for. He can't +possibly stay here. Surely five hundred pounds is worth one little night +of discomfort? And there are a legion of hotels in London." + +"Five hundred pounds!" exclaimed M. Poiron. "_Qu'est-ce que vous chantez +la?_ I want more than five hundred pounds." + +"Then you're jolly well not going to get it," cried Mr. Smith, in a +rage. "And as for you"--he turned on Aristide--"I'll wring your infernal +neck yet." + +"Calm yourself, calm yourself!" smiled Aristide, who was enjoying +himself hugely. + +At this moment the door opened and Miss Christabel appeared. On seeing +the decorated stranger she started with a little "Oh!" of surprise. + +"I beg your pardon." + +Mr. Smith's angry face wreathed itself in smiles. + +"This, my darling, is M. Poiron, the eminent Paris expert, who has been +good enough to come and give us his opinion on the picture." + +M. Poiron bowed. Aristide advanced. + +"Mademoiselle, your appearance is like a mirage in a desert." + +She smiled indulgently and turned to her father. "I've been wondering +what had become of you. Harry has been here for the last half-hour." + +"Bring him in, dear child, bring him in!" said Mr. Smith, with all the +heartiness of the fine old English gentleman. "Our good friends are +dying to meet him." + +The girl flickered out of the room like a sunbeam (the phrase is +Aristide's), and the three precious rascals put their heads together in +a hurried and earnest colloquy. Presently Miss Christabel returned, and +with her came the Honourable Harry Ralston, a tall, soldierly fellow, +with close-cropped fair curly hair and a fair moustache, and frank blue +eyes that, even in Parliament, had seen no harm in his fellow-creatures. +Aristide's magical vision caught him wincing ever so little at Mr. +Smith's effusive greeting and overdone introductions. He shook Aristide +warmly by the hand. + +"You have a beauty there, Baron, a perfect beauty," said he, with the +insane ingenuousness of youth. "I wonder how you can manage to part with +it." + +"_Ma foi_," said Aristide, with his back against the end of the +dining-table and gazing at the masterpiece. "I have so many at the +Chateau de Mireilles. When one begins to collect, you know--and when +one's grandfather and father have had also the divine mania----" + +"You were saying, M. le Baron," said M. Poiron of Paris, "that your +respected grandfather bought this direct from Corot himself." + +"A commission," said Aristide. "My grandfather was a patron of Corot." + +"Do you like it, dear?" asked the Honourable Harry. + +"Oh, yes!" replied the girl, fervently. "It is beautiful. I feel like +Harry about it." She turned to Aristide. "How can you part with it? Were +you really in earnest when you said you would like me to come and see +your collection?" + +"For me," said Aristide, "it would be a visit of enchantment." + +"You must take me, then," she whispered to Harry. "The Baron has been +telling us about his lovely old chateau." + +"Will you come, monsieur?" asked Aristide. + +"Since I'm going to rob you of your picture," said the young man, with +smiling courtesy, "the least I can do is to pay you a visit of apology. +Lovely!" said he, going up to the Corot. + +Aristide took Miss Christabel, now more bewitching than ever with the +glow of young love in her eyes and a flush on her cheek, a step or two +aside and whispered:-- + +"But he is charming, your fiance! He almost deserves his good fortune." + +"Why almost?" she laughed, shyly. + +"It is not a man, but a demi-god, that would deserve you, mademoiselle." + +M. Poiron's harsh voice broke out. + +"You see, it is painted in the beginning of Corot's later manner--it is +1864. There is the mystery which, when he was quite an old man, became a +trick. If you were to put it up to auction at Christie's it would fetch, +I am sure, five thousand pounds." + +"That's more than I can afford to give," said the young man, with a +laugh. "Mr. Smith mentioned something between three and four thousand +pounds. I don't think I can go above three." + +"I have nothing to do with it, my dear boy, nothing whatever," said Mr. +Smith, rubbing his hands. "You wanted a Corot. I said I thought I could +put you on to one. It's for the Baron here to mention his price. I +retire now and for ever." + +"Well, Baron?" said the young man, cheerfully. "What's your idea?" + +Aristide came forward and resumed his place at the end of the table. The +picture was in front of him beneath the strong electric light; on his +left stood Mr. Smith and Poiron, on his right Miss Christabel and the +Honourable Harry. + +"I'll not take three thousand pounds for it," said Aristide. "A picture +like that! Never!" + +"I assure you it would be a fair price," said Poiron. + +"You mentioned that figure yourself only just now," said Mr. Smith, with +an ugly glitter in his little pig's eyes. + +"I presume, gentlemen," said Aristide, "that this picture is my own +property." He turned engagingly to his host. "Is it not, _cher ami_?" + +"Of course it is. Who said it wasn't?" + +"And you, M. Poiron, acknowledge formally that it is mine," he asked, in +French. + +"_Sans aucun doute._" + +"_Eh bien_," said Aristide, throwing open his arms and gazing round +sweetly. "I have changed my mind. I do not sell the picture at all." + +"Not sell it? What the--what do you mean?" asked Mr. Smith, striving to +mellow the gathering thunder on his brow. + +"I do not sell," said Aristide. "Listen, my dear friends!" He was in the +seventh heaven of happiness--the principal man, the star, taking the +centre of the stage. "I have an announcement to make to you. I have +fallen desperately in love with mademoiselle." + +There was a general gasp. Mr. Smith looked at him, red-faced and +open-mouthed. Miss Christabel blushed furiously and emitted a sound half +between a laugh and a scream. Harry Ralston's eyes flashed. + +"My dear sir----" he began. + +"Pardon," said Aristide, disarming him with the merry splendour of his +glance. "I do not wish to take mademoiselle from you. My love is +hopeless! I know it. But it will feed me to my dying day. In return for +the joy of this hopeless passion I will not sell you the picture--I give +it to you as a wedding present." + +He stood, with the air of a hero, both arms extended towards the amazed +pair of lovers. + +"I give it to you," said he. "It is mine. I have no wish but for your +happiness. In my Chateau de Mireilles there are a hundred others." + +"This is madness!" said Mr. Smith, bursting with suppressed indignation, +so that his bald head grew scarlet. + +"My dear fellow!" said Mr. Harry Ralston. "It is unheard-of generosity +on your part. But we can't accept it." + +"Then," said Aristide, advancing dramatically to the picture, "I take it +under my arm, I put it in a hansom cab, and I go with it back to +Languedoc." + +Mr. Smith caught him by the wrist and dragged him out of the room. + +"You little brute! Do you want your neck broken?" + +"Do you want the marriage of your daughter with the rich and Honourable +Harry broken?" asked Aristide. + +"Oh, damn! Oh, damn! Oh, damn!" cried Mr. Smith, stamping about +helplessly and half weeping. + +Aristide entered the dining-room and beamed on the company. + +"The kind Mr. Smith has consented. Mr. Honourable Harry and Miss +Christabel, there is your Corot. And now, may I be permitted?" He rang +the bell. A servant appeared. + +"Some champagne to drink to the health of the fiances," he cried. "Lots +of champagne." + +Mr. Smith looked at him almost admiringly. + +"By Jove!" he muttered. "You _have_ got a nerve." + + * * * * * + +"_Voila!_" said Aristide, when he had finished the story. + +"And did they accept the Corot?" I asked. + +"Of course. It is hanging now in the big house in Hampshire. I stayed +with the kind Mr. Smith for six weeks," he added, doubling himself up in +his chair and hugging himself with mirth, "and we became very good +friends. And I was at the wedding." + +"And what about their honeymoon visit to Languedoc?" + +"Alas!" said Aristide. "The morning before the wedding I had a +telegram--it was from my old father at Aigues-Mortes--to tell me that +the historic Chateau de Mireilles, with my priceless collection of +pictures, had been burned to the ground." + + + + +IV + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE FOUNDLING + + +There was a time when Aristide Pujol, in sole charge of an automobile, +went gaily scuttering over the roads of France. I use the word +advisedly. If you had heard the awful thing as it passed by you would +agree that it is the only word adequate to express its hideous mode of +progression. It was a two-seated, scratched, battered, ramshackle tin +concern of hoary antiquity, belonging to the childhood of the race. Not +only horses, but other automobiles shied at it. It was a vehicle of +derision. Yet Aristide regarded it with glowing pride and drove it with +such daredevilry that the parts must have held together only through +sheer breathless wonder. Had it not been for the car, he told me, he +would not have undertaken the undignified employment in which he was +then engaged--the mountebank selling of a corn-cure in the public places +of small towns and villages. It was not a fitting pursuit for a late +managing director of a public company and an ex-Professor of French in +an English Academy for Young Ladies. He wanted to rise, _ma foi_, not +descend in the social scale. But when hunger drives--_que voulez-vous_? +Besides, there was the automobile. It is true he had bound himself by +his contract to exhibit a board at the back bearing a flaming picture of +the success of the cure and a legend: "_Guerissez vos cors_," and to +display a banner with the same device, when weather permitted. But, +still, there was the automobile. + +It had been lying for many motor-ages in the shed of the proprietors of +the cure, the Maison Hieropath of Marseilles, neglected, forlorn, eaten +by rust and worm, when suddenly an idea occurred to their business +imagination. Why should they not use the automobile to advertise and +sell the cure about the country? The apostle in charge would pay for his +own petrol, take a large percentage on sales, and the usual traveller's +commission on orders that he might place. But where to find an apostle? +Brave and desperate men came in high hopes, looked at the car, and, +shaking their heads sorrowfully, went away. At last, at the loosest of +ends, came Aristide. The splendour of the idea--a poet, in his way, was +Aristide, and the Idea was the thing that always held him captive--the +splendour of the idea of dashing up to hotels in his own automobile +dazed him. He beheld himself doing his hundred kilometres an hour and +trailing clouds of glory whithersoever he went. To a child a moth-eaten +rocking-horse is a fiery Arab of the plains; to Aristide Pujol this +cheat of the scrap-heap was a sixty-horse-power thunderer and devourer +of space. + +How they managed to botch up her interior so that she moved unpushed +is a mystery which Aristide, not divining, could not reveal; and when +and where he himself learned to drive a motor-car is also vague. I +believe the knowledge came by nature. He was a fellow of many weird +accomplishments. He could conjure; he could model birds and beasts out +of breadcrumb; he could play the drum--so well that he had a kettle-drum +hanging round his neck during most of his military service; he could +make omelettes and rabbit-hutches; he could imitate any animal that ever +emitted sound--a gift that endeared him to children; he could do almost +anything you please--save stay in one place and acquire material +possessions. The fact that he had never done a thing before was to him +no proof of his inability to do it. In his superb self-confidence he +would have undertaken to conduct the orchestra at Covent Garden or +navigate a liner across the Atlantic. Knowing this, I cease to bother my +head about so small a matter as the way in which he learned to drive a +motor-car. + +Behold him, then, one raw March morning, scuttering along the road that +leads from Arles to Salon, in Provence. He wore a goat-skin coat and a +goat-skin cap drawn down well over his ears. His handsome bearded face, +with its lustrous, laughing eyes, peeped out curiously human amid the +circumambient shagginess. There was not a turn visible in the long, +straight road that lost itself in the far distant mist; not a speck on +it signifying cart or creature. Aristide Pujol gave himself up to the +delirium of speed and urged the half-bursting engine to twenty miles an +hour. In spite of the racing-track surface, the crazy car bumped and +jolted; the sides of the rickety bonnet clashed like cymbals; every +valve wheezed and squealed; every nut seemed to have got loose and +terrifically clattered; rattling noises, grunting noises, screeching +noises escaped from every part; it creaked and clanked like an +over-insured tramp-steamer in a typhoon; it lurched as though afflicted +with loco-motor ataxy; and noisome vapours belched forth from the open +exhaust-pipe as though the car were a Tophet on wheels. But all was +music in the ears of Aristide. The car was going (it did not always go), +the road scudded under him, and the morning air dashed stingingly into +his face. For the moment he desired nothing more of life. + +This road between Arles and Salon runs through one of the most desolate +parts of France: a long, endless plain, about five miles broad, lying +between two long low ranges of hills. It is strewn like a monstrous +Golgotha, not with skulls, but with huge smooth pebbles, as massed +together as the shingle on a beach. Rank grass shoots up in what +interstices it finds; but beyond this nothing grows. Nothing can grow. +On a sunless day under a lowering sky it is a land accursed. Mile after +mile for nearly twenty miles stretches this stony and barren waste. No +human habitation cheers the sight, for from such a soil no human hand +could wrest a sustenance. Only the rare traffic going from Arles to +Salon and from Salon to Arles passes along the road. The cheery passing +show of the live highway is wanting; there are no children, no dogs, +no ducks and hens, no men and women lounging to their work; no +red-trousered soldiers on bicycles, no blue-bloused, weather-beaten +farmers jogging along in their little carts. As far as the eye can reach +nothing suggestive of man meets the view. Nothing but the infinite +barrenness of the plain, the ridges on either side, the long, straight, +endless road cleaving through this abomination of desolation. + +To walk through it would be a task as depressing as mortal could +execute. But to the speed-drunken motorist it is a realization of dim +and tremulous visions of Paradise. What need to look to right or left +when you are swallowing up free mile after mile of dizzying road? +Aristide looked neither to right nor left, and knew this was heaven at +last. + + [Illustration: BETWEEN THE FOLDS OF THE BLANKET PEEPED THE FACE OF A + SLEEPING CHILD] + +Suddenly, however, he became aware of a small black spot far ahead in +the very middle of the unencumbered track. As he drew near it looked +like a great stone. He swerved as he passed it, and, looking, saw that +it was a bundle wrapped in a striped blanket. It seemed so odd that it +should be lying there that, his curiosity being aroused, he pulled up +and walked back a few yards to examine it. The nearer he approached the +less did it resemble an ordinary bundle. He bent down, and lo! between +the folds of the blanket peeped the face of a sleeping child. + +"_Nom de Dieu!_" cried Aristide. "_Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" + +He ought not to have said it, but his astonishment was great. He stared +at the baby, then up and down the road, then swept the horizon. Not a +soul was visible. How did the baby get there? The heavens, according to +history, have rained many things in their time: bread, quails, blood, +frogs, and what not; but there is no mention of them ever having rained +babies. It could not, therefore, have come from the clouds. It could not +even have fallen from the tail of a cart, for then it would have been +killed, or at least have broken its bones and generally been rendered a +different baby from the sound, chubby mite sleeping as peacefully as +though the Golgotha of Provence had been its cradle from birth. It could +not have come there accidentally. Deliberate hands had laid it down; in +the centre of the road, too. Why not by the side, where it would have +been out of the track of thundering automobiles? When the murderous +intent became obvious Aristide shivered and felt sick. He breathed +fierce and honest anathema on the heads of the bowelless fiends who had +abandoned the babe to its doom. Then he stooped and picked up the bundle +tenderly in his arms. + +The wee face puckered for a moment and the wee limbs shot out +vigorously; then the dark eyes opened and stared Aristide solemnly and +wonderingly in the face. So must the infant Remus have first regarded +his she-wolf mother. Having ascertained, however, that it was not going +to be devoured, it began to cry lustily, showing two little white specks +of teeth in the lower gum. + +"_Mon pauvre petit_, you are hungry," said Aristide, carrying it to the +car racked by the clattering engine. "I wonder when you last tasted +food? If I only had a little biscuit and wine to give you; but, alas! +there's nothing but petrol and corn-cure, neither of which, I believe, +is good for babies. Wait, wait, _mon cheri_, until we get to Salon. +There I promise you proper nourishment." + +He danced the baby up and down in his arms and made half-remembered and +insane noises, which eventually had the effect of reducing it to its +original calm stare of wonderment. + +"_Voila_," said Aristide, delighted. "Now we can advance." + +He deposited it on the vacant seat, clambered up behind the wheel, and +started. But not at the break-neck speed of twenty miles an hour. He +went slowly and carefully, his heart in his mouth at every lurch of the +afflicted automobile, fearful lest the child should be precipitated from +its slippery resting-place. But, alas! he did not proceed far. At the +end of a kilometre the engine stopped dead. He leaped out to see what +had happened, and, after a few perplexed and exhausting moments, +remembered. He had not even petrol to offer to the baby, having +omitted--most feather-headed of mortals--to fill up his tank before +starting, and forgotten to bring a spare tin. There was nothing to be +done save wait patiently until another motorist should pass by from whom +he might purchase the necessary amount of essence to carry him on to +Salon. Meanwhile the baby would go breakfastless. Aristide clambered +back to his seat, took the child on his knees, and commiserated it +profoundly. Sitting there on his apparently home-made vehicle, in the +midst of the unearthly silence of the sullen and barren wilderness, +attired in his shaggy goat-skin cap and coat, he resembled an up-to-date +Robinson Crusoe dandling an infant Friday. + +The disposal of the child at Salon would be simple. After having it fed +and tended at an hotel, he would make his deposition to the police, who +would take it to the Enfants Trouves, the department of State which +provides fathers and mothers and happy homes for foundlings at a cost to +the country of twenty-five francs a month per foundling. It is true that +the parents so provided think more of the twenty-five francs than they +do of the foundling. But that was the affair of the State, not of +Aristide Pujol. In the meanwhile he examined the brat curiously. It was +dressed in a coarse calico jumper, very unclean. The striped blanket was +full of holes and smelled abominably. Some sort of toilet appeared +essential. He got down and from his valise took what seemed necessary to +the purpose. The jumper and blanket he threw far on the pebbly waste. +The baby, stark naked for a few moments, crowed and laughed and +stretched like a young animal, revealing itself to be a sturdy boy about +nine months old. When he seemed fit to be clad Aristide tied him up in +the lower part of a suit of pyjamas, cutting little holes in the sides +for his tiny arms; and, further, with a view to cheating his hunger, +provided him with a shoe-horn. The defenceless little head he managed to +squeeze into the split mouth of a woollen sock. Aristide regarded him in +triumph. The boy chuckled gleefully. Then Aristide folded him warm in +his travelling-rug and entered into an animated conversation. + +Now it happened that, at the most interesting point of the talk, the +baby clutched Aristide's finger in his little brown hand. The tiny +fingers clung strong. + +A queer thrill ran through the impressionable man. The tiny fingers +seemed to close round his heart.... It was a bonny, good-natured, +gurgling scrap--and the pure eyes looked truthfully into his soul. + +"Poor little wretch!" said Aristide, who, peasant's son that he was, +knew what he was talking about. "Poor little wretch! If you go into the +Enfants Trouves you'll have a devil of a time of it." + +The tiny clasp tightened. As if the babe understood, the chuckle died +from his face. + +"You'll be cuffed and kicked and half starved, while your adopted mother +pockets her twenty-five francs a month, and you'll belong to nobody, and +wonder why the deuce you're alive, and wish you were dead; and, if you +remember to-day, you'll curse me for not having had the decency to run +over you." + +The clasp relaxed, puckers appeared at the corners of the dribbling +mouth, and a myriad tiny horizontal lines of care marked the sock-capped +brow. + +"Poor little devil!" said Aristide. "My heart bleeds for you, especially +now that you're dressed in my sock and pyjama, and are sucking the only +shoe-horn I ever possessed." + +A welcome sound caused Aristide to leap into the middle of the road. He +looked ahead, and there, in a cloud of dust, a thing like a torpedo came +swooping down. He held up both his arms, the signal of a motorist in +distress. The torpedo approached with slackened speed, and stopped. It +was an evil-looking, drab, high-powered racer, and two bears with +goggles sat in the midst thereof. The bear at the wheel raised his cap +and asked courteously:-- + +"What can we do for you, monsieur?" + +At that moment the baby broke into heart-rending cries. Aristide took +off his goat-skin cap and, remaining uncovered, looked at the bear, then +at the baby, then at the bear again. + +"Monsieur," said he, "I suppose it's useless to ask you whether you have +any milk and a feeding-bottle?" + +"_Mais dites donc!_" shouted the bear, furiously, his hand on the brake. +"Stop an automobile like this on such a pretext----?" + +Aristide held up a protesting hand, and fixed the bear with the +irresistible roguery of his eyes. + +"Pardon, monsieur, I am also out of petrol. Forgive a father's feelings. +The baby wants milk and I want petrol, and I don't know whose need is +the more imperative. But if you could sell me enough petrol to carry me +to Salon I should be most grateful." + +The request for petrol is not to be refused. To supply it, if possible, +is the written law of motordom. The second bear slid from his seat and +extracted a tin from the recesses of the torpedo, and stood by while +Aristide filled his tank, a process that necessitated laying the baby on +the ground. He smiled. + +"You seem amused," said Aristide. + +"_Parbleu!_" said the motorist. "You have at the back of your auto a +placard telling people to cure their corns, and in front you carry a +baby." + +"That," replied Aristide, "is easily understood. I am the agent of the +Maison Hieropath of Marseilles, and the baby, whom I, its father, am +carrying from a dead mother to an invalid aunt, I am using as an +advertisement. As he luckily has no corns, I can exhibit his feet as a +proof of the efficacy of the corn-cure." + +The bear laughed and joined his companion, and the torpedo thundered +away. Aristide replaced the baby, and with a complicated arrangement of +string fastened it securely to the seat. The baby, having ceased crying, +clutched his beard as he bent over, and "goo'd" pleasantly. The tug was +at his heart-strings. How could he give so fascinating, so valiant a +mite over to the Enfants Trouves? Besides, it belonged to him. Had he +not in jest claimed paternity? It had given him a new importance. He +could say "_mon fils_," just as he could say (with equal veracity) "_mon +automobile_." A generous thrill ran through him. He burst into a loud +laugh, clapped his hands, and danced before the delighted babe. + +"_Mon petit Jean_," said he, with humorous tenderness, "for I suppose +your name is Jean; I will rend myself in pieces before I let the +Administration board you out among the wolves. You shall not go to the +Enfants Trouves. I myself will adopt you, _mon petit Jean_." + +As Aristide had no fixed abode whatever, the address on his +visiting-card, "213 bis, Rue Saint-Honore, Paris," being that of an old +greengrocer woman of his acquaintance, with whom he lodged when he +visited the metropolis, there was a certain amount of rashness in the +undertaking. But when was Aristide otherwise than rash? Had prudence +been his guiding principle through life he would not have been selling +corn-cure for the Maison Hieropath, and consequently would not have +discovered the child at all. + +In great delight at this satisfactory settlement of little Jean's +destiny, he started the ramshackle engine and drove triumphantly on his +way. Jean, fatigued by the emotions of the last half-hour, slumbered +peacefully. + +"The little angel!" said Aristide. + +The sun was shining when they arrived at Salon, the gayest, the most +coquettish, the most laughing little town in Provence. It is a place all +trees and open spaces, and fountains and cafes, and sauntering people. +The only thing grim about it is the solitary machicolated tower in the +main street, the last vestige of ancient ramparts; and even that, close +cuddled on each side by prosperous houses with shops beneath, looks +like an old, old, wrinkled grandmother smiling amid her daintier +grandchildren. Everyone seemed to be in the open air. Those who kept +shops stood at the doorways. The prospect augured well for the Maison +Hieropath. + +Aristide stopped before an hotel, disentangled Jean, to the mild +interest of the passers-by, and, carrying him in, delivered him into the +arms of the landlady. + +"Madame," he said, "this is my son. I am taking him from his mother, who +is dead, to an aunt who is an invalid. So he is alone on my hands. He is +very hungry, and I beseech you to feed him at once." + +The motherly woman received the babe instinctively and cast aside the +travelling-rug in which he was enveloped. Then she nearly dropped him. + +"_Mon Dieu! Qu'est-ce que c'est que ca?_" + +She stared in stupefaction at the stocking-cap and at the long flannel +pyjama legs that depended from the body of the infant, around whose +neck the waist was tightly drawn. Never since the world began had babe +masqueraded in such attire. Aristide smiled his most engaging smile. + +"My son's luggage has unfortunately been lost. His portmanteau, _pauvre +petit_, was so small. A poor widower, I did what I could. I am but a +mere man, madame." + +"Evidently," said the woman, with some asperity. + +Aristide took a louis from his purse. "If you will purchase him some +necessary articles of costume while I fulfil my duties towards the +Maison Hieropath of Marseilles, which I represent, you will be doing me +a kindness." + +The landlady took the louis in a bewildered fashion. Allowing for the +baby's portmanteau to have gone astray, what, she asked, had become +of the clothes he must have been wearing? Aristide entered upon a +picturesque and realistic explanation. The landlady was stout, she was +stupid, she could not grasp the fantastic. + +"_Mon Dieu!_" she said. "To think that there are Christians who dress +their children like this!" She sighed exhaustively, and, holding the +grotesque infant close to her breast, disappeared indignantly to +administer the very greatly needed motherment. + + [Illustration: HE DEMONSTRATED THE PROPER APPLICATION OF THE CURE] + +Aristide breathed a sigh of relief, and after a well-earned _dejeuner_ +went forth with the car into the Place des Arbres and prepared to ply +his trade. First he unfurled the Hieropath banner, which floated +proudly in the breeze. Then on a folding table he displayed his +collection of ointment-boxes (together with pills and a toothache-killer +which he sold on his own account) and a wax model of a human foot on +which were grafted putty corns in every stage of callosity. As soon as +half-a-dozen idlers collected he commenced his harangue. When their +numbers increased he performed prodigies of chiropody on the putty +corns, and demonstrated the proper application of the cure. He talked +incessantly all the while. He has told me, in the grand manner, that +this phase of his career was distasteful to him. But I scarcely believe +it. If ever a man loved to talk, it was Aristide Pujol; and what +profession, save that of an advocate, offers more occasion for wheedling +loquacity than that of a public vendor of quack medicaments? As a matter +of fact, he revelled in it. When he offered a free box of the cure to +the first lady who confessed the need thereof, and a blushing wench came +forward, the rascal revelled in the opportunity for badinage which set +the good-humoured crowd in a roar. He loved to exert his half-mesmeric +power. He had not the soul of a mountebank, for Aristide's soul had its +high and generous dwelling-place; but he had the puckish swiftness and +mischief of which the successful mountebank is made. And he was a +success because he treated it as an art, thinking nothing during its +practice of the material gain, laughing whole-heartedly, like his great +predecessor Tabarin of imperishable memory, and satisfying to the full +his instinct for the dramatic. On the other hand, ever since he started +life in the brass-buttoned shell-jacket of a _chasseur_ in a Marseilles +cafe, and dreamed dreams of the fairytale lives of the clients who +came in accompanied by beautifully dressed ladies, he had social +ambitions--and the social status of the mountebank is, to say the least +of it, ambiguous. Ah me! What would man be without the unattainable? + +Aristide pocketed his takings, struck his flag, dismantled his table, +and visited the shops of Salon in the interests of the Maison Hieropath. +The day's work over, he returned to inquire for his supposititious +offspring. The landlady, all smiles, presented him with a transmogrified +Jean, cleansed and powdered, arrayed in the smug panoply of bourgeois +babyhood. Shoes with a pompon adorned his feet, and a rakish cap +decorated with white satin ribbons crowned his head. He also wore an +embroidered frock and a pelisse trimmed with rabbit-fur. Jean grinned +and dribbled self-consciously, and showed his two little teeth to the +proudest father in the world. The landlady invited the happy parent into +her little dark parlour beyond the office, and there exhibited a parcel +containing garments and implements whose use was a mystery to Aristide. +She also demanded the greater part of another louis. Aristide began to +learn that fatherhood is expensive. But what did it matter? + +After all, here was a babe equipped to face the exigencies of a +censorious world; in looks and apparel a credit to any father. As the +afternoon was fine, and as it seemed a pity to waste satin and +rabbit-fur on the murky interior of the hotel, Aristide borrowed a +perambulator from the landlady, and, joyous as a schoolboy, wheeled the +splendid infant through the sunny avenues of Salon. + +That evening a bed was made up for the child in Aristide's room, which, +until its master retired for the night, was haunted by the landlady, the +chambermaids and all the kitchen wenches in the hotel. Aristide had to +turn them out and lock his door. + +"This is excellent," said he, apostrophizing the thoroughly fed, washed, +and now sleeping child. "This is superb. As in every hotel there are +women, and as every woman thinks she can be a much better mother than I, +so in every hotel we visit we shall find a staff of trained and +enthusiastic nurses. Jean, you will live like a little _coq en pate_." + +The night passed amid various excursions on the part of Aristide and +alarms on the part of Jean. Sometimes the child lay so still that +Aristide arose to see whether he was alive. Sometimes he gave such +proofs of vitality that Aristide, in terror lest he should awaken the +whole hotel, walked him about the room chanting lullabies. This was in +accordance with Jean's views on luxury. He "goo'd" with joy. When +Aristide put him back to bed he howled. Aristide snatched him up and +he "goo'd" again. At last Aristide fed him desperately, dandled him +eventually to sleep, and returned to an excited pillow. It is a fearsome +thing for a man to be left alone in the dead of night with a young baby. + +"I'll get used to it," said Aristide. + +The next morning he purchased a basket, which he lashed ingeniously on +the left-hand seat of the car, and a cushion, which he fitted into the +basket. The berth prepared, he deposited the sumptuously-apparelled Jean +therein and drove away, amid the perplexed benisons of the landlady and +her satellites. + +Thus began the oddest Odyssey on which ever mortals embarked. The man +with the automobile, the corn-cure, and the baby grew to be legendary in +the villages of Provence. When the days were fine, Jean in his basket +assisted at the dramatic performance in the market-place. Becoming a +magnet for the women, and being of a good-humoured and rollicking +nature, he helped on the sale of the cure prodigiously. He earned his +keep, as Aristide declared in exultation. Soon Aristide formed a +collection of his tricks and doings wherewith he would entertain the +chance acquaintances of his vagabondage. To a permanent companion he +would have grown insufferable. He invented him a career from the day of +his birth, chronicled the coming of the first tooth, wept over the +demise of the fictitious mother, and, in his imaginative way, convinced +himself of his fatherhood. And every day the child crept deeper into the +man's sunny heart. + + [Illustration: IT IS A FEARSOME THING FOR A MAN TO BE LEFT ALONE IN THE + DEAD OF NIGHT WITH A YOUNG BABY] + +Together they had many wanderings and many adventures. The wheezy, crazy +mechanism of the car went to bits in unexpected places. They tobogganed +down hills without a brake at the imminent peril of their lives. They +suffered the indignity of being towed by wine-wagons. They spent hours +by the wayside while Aristide took her to pieces and, sometimes with the +help of a passing motorist, put her together again. Sometimes, too, an +inn boasted no landlady, only a dishevelled and over-driven chambermaid, +who refused to wash Jean. Aristide washed and powdered Jean himself, the +landlord lounging by, pipe in mouth, administering suggestions. Once +Jean grew ill, and Aristide in terror summoned the doctor, who told him +that he had filled the child up with milk to bursting-point. Yet, in +spite of heterogeneous nursing and exposure to sun and rain and piercing +mistral, Jean throve exceedingly, and, to Aristide's delight, began to +cut another tooth. The vain man began to regard himself as an expert in +denticulture. + +At the end of a fairly-wide circuit, Aristide, with empty store-boxes +and pleasantly-full pockets, arrived at the little town of +Aix-en-Provence. He had arrived there not without difficulty. On the +outskirts the car, which had been coaxed reluctantly along for many +weary kilometres, had groaned, rattled, whirred, given a couple of +convulsive leaps, and stood stock-still. This was one of her pretty +ways. He was used to them, and hitherto he had been able to wheedle +her into resumed motion. But this time, with all his cunning and +perspiration, he could not induce another throb in the tired engines. +A friendly motorist towed them to the Hotel de Paris in the Cours +Mirabeau. Having arranged for his room and given Jean in charge of the +landlady, he procured some helping hands, and pushed the car to the +nearest garage. There he gave orders for the car to be put into running +condition for the following morning, and returned to the hotel. + +He found Jean in the vestibule, sprawling sultanesquely on the +landlady's lap, the centre of an admiring circle which consisted of two +little girls in pigtails, an ancient peasant-woman, and two English +ladies of obvious but graceful spinsterhood. + +"Here is the father," said the landlady. + +He had already explained Jean to the startled woman--landladies were +always startled at Jean's unconventional advent. "Madame," he had said, +according to rigid formula, "this is my son. I am taking him from his +mother, who is dead, to an aunt who is an invalid, so he is alone on my +hands. I beseech you to let some kind woman attend to his necessities." + +There was no need for further explanation. Aristide, thus introduced, +bowed politely, removed his Crusoe cap, and smiled luminously at the +assembled women. They resumed their antiphonal chorus of worship. The +brown, merry, friendly brat had something of Aristide's personal charm. +He had a bubble and a "goo" for everyone. Aristide looked on in great +delight. Jean was a son to be proud of. + +"_Ah! qu'il est fort--fort comme un Turc._" + +"_Regardez ses dents._" + +"The darling thing!" + +"_Il est_--oh, dear!--_il est ravissante!_"--with a disastrous plunge +into gender. + +"_Tiens! il rit. C'est moi qui le fais rire._" + +"To think," said the younger Englishwoman to her sister, "of this wee +mite travelling about in an open motor!" + +"He's having the time of his life. He enjoys it as much as I do," said +Aristide, in his excellent English. + +The lady started. She was a well-bred, good-humoured woman in the early +thirties, stout, with reddish hair, and irregular though comely +features. Her sister was thin, faded, sandy, and kind-looking. + +"I thought you were French," she said, apologetically. + +"So I am," replied Aristide. "Provencal of Provence, Meridional of the +Midi, Marseillais of Marseilles." + +"But you talk English perfectly." + +"I've lived in your beautiful country," said Aristide. + +"You have the bonniest boy," said the elder lady. "How old is he?" + +"Nine months, three weeks and a day," said Aristide, promptly. + +The younger lady bent over the miraculous infant. + +"Can I take him? _Est-ce que je puis_--oh, dear!" She turned a whimsical +face to Aristide. + +He translated. The landlady surrendered the babe. The lady danced him +with the spinster's charming awkwardness, yet with instinctive feminine +security, about the hall, while the little girls in pigtails, daughters +of the house, followed like adoratory angels in an altar-piece, and the +old peasant-woman looked benignly on, a myriad-wrinkled St. Elizabeth. +Aristide had seen Jean dandled by dozens of women during their brief +comradeship; he had thought little of it, as it was the natural thing +for women to do; but when this sweet English lady mothered Jean it +seemed to matter a great deal. She lifted Jean and himself to a higher +plane. Her touch was a consecration. + +It was the hour of the day when infants of nine months should be washed +and put to bed. The landlady, announcing the fact, held out her arms. +Jean clung to his English nurse, who played the fascinating game of +pretending to eat his hand. The landlady had not that accomplishment. +She was dull and practical. + +"Come and be washed," she said. + +"Oh, do let me come, too," cried the English lady. + +"_Bien volontiers, mademoiselle_," said the other. "_C'est par ici._" + +The English lady held Jean out for the paternal good-night. Aristide +kissed the child in her arms. The action brought about, for the moment, +a curious and sweet intimacy. + +"My sister is passionately fond of children," said the elder lady, in +smiling apology. + +"And you?" + +"I, too. But Anne--my sister--will not let me have a chance when she is +by." + +After dinner Aristide went up, as usual, to his room to see that Jean +was alive, painless, and asleep. Finding him awake, he sat by his side +and, with the earnestness of a nursery-maid, patted him off to slumber. +Then he crept out on tiptoe and went downstairs. Outside the hotel he +came upon the two sisters sitting on a bench and drinking coffee. The +night was fine, the terraces of the neighbouring cafes were filled with +people, and all the life of Aix not at the cafes promenaded up and down +the wide and pleasant avenue. The ladies smiled. How was the boy? He +gave the latest news. Permission to join them at their coffee was +graciously given. A waiter brought a chair and he sat down. Conversation +drifted from the baby to general topics. The ladies told the simple +story of their tour. They had been to Nice and Marseilles, and they were +going on the next day to Avignon. They also told their name--Honeywood. +He gathered that the elder was Janet, the younger Anne. They lived at +Chislehurst when they were in England, and often came up to London to +attend the Queen's Hall concerts and the dramatic performances at His +Majesty's Theatre. As guileless, though as self-reliant, gentlewomen +as sequestered England could produce. Aristide, impressionable and +responsive, fell at once into the key of their talk. He has told me that +their society produced on him the effect of the cool hands of saints +against his cheek. + +At last the conversation inevitably returned to Jean. The landlady had +related the tragic history of the dead mother and the invalid aunt. They +deplored the orphaned state of the precious babe. For he was precious, +they declared. Miss Anne had taken him to her heart. + +"If only you had seen him in his bath, Janet!" + +She turned to Aristide. "I'm afraid," she said, very softly, hesitating +a little--"I'm afraid this must be a sad journey for you." + +He made a wry mouth. The sympathy was so sincere, so womanly. That which +was generous in him revolted against acceptance. + +"Mademoiselle," said he, "I can play a farce with landladies--it happens +to be convenient--in fact, necessary. But with you--no. You are +different. Jean is not my child, and who his parents are I've not the +remotest idea." + +"Not your child?" They looked at him incredulously. + +"I will tell you--in confidence," said he. + +Jean's history was related in all its picturesque details; the horrors +of the life of an _enfant trouve_ luridly depicted. The sisters listened +with tears in their foolish eyes. Behind the tears Anne's grew bright. +When he had finished she stretched out her hand impulsively. + +"Oh, I call it splendid of you!" + +He took the hand and, in his graceful French fashion, touched it with +his lips. She flushed, having expected, in her English way, that he +would grasp it. + +"Your commendation, mademoiselle, is sweet to hear," said he. + +"I hope he will grow up to be a true comfort to you, M. Pujol," said +Miss Janet. + +"I can understand a woman doing what you've done, but scarcely a man," +said Miss Anne. + +"But, dear mademoiselle," cried Aristide, with a large gesture, "cannot +a man have his heart touched, his--his--_ses entrailles, enfin_--stirred +by baby fingers? Why should love of the helpless and the innocent be +denied him?" + +"Why, indeed?" said Miss Janet. + +Miss Anne said, humbly: "I only meant that your devotion to Jean was all +the more beautiful, M. Pujol." + +Soon after this they parted, the night air having grown chill. Both +ladies shook hands with him warmly. + +Anne's hand lingered the fraction of a second longer in his than +Janet's. She had seen Jean in his bath. + +Aristide wandered down the gay avenue into the open road and looked at +the stars, reading in their splendour a brilliant destiny for Jean. He +felt, in his sensitive way, that the two sweet-souled Englishwomen had +deepened and sanctified his love for Jean. When he returned to the hotel +he kissed his incongruous room-mate with the gentleness of a woman. + +In the morning he went round to the garage. The foreman mechanician +advanced to meet him. + +"Well?" + +"There is nothing to be done, monsieur." + +"What do you mean by 'nothing to be done'?" asked Aristide. + +The other shrugged his sturdy shoulders. + +"She is worn out. She needs new carburation, new cylinders, new +water-circulation, new lubrication, new valves, new brakes, new +ignition, new gears, new bolts, new nuts, new everything. In short, she +is not repairable." + +Aristide listened in incredulous amazement. His automobile, his +wonderful, beautiful, clashing, dashing automobile unrepairable! It was +impossible. But a quarter of an hour's demonstration by the foreman +convinced him. The car was dead. The engine would never whir again. All +the petrol in the world would not stimulate her into life. Never again +would he sit behind that wheel rejoicing in the insolence of speed. The +car, which, in spite of her manifold infirmities, he had fondly imagined +to be immortal, had run her last course. Aristide felt faint. + +"And there is nothing to be done?" + +"Nothing, monsieur. Fifty francs is all that she is worth." + +"At any rate," said Aristide, "send the basket to the Hotel de Paris." + +He went out of the garage like a man in a dream. At the door he turned +to take a last look at the Pride of his Life. Her stern was towards him, +and all he saw of her was the ironical legend, "Cure your Corns." + +At the hotel he found the bench outside occupied chiefly by Jean. One +of the little girls in pigtails was holding him, while Miss Anne +administered the feeding-bottle. Provincial France is the happiest +country in the world--in that you can live your intimate, domestic life +in public, and nobody heeds. + +"I hope you've not come to tell Jean to boot and saddle," said Miss +Anne, a smile on her roughly-hewn, comely face. + +"Alas!" said Aristide, cheered by the charming spectacle before him. "I +don't know when we can get away. My auto has broken down hopelessly. I +ought to go at once to my firm in Marseilles"--he spoke as if he were a +partner in the Maison Hieropath--"but I don't quite know what to do with +Jean." + +"Oh, I'll look after Jean." + +"But you said you were leaving for Avignon to-day." + + [Illustration: ONE OF THE LITTLE GIRLS IN PIGTAILS WAS HOLDING HIM, + WHILE MISS ANNE ADMINISTERED THE FEEDING-BOTTLE] + +She laughed, holding the feeding-bottle. "The Palace of the Popes has +been standing for six centuries, and it will be still standing +to-morrow; whereas Jean----" Here Jean, for some reason known to +himself, grinned wet and wide. "Isn't he the most fascinating thing of +the twentieth century?" she cried, logically inconsequential, like most +of her sex. "You go to Marseilles, M. Pujol." + +So Aristide took the train to Marseilles--a half-hour's journey--and in +a quarter of the city resembling a fusion of Jarrow, an unfashionable +part of St. Louis, and a brimstone-manufacturing suburb of Gehenna, he +interviewed the high authorities of the Maison Hieropath. His cajolery +could lead men into diverse lunacies, but it could not induce the +hard-bitten manufacturer of quack remedies to provide a brand-new +automobile for his personal convenience. The old auto had broken down. +The manufacturer shrugged his shoulders. The mystery was that it had +lasted as long as it did. He had expected it to explode the first +day. The idea had originally been that of the junior partner, a +scatter-brained youth whom at times they humoured. Meanwhile, there +being no beplacarded and beflagged automobile, there could be no +advertisement; therefore they had no further use for M. Pujol's +services. + +"Good," said Aristide, when he reached the evil thoroughfare. "It was a +degraded occupation, and I am glad I am out of it. Meanwhile, here is +Marseilles before me, and it will be astonishing if I do not find some +fresh road to fortune before the day is out." + +Aristide tramped and tramped all day through the streets of Marseilles, +but the road he sought he did not find. He returned to Aix in dire +perplexity. He was used to finding himself suddenly cut off from the +means of livelihood. It was his chronic state of being. His gay +resourcefulness had always carried him through. But then there had been +only himself to think of. Now there was Jean. For the first time for +many years the dragon-fly's wings grew limp. Jean--what could he do with +Jean? + +Jean had already gone to sleep when he arrived. All day he had been as +good as gold, so Miss Anne declared. For herself, she had spent the +happiest day of her life. + +"I don't wonder at your being devoted to him, M. Pujol," she said. "He +has the most loving ways of any baby I ever met." + +"Yes, mademoiselle," replied Aristide, with an unaccustomed huskiness in +his voice, "I am devoted to him. It may seem odd for a man to be wrapped +up in a baby of nine months old--but--it's like that. It's true. _Je +l'adore de tout mon coeur, de tout mon etre_," he cried, in a sudden +gust of passion. + +Miss Anne smiled kindly, not dreaming of his perplexity, amused by his +Southern warmth. Miss Janet joined them in the hall. They went in to +dinner, Aristide sitting at the central _table d'hote_, the ladies at a +little table by themselves. After dinner they met again outside the +hotel, and drank coffee and talked the evening away. He was not as +bright a companion as on the night before. His gaiety was forced. He +talked about everything else in the world but Jean. The temptation to +pour his financial troubles into the sympathetic ears of these two dear +women he resisted. They regarded him as on a social equality, as a man +of means engaged in some sort of business at Marseilles; they had +invited him to bring Jean to see them at Chislehurst when he should +happen to be in England again. Pride forbade him to confess himself a +homeless, penniless vagabond. The exquisite charm of their frank +intimacy would be broken. Besides, what could they do? + +They retired early. Aristide again sought the message of the stars; but +the sky was clouded over, and soon a fine rain began to fall. A bock at +a cafe brought him neither comfort nor inspiration. He returned to the +hotel, and, eluding a gossip-seeking landlady, went up to his room. + +What could be done? Neither the sleeping babe nor himself could offer +any suggestion. One thing was grimly inevitable. He and Jean must part. +To carry him about like an infant prince in an automobile had, after +all, been a simple matter; to drag him through Heaven knew what +hardships in his makeshift existence was impossible. In his childlike, +impulsive fashion he had not thought of the future when he adopted Jean. +Aristide always regarded the fortune of the moment as if it would last +forever. Past deceptions never affected his incurable optimism. Now Jean +and he must part. Aristide felt that the end of the world had come. His +pacing to and fro awoke the child, who demanded, in his own way, the +soothing rocking of his father's arms. There he bubbled and "goo'd" till +Aristide's heart nearly broke. + +"What can I do with you, _mon petit Jean_?" + +The Enfants Trouves, after all? He thought of it with a shudder. + +The child asleep again, he laid it on its bed, and then sat far into the +night thinking barrenly. At last one of his sudden gleams of inspiration +illuminated his mind. It was the only way. He took out his watch. It was +four o'clock. What had to be done must be done swiftly. + +In the travelling-basket, which had been sent from the garage, he placed +a pillow, and on to the pillow he transferred with breathless care the +sleeping Jean, and wrapped him up snug and warm in bedclothes. Then he +folded the tiny day-garments that lay on a chair, collected the little +odds and ends belonging to the child, took from his valise the rest of +Jean's little wardrobe, and laid them at the foot of the basket. The +most miserable man in France then counted up his money, divided it into +two parts, and wrote a hasty letter, which, with the bundle of notes, he +enclosed in an envelope. + +"My little Jean," said he, laying the envelope on the child's breast. +"Here is a little more than half my fortune. Half is for yourself and +the little more to pay your wretched father's hotel bill. Good-bye, my +little Jean. _Je t'aime bien, tu sais_--and don't reproach me." + + * * * * * + +About an hour afterwards Miss Anne awoke and listened, and in a moment +or two Miss Janet awoke also. + +"Janet, do you hear that?" + +"It's a child crying. It's just outside the door." + +"It sounds like Jean." + +"Nonsense, my dear!" + +But Anne switched on the light and went to see for herself; and there, +in the tiny anteroom that separated the bedroom from the corridor, she +found the basket--a new Pharoah's daughter before a new little Moses in +the bulrushes. In bewilderment she brought the ark into the room, and +read the letter addressed to Janet and herself. She burst into tears. +All she said was:-- + +"Oh, Janet, why couldn't he have told us?" + +And then she fell to hugging the child to her bosom. + +Meanwhile Aristide Pujol, clad in his goat-skin cap and coat, valise in +hand, was plodding through the rain in search of the elusive phantom, +Fortune; gloriously certain that he had assured Jean's future, yet with +such a heartache as he had never had in his life before. + + + + +V + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE PIG'S HEAD + + +Once upon a time Aristide Pujol found himself standing outside his Paris +residence, No. 213 _bis_, Rue Saint Honore, without a penny in the +world. His last sou had gone to Madame Bidoux, who kept a small green +grocer's shop at No. 213 _bis_ and rented a ridiculously small back room +for a ridiculously small weekly sum to Aristide whenever he honoured the +French capital with his presence. During his absence she forwarded him +such letters as might arrive for him; and as this was his only permanent +address, and as he let Madame Bidoux know his whereabouts only at vague +intervals of time, the transaction of business with Aristide Pujol, +"Agent, No. 213 _bis_, Rue Saint Honore, Paris," by correspondence was +peculiarly difficult. + +He had made Madame Bidoux's acquaintance in the dim past; and he had +made it in his usual direct and electric manner. Happening to walk down +the Rue Saint Honore, he had come upon tragedy. Madame Bidoux, fat, red +of face, tearful of eye and strident of voice, held in her arms a +little mongrel dog--her own precious possession--which had just been run +over in the street, and the two of them filled the air with wailings and +vociferation. Aristide uncovered his head, as though he were about to +address a duchess, and smiled at her engagingly. + +"Madame," said he, "I perceive that your little dog has a broken leg. As +I know all about dogs, I will, with your permission, set the limb, put +it into splints and guarantee a perfect cure. Needless to say, I make no +charge for my services." + +Snatching the dog from the arms of the fascinated woman, he darted in +his dragon-fly fashion into the shop, gave a hundred orders to a +stupefied assistant, and--to cut short a story which Aristide told me +with great wealth of detail--mended the precious dog and gained Madame +Bidoux's eternal gratitude. For Madame Bidoux the world held no more +remarkable man than Aristide Pujol; and for Aristide the world held no +more devoted friend than Madame Bidoux. Many a succulent meal, at the +widow's expense--never more enjoyable than in summer time when she set a +little iron table and a couple of iron chairs on the pavement outside +the shop--had saved him from starvation; and many a gewgaw sent from +London or Marseilles or other such remote latitudes filled her heart +with pride. Since my acquaintance with Aristide I myself have called on +this excellent woman, and I hope I have won her esteem, though I have +never had the honour of eating pig's trotters and chou-croute with her +on the pavement of the Rue Saint Honore. It is an honour from which, +being an unassuming man, I shrink. + +Unfortunately Madame Bidoux has nothing further to do with the story I +am about to relate, save in one respect:-- + +There came a day--it was a bleak day in November, when Madame Bidoux's +temporary financial difficulties happened to coincide with Aristide's. +To him, unsuspicious of coincidence, she confided her troubles. He +emptied the meagre contents of his purse into her hand. + +"Madame Bidoux," said he with a flourish, and the air of a prince, "why +didn't you tell me before?" and without waiting for her blessing he went +out penniless into the street. + +Aristide was never happier than when he had not a penny piece in the +world. He believed, I fancy, in a dim sort of way, in God and the Virgin +and Holy Water and the Pope; but the faith that thrilled him to +exaltation was his faith in the inevitable happening of the unexpected. +He marched to meet it with the throbbing pulses of a soldier rushing to +victory or a saint to martyrdom. He walked up the Rue Saint Honore, the +Rue de la Paix, along the Grands Boulevards, smiling on a world which +teemed with unexpectednesses, until he reached a cafe on the Boulevard +des Bonnes Filles de Calvaire. Here he was arrested by Fate, in the form +of a battered man in black, who, springing from the solitary frostiness +of the terrace, threw his arms about him and kissed him on both cheeks. + +"_Mais, c'est toi, Pujol!_" + +"_C'est toi, Roulard!_" + +Roulard dragged Aristide to his frosty table and ordered drinks. Roulard +had played the trumpet in the regimental band in which Aristide had +played the kettle drum. During their military service they had been +inseparables. Since those happy and ear-splitting days they had not met. +They looked at each other and laughed and thumped each other's +shoulders. + +"_Ce vieux Roulard!_" + +"_Ce sacre Pujol._" + +"And what are you doing?" asked Aristide, after the first explosions of +astonishment and reminiscence. + +A cloud overspread the battered man's features. He had a wife and five +children and played in theatre orchestras. At the present time he was +trombone in the "Tournee Gulland," a touring opera company. It was not +gay for a sensitive artist like him, and the trombone gave one a thirst +which it took half a week's salary to satisfy. _Mais enfin, que +veux-tu?_ It was life, a dog's life, but life was like that. Aristide, +he supposed, was making a fortune. Aristide threw back his head, and +laughed at the exquisite humour of the hypothesis, and gaily disclosed +his Micawberish situation. Roulard sat for a while thoughtful and +silent. Presently a ray of inspiration dispelled the cloud from the +features of the battered man. + +"_Tiens, mon vieux_," said he, "I have an idea." + +It was an idea worthy of Aristide's consideration. The drum of the +Tournee Gulland had been dismissed for drunkenness. The vacancy had not +been filled. Various executants who had drummed on approval--this being +an out-week of the tour--had driven the chef d'orchestre to the verge of +homicidal mania. Why should not Aristide, past master in drumming, find +an honourable position in the orchestra of the Tournee Gulland? + +Aristide's eyes sparkled, his fingers itched for the drumsticks, he +started to his feet. + +"_Mon vieux Roulard!_" he cried, "you have saved my life. More than +that, you have resuscitated an artist. Yes, an artist. _Sacre nom de +Dieu!_ Take me to this chef d'orchestre." + +So Roulard, when the hour of rehearsal drew nigh, conducted Aristide to +the murky recesses of a dirty little theatre in the Batignolles, where +Aristide performed such prodigies of repercussion that he was forthwith +engaged to play the drum, the kettle-drum, the triangle, the cymbals, +the castagnettes and the tambourine, in the orchestra of the Tournee +Gulland at the dazzling salary of thirty francs a week. + +To tell how Aristide drummed and cymballed the progress of Les +Huguenots, Carmen, La Juive, La Fille de Madame Angot and L'Arlesienne +through France would mean the rewriting of a "Capitaine Fracasse." To +hear the creature talk about it makes my mouth as a brick kiln and my +flesh as that of a goose. He was the Adonis, the Apollo, the Don Juan, +the Irresistible of the Tournee. Fled truculent bass and haughty tenor +before him; from diva to moustachioed contralto in the chorus, all the +ladies breathlessly watched for the fall of his handkerchief; he was +recognized, in fact, as a devil of a fellow. But in spite of these +triumphs, the manipulation of the drum, kettle-drum, triangle, cymbals, +castagnettes and tambourine, which at first had given him intense and +childish delight, at last became invested with a mechanical monotony +that almost drove him mad. All day long the thought of the ill-lit +corner, on the extreme right of the orchestra, garnished with the +accursed instruments of noise to which duty would compel him at eight +o'clock in the evening hung over him like a hideous doom. Sweet singers +of the female sex were powerless to console. He passed them by, and +haughty tenor and swaggering basso again took heart of grace. + +"_Mais, mon Dieu, c'est le metier!_" expostulated Roulard. + +"_Sale metier!_" cried Aristide, who was as much fitted for the +merciless routine of a theatre orchestra as a quagga for the shafts of +an omnibus. "A beast of a trade! One is no longer a man. One is just an +automatic system of fog-signals!" + +In this depraved state of mind he arrived at Perpignan, where that +befell him which I am about to relate. + +Now, Perpignan is the last town of France on the Gulf of Lions, a few +miles from the Spanish border. From it you can see the great white +monster of Le Canigou, the pride of the Eastern Pyrenees, far, far away, +blocking up the valley of the Tet, which flows sluggishly past the +little town. The Quai Sadi-Carnot (is there a provincial town in France +which has not a _something_ Sadi-Carnot in it?) is on the left bank +of the Tet; at one end is the modern Place Arago, at the other Le +Castillet, a round, castellated red-brick fortress with curiously long +and deep machicolations of the 14th century with some modern additions +of Louis XI, who also built the adjoining Porte Notre Dame which gives +access to the city. Between the Castillet and the Place Arago, the Quai +Sadi-Carnot is the site of the Prefecture, the Grand Hotel, various +villas and other resorts of the aristocracy. Any little street off it +will lead you into the seething centre of Perpignan life--the Place de +la Loge, which is a great block of old buildings surrounded on its four +sides by narrow streets of shops, cafes, private houses, all with +balconies and jalousies, all cramped, crumbling, Spanish, picturesque. +The oldest of this conglomerate block is a corner building, the Loge de +Mer, a thirteenth century palace, the cloth exchange in the glorious +days when Perpignan was a seaport and its merchant princes traded with +Sultans and Doges and such-like magnificoes of the Mediterranean. But +nowadays its glory has departed. Below the great gothic windows spreads +the awning of a cafe, which takes up all the ground floor. Hugging it +tight is the Mairie, and hugging that, the Hotel de Ville. Hither does +every soul in the place, at some hour or other of the day, inevitably +gravitate. Lawyers and clients, doctors and patients, merchants, lovers, +soldiers, market-women, loafers, horses, dogs, wagons, all crowd in a +noisy medley the narrow cobble-paved streets around the Loge. Of course +there are other streets, tortuous, odorous and cool, intersecting the +old town, and there are various open spaces, one of which is the broad +market square on one side flanked by the Theatre Municipal. + +From the theatre Aristide Pujol issued one morning after rehearsal, +and, leaving his colleagues, including the ever-thirsty Roulard, to +refresh themselves at a humble cafe hard by, went forth in search of +distraction. He idled about the Place de la Loge, passed the time of day +with a cafe waiter until the latter, with a disconcerting "_Voila! +Voila!_" darted off to attend to a customer, and then strolled through +the Porte Notre Dame onto the Quai Sadi-Carnot. There a familiar sound +met his ears--the roll of a drum followed by an incantation in a +quavering, high-pitched voice. It was the Town Crier, with whom, as with +a brother artist, he had picked acquaintance the day before. + +They met by the parapet of the Quai, just as Pere Bracasse had come to +the end of his incantation. The old man, grizzled, tanned and seamed, +leant weakly against the parapet. + +"How goes it, Pere Bracasse?" + +"Alas, mon bon Monsieur, it goes from bad to worse," sighed the old man. +"I am at the end of my strength. My voice has gone and the accursed +rheumatism in my shoulder gives me atrocious pain whenever I beat the +drum." + +"How much more of your round have you to go?" asked Aristide. + +"I have only just begun," said Pere Bracasse. + +The Southern sun shone from a cloudless sky; a light, keen wind blowing +from the distant snow-clad Canigou set the blood tingling. A lunatic +idea flashed through Aristide's mind. He whipped the drum strap over the +old man's head. + +"Pere Bracasse," said he, "you are suffering from rheumatism, +bronchitis, fever and corns, and you must go home to bed. I will finish +your round for you. Listen," and he beat such a tattoo as Pere Bracasse +had never accomplished in his life. "Where are your words?" + +The old man, too weary to resist and fascinated by Aristide's laughing +eyes, handed him a dirty piece of paper. Aristide read, played a +magnificent roll and proclaimed in a clarion voice that a gold bracelet +having been lost on Sunday afternoon in the Avenue des Platanes, whoever +would deposit it at the Mairie would receive a reward. + +"That's all?" he enquired. + +"That's all," said Pere Bracasse. "I live in the Rue Petite-de-la-Real, +No. 4, and you will bring me back the drum when you have finished." + +Aristide darted off like a dragon-fly in the sunshine, as happy as a +child with a new toy. Here he could play the drum to his heart's content +with no score or conductor's baton to worry him. He was also the one and +only personage in the drama, concentrating on himself the attention of +the audience. He pitied poor Roulard, who could never have such an +opportunity with his trombone.... + +The effect of his drumming before the Cafe de la Loge was electric. +Shopkeepers ran out of their shops, housewives craned over their +balconies to listen to him. By the time he had threaded the busy strip +of the town and emerged on to the Place Arago he had collected an +admiring train of urchins. On the Place Arago he halted on the fringe of +a crowd surrounding a cheap-jack whose vociferations he drowned in a +roll of thunder. He drummed and drummed till he became the centre of the +throng. Then he proclaimed the bracelet. He had not enjoyed himself so +much since he left Paris. + +He was striding away, merry-eyed and happy, followed by his satellites +when a prosperous-looking gentleman with a very red face, a prosperous +roll of fat above the back of his collar, and the ribbon of the Legion +of Honour in his buttonhole, descending the steps of the great +glass-covered cafe commanding the Place, hurried up and laid his finger +on his arm. + +"Pardon, my friend," said he, "what are you doing there?" + +"You shall hear, monsieur," replied Aristide, clutching the drumsticks. + +"For the love of Heaven!" cried the other hastily interrupting. "Tell me +what are you doing?" + +"I am crying the loss of a bracelet, monsieur!" + +"But who are you?" + +"I am Aristide Pujol, and I play the drum, kettle-drum, triangle, +cymbals, castagnettes and tambourine in the orchestra of the Tournee +Gulland. And now, in my turn, may I ask to whom I have the honour of +speaking?" + +"I am the Mayor of Perpignan." + +Aristide raised his hat politely. "I hope to have the pleasure," said +he, "of Monsieur le Maire's better acquaintance." + +The Mayor, attracted by the rascal's guileless mockery, laughed. + +"You will, my friend, if you go on playing that drum. You are not the +Town Crier." + +Aristide explained. Pere Bracasse was ill, suffering from rheumatism, +bronchitis, fever and corns. He was replacing him. The Mayor retorted +that Pere Bracasse being a municipal functionary could not transmit his +functions except through the Administration. Monsieur Pujol must desist +from drumming and crying. Aristide bowed to authority and unstrung his +drum. + +"But I was enjoying myself so much, Monsieur le Maire. You have spoiled +my day," said he. + +The Mayor laughed again. There was an irresistible charm and roguishness +about the fellow, with his intelligent oval face, black Vandyke beard +and magically luminous eyes. + +"I should have thought you had enough of drums in your orchestra." + +"Ah! there I am cramped!" cried Aristide. "I have it in horror, in +detestation. Here I am free. I can give vent to all the aspirations of +my soul!" + +The Mayor mechanically moved from the spot where they had been standing. +Aristide, embroidering his theme, mechanically accompanied him; and, +such is democratic France, and also such was the magnetic, Ancient +Mariner-like power of Aristide--did not I, myself, on my first meeting +with him at Aigues-Mortes fall helplessly under the spell--that, in a +few moments, the amateur Town Crier and the Mayor were walking together, +side by side, along the Quai Sadi-Carnot, engaged in amiable converse. +Aristide told the Mayor the story of his life--or such incidents of it +as were meet for Mayoral ears--and when they parted--the Mayor to lunch, +Aristide to yield up the interdicted drum to Pere Bracasse--they shook +hands warmly and mutually expressed the wish that they would soon meet +again. + +They met again; Aristide saw to that. They met again that very afternoon +in the cafe on the Place Arago. When Aristide entered he saw the Mayor +seated at a table in the company of another prosperous, red-ribboned +gentleman. Aristide saluted politely and addressed the Mayor. The Mayor +saluted and presented him to Monsieur Querin, the President of the +Syndicat d'Initiative of the town of Perpignan. Monsieur Querin saluted +and declared himself enchanted at the encounter. Aristide stood +gossiping until the Mayor invited him to take a place at the table and +consume liquid refreshment. Aristide glowingly accepted the invitation +and cast a look of triumph around the cafe. Not to all mortals is it +given to be the boon companion of a Mayor and a President of the +Syndicat d'Initiative! + +Then ensued a conversation momentous in its consequences. + +The Syndicat d'Initiative is a semi-official body existing in most +provincial towns in France for the purpose of organising public +festivals for the citizens and developing the resources and +possibilities of the town for the general amenity of visitors. Now +Perpignan is as picturesque, as sun-smitten and, in spite of the icy +tramontana, even as joyous a place as tourist could desire; and the +Carnival of Perpignan, as a spontaneous outburst of gaiety and +pageantry, is unique in France. But Perpignan being at the end of +everywhere and leading nowhere attracts very few visitors. Biarritz is +on the Atlantic coast at the other end of the Pyrenees; Hyeres, Cannes +and Monte Carlo on the other side of the Gulf of Lions. No English or +Americans--the only visitors of any account in the philosophy of +provincial France--flock to Perpignan. This was a melancholy fact +bewailed by Monsieur Querin. The town was perishing from lack of +Anglo-Saxon support. Monsieur Coquereau, the Mayor, agreed. If the +English and Americans came in their hordes to this paradise of mimosa, +fourteenth century architecture, sunshine and unique Carnival, the +fortunes of all the citizens would be assured. Perpignan would out-rival +Nice. But what could be done? + +"Advertise it," said Aristide. "Flood the English-speaking world with +poetical descriptions of the place. Build a row of palatial hotels in +the new part of the town. It is not known to the Anglo-Saxons." + +"How can you be certain of that?" asked Monsieur Querin. + +"_Parbleu!_" he cried, with a wide gesture. "I have known the English +all my life. I speak their language as I speak French or my native +Provencal. I have taught in schools in England. I know the country and +the people like my pocket. They have never heard of Perpignan." + +His companions acquiesced sadly. Aristide, aglow with a sudden impudent +inspiration, leant across the marble table. + +"Monsieur le Maire and Monsieur le President du Syndicat d'Initiative, I +am sick to death of playing the drum, the kettle-drum, the triangle, the +cymbals, the castagnettes and the tambourine in the Tournee Gulland. I +was born to higher things. Entrust to me"--he converged the finger-tips +of both hands to his bosom--"to me, Aristide Pujol, the organisation of +Perpignan-Ville de Plaisir, and you will not regret it." + +The Mayor and the President laughed. + + * * * * * + +But my astonishing friend prevailed--not indeed to the extent of being +appointed a Petronius, _arbiter elegantiarum_, of the town of Perpignan; +but to the extent of being employed, I fear in a subordinate capacity, +by the Mayor and the Syndicat in the work of propagandism. The Tournee +Gulland found another drum and went its tuneful but weary way; and +Aristide remained gloriously behind and rubbed his hands with glee. At +last he had found permanence in a life where heretofore had been naught +but transience. At last he had found a sphere worthy of his genius. He +began to nourish insensate ambitions. He would be the Great Benefactor +of Perpignan. All Roussillon should bless his name. Already he saw his +statue on the Quai Sadi-Carnot. + +His rise in the social scale of the town was meteoric, chiefly owing to +the goodwill of Madame Coquereau, the widowed mother of the Mayor. She +was a hard-featured old lady, with a face that might have been made of +corrugated iron painted yellow and with the eyes of an old hawk. She +dressed always in black, was very devout and rich and narrow and +iron-willed. Aristide was presented to her one Sunday afternoon at the +Cafe on the Place Arago--where on Sunday afternoons all the fashion of +Perpignan assembles--and--need I say it?--she fell at once a helpless +victim to his fascination. Accompanying her grandmother was Mademoiselle +Stephanie Coquereau, the Mayor's niece (a wealthy orphan, as Aristide +soon learned), nineteen, pretty, demure, perfectly brought up, who said +"_Oui, Monsieur_" and "_Non, Monsieur_" with that quintessence of modest +grace which only a provincial French Convent can cultivate. + +Aristide's heart left his body and rolled at the feet of Mademoiselle +Stephanie. It was a way with Aristide's heart. It was always doing that. +He was of Provence and not of Peckham Rye or Hoboken, and he could not +help it. + +Aristide called on Madame Coquereau, who entertained him with sweet +Frontignan wine, dry sponge cakes and conversation. After a while he was +invited to dinner. In a short space of time he became the intimate +friend of the house, and played piquet with Madame Coquereau, and grew +familiar with the family secrets. First he learned that Mademoiselle +Stephanie would go to a husband with two hundred and fifty thousand +francs. Aristide's heart panted at the feet of Mademoiselle Stephanie. +Further he gathered that, though Monsieur Coquereau was a personage of +great dignity and importance in civic affairs, he was as but a little +child in his own house. Madame Coquereau held the money-bags. Her son +had but little personal fortune. He had reached the age of forty-five +without being able to marry. Marriage unauthorized by Madame Coquereau +meant immediate poverty and the testamentary assignment of Madame +Coquereau's fortune to various religious establishments. None of the +objects of Monsieur Coquereau's matrimonial desire had pleased Madame +Coquereau, and none of Madame Coquereau's blushing candidates had caused +a pulse in Monsieur Coquereau's being to beat the faster. The Mayor held +his mother in professed adoration and holy terror. She held him in +abject subjection. Aristide became the confidant, in turn, of Madame's +sour philosophy of life and of Monsieur's impotence and despair. As for +Mademoiselle Stephanie, she kept on saying "_Oui, Monsieur_" and "_Non, +Monsieur_," in a crescendo of maddening demureness. + +So passed the halcyon hours. During the day time Aristide in a corner of +the Mayor's office, drew up flamboyant circulars in English which would +have put a pushing Land and Estate Agent in the New Jerusalem to the +blush, and in the evening played piquet with Madame Coquereau, while +Mademoiselle Stephanie, model of modest piety, worked pure but nameless +birds and flowers on her embroidery frame. Monsieur le Maire, of course, +played his game of manilla at the cafe, after dinner, and generally +came home just before Aristide took his leave. If it had not been for +the presence of Mademoiselle Stephanie, it would not have been gay for +Aristide. But love gilded the moments. + +On the first evening of the Carnival, which lasts nearly a fortnight in +Perpignan, Aristide, in spite of a sweeter "_Oui, Monsieur_" than ever +from Mademoiselle Stephanie, made an excuse to slip away rather earlier +than usual, and, front door having closed behind him, crossed the strip +of gravel with a quick step and flung out of the iron gates. Now the +house had an isolated position in the new quarter of the town. It was +perky and modern and defaced by all sorts of oriel windows and tourelles +and pinnacles which gave it a top-heavy appearance, and it was +surrounded by a low brick wall. Aristide, on emerging through the iron +gates, heard the sound of scurrying footsteps on the side of the wall +nearest to the town, and reached the corner, just in time to see a +masquer, attired in a Pierrot costume and wearing what seemed to be a +pig's head, disappear round the further angle. Paying no heed to this +phenomenon, Aristide lit a cigarette and walked, in anticipation of +enjoyment, to the great Avenue des Plantanes where the revelry of the +Carnival was being held. Aristide was young, he loved flirtation, and +flirtation flourished in the Avenue des Plantanes. + +The next morning the Mayor entered his office with a very grave face. + +"Do you know what has happened? My house was broken into last night. The +safe in my study was forced open, and three thousand francs and some +valuable jewelry were stolen. _Quel malheur!_" he cried, throwing +himself into a chair, and wiping his forehead. "It is not I who can +afford to lose three thousand francs at once. If they had robbed _maman_ +it would have been a different matter." + +Aristide expressed his sympathy. + +"Whom do you suspect?" he asked. + +"A robber, _parbleu!_" said the Mayor. "The police are even now making +their investigations." + +The door opened and a plain clothes detective entered the office. + +"Monsieur le Maire," said he, with an air of triumph, "I know a +burglar." + +Both men leapt to their feet. + +"Ah!" said Aristide. + +"_A la bonne heure!_" cried the Mayor. + +"Arrest him at once," said Aristide. + +"Alas, Monsieur," said the detective, "that I cannot do. I have called +on him this morning and his wife tells me that he left for the North +yesterday afternoon. But it is Jose Puegas that did it. I know his +ways." + +"_Tiens!_" said the Mayor, reflectively. "I know him also, an evil +fellow." + +"But why are you not looking for him?" exclaimed Aristide. + +"Arrangements have been made," replied the detective coldly. + +Aristide suddenly bethought him of the furtive masquer of the night +before. + +"I can put you on his track," said he, and related what he knew. + +The Mayor looked dubious. "It wasn't he," he remarked. + +"Jose Puegas, Monsieur, would not commit a burglary in a pig's head," +said the policeman, with the cutting contempt of the expert. + +"It was a vow, I suppose," said Aristide, stung to irony. "I've always +heard he was a religious man." + +The detective did not condescend to reply. + +"Monsieur le Maire," said he, "I should like to examine the premises, +and beg that you will have the kindness to accompany me." + +"With the permission of Monsieur le Maire," said Aristide. "I too will +come." + +"Certainly," said the Mayor. "The more intelligences concentrated on the +affair the better." + +"I am not of that opinion," said the detective. + +"It is the opinion of Monsieur le Maire," said Aristide rebukingly, "and +that is enough." + +When they reached the house--distances are short in Perpignan--they +found policemen busily engaged with tape measures around the premises. +Old Madame Coquereau in a clean white linen dressing jacket, +bare-headed, defying the keen air, stood grim and eager in the midst of +them. + +"Good morning, Monsieur Pujol, what do you think of this?" + +"A veritable catastrophe," said Aristide. + +She shrugged her iron shoulders. "I tell him it serves him right," she +said, cuttingly. "A sensible person keeps his money under his mattress +and not in a tin machine by a window which anyone can get at. I wonder +we've not been murdered in our beds before." + +"_Ah, Maman!_" expostulated the Mayor of Perpignan. + +But she turned her back on him and worried the policemen. They, having +probed, and measured, and consulted with the detective, came to an exact +conclusion. The thief had climbed over the back wall--there were his +footsteps. He had entered by the kitchen door--there were the marks of +infraction. He had broken open the safe--there was the helpless +condition of the lock. No one in Perpignan, but Jose Puegas, with his +bad, socialistic, Barcelona blood, could have done it. These brilliant +results were arrived at after much clamour and argument and imposing +_proces verbal_. Aristide felt strangely depressed. He had narrated his +story of the pig-headed masquer to unresponsive ears. Here was a +melodramatic scene in which he not only was not playing a leading part, +but did not even carry a banner. To be less than a super in life's +pageant was abhorrent to the nature of Aristide Pujol. + +Moodily he wandered away from the little crowd. He hated the police and +their airs of gods for whom exists no mystery. He did not believe in the +kitchen-door theory. Why should not the thief have simply entered by the +window of the study, which like the kitchen, was on the ground floor? He +went round the house and examined the window by himself. No; there were +no traces of burglary. The fastenings of the outside shutters and the +high window were intact. The police were right. + +Suddenly his quick eye lit on something in the gravel path and his heart +gave a great leap. It was a little round pink disc of confetti. + +Aristide picked it up and began to dance and shake his fist at the +invisible police. + +"Aha!" he cried, "now we shall see who is right and who is wrong!" + +He began to search and soon found another bit of confetti. A little +further along he discovered a third and a fourth. By using his walking +stick he discovered that they formed a trail to a point in the wall. He +examined the wall. There, if his eyes did not deceive him, were +evidences of mortar dislodged by nefarious toes. And there, _mirabile +visu!_ at the very bottom of the wall lay a little woollen pompon or +tassel, just the kind of pompon that gives a finish to a pierrot's +shoes. Evidently the scoundrel had scraped it off against the bricks +while clambering over. + +The pig-headed masquer stood confessed. + +A less imaginative man than Aristide would have immediately acquainted +the police with his discovery. But Aristide had been insulted. A dull, +mechanical bureaucrat who tried to discover crime with a tape-measure +had dared to talk contemptuously of his intelligence! On his wooden head +should be poured the vials of his contempt. + +"_Tron de l'air!_" cried Aristide--a Provencal oath which he only used +on sublime occasions--"It is I who will discover the thief and make the +whole lot of you the laughing-stock of Perpignan." + +So did my versatile friend, joyously confident in his powers, start on +his glorious career as a private detective. + +"Madame Coquereau," said he, that evening, while she was dealing a hand +at piquet, "what would you say if I solved this mystery and brought the +scoundrel to justice?" + +"To say that you would have more sense than the police, would be a poor +compliment," said the old lady. + +Stephanie raised cloistral eyes from her embroidery frame. She sat in a +distant corner of the formal room discreetly lit by a shaded lamp. + +"You have a clue, Monsieur?" she asked with adorable timidity. + +Aristide tapped his forehead with his forefinger. "All is there, +Mademoiselle." + +They exchanged a glance--the first they had exchanged--while Madame +Coquereau was frowning at her cards; and Aristide interpreted the glance +as the promise of supreme reward for great deeds accomplished. + +The mayor returned early from the cafe, a dejected man. The loss of his +hundred and twenty pounds weighed heavily on his mind. He kissed his +mother sorrowfully on the cheek, his niece on the brow, held out a +drooping hand to Aristide, and, subsiding into a stiff imitation Louis +XVI chair, rested his elbows on its unconsoling arms and hid his face in +his hands. + +"My poor uncle! You suffer so much?" breathed Stephanie, in divine +compassion. + +"Little Saint!" murmured Aristide devoutly, as he declared four aces and +three queens. + +The Mayor moved his head sympathetically. He was suffering from the +sharpest pain in his pocket he had felt for many a day. Madame +Coquereau's attention wandered from the cards. + +"_Dis donc_, Fernand," she said sharply. "Why are you not wearing your +ring?" + +The Mayor looked up. + +"_Maman_," said he, "it is stolen." + +"Your beautiful ring?" cried Aristide. + +The Mayor's ring, which he usually wore, was a remarkable personal +adornment. It consisted in a couple of snakes in old gold clenching an +enormous topaz between their heads. Only a Mayor could have worn it with +decency. + +"You did not tell me, Fernand," rasped the old lady. "You did not +mention it to me as being one of the stolen objects." + +The Mayor rose wearily. "It was to avoid giving you pain, _maman_. I +know what a value you set upon the ring of my good Aunt Philomene." + +"And now it is lost," said Madame Coquereau, throwing down her cards. "A +ring that belonged to a saint. Yes, Monsieur Pujol, a saint, though she +was my sister. A ring that had been blessed by His Holiness the +Pope----" + +"But, _maman_," expostulated the Mayor, "that was an imagination of Aunt +Philomene. Just because she went to Rome and had an audience like anyone +else----" + +"Silence, impious atheist that you are!" cried the old lady. "I tell you +it was blessed by His Holiness--and when I tell you a thing it is true. +That is the son of to-day. He will call his mother a liar as soon as +look at her. It was a ring beyond price. A ring such as there are few in +the world. And instead of taking care of this precious heirloom, he goes +and locks it away in a safe. Ah! you fill me with shame. Monsieur Pujol, +I am sorry I can play no more, I must retire. Stephanie, will you +accompany me?" + +And gathering up Stephanie like a bunch of snowdrops, the yellow, +galvanized iron old lady swept out of the room. + +The Mayor looked at Aristide and moved his arms dejectedly. + +"Such are women," said he. + +"My own mother nearly broke her heart because I would not become a +priest," said Aristide. + +"I wish I were a Turk," said the Mayor. + +"I, too," said Aristide. + +He took pouch and papers and rolled a cigarette. + +"If there is a man living who can say he has not felt like that at least +once in his life he ought to be exhibited at a fair." + +"How well you understand me, my good Pujol," said Monsieur Coquereau. + +The next few days passed busily for Aristide. He devoted every spare +hour to his new task. He scrutinized every inch of ground between the +study window and the wall; he drew radiating lines from the point of +the wall whence the miscreant had started homeward and succeeded in +finding more confetti. He cross-examined every purveyor of pierrot shoes +and pig's heads in Perpignan. His researches soon came to the ears of +the police, still tracing the mysterious Jose Puegas. A certain +good-humoured brigadier whose Catalan French Aristide found difficult to +understand, but with whom he had formed a derisory kind of friendship, +urged him to desist from the hopeless task. + +"_Jamais de la vie!_" he cried--"The honour of Aristide Pujol is at +stake." + +The thing became an obsession. Not only his honour but his future was at +stake. If he discovered the thief, he would be the most talked of person +in Perpignan. He would know how to improve his position. He would rise +to dizzy heights. Perpignan-Ville de Plaisir would acclaim him as its +saviour. The Government would decorate him. And finally, both the Mayor +and Madame Coquereau would place the blushing and adorable Mademoiselle +Stephanie in his arms and her two hundred and fifty thousand francs +dowry in his pocket. Never before had so dazzling a prize shimmered +before him in the near distance. + +On the last Saturday night of the Carnival, there was a special _corso_ +for the populace in the Avenue des Plantanes, the long splendid Avenue +of plane trees just outside the Porte Notre Dame, which is the special +glory of Perpignan. The masquers danced to three or four bands. They +threw confetti and _serpentins_. They rode hobby-horses and beat each +other with bladders. They joined in bands of youths and maidens and +whirled down the Avenue in Bacchic madness. It was a _corso blanc_, and +everyone wore white--chiefly modifications of Pierrot costume--and +everyone was masked. Chinese lanterns hung from the trees and in +festoons around the bandstands and darted about in the hands of the +revellers. Above, great standard electric lamps shed their white glare +upon the eddying throng casting a myriad of grotesque shadows. Shouts +and laughter and music filled the air. + +Aristide in a hideous red mask and with a bag of confetti under his arm, +plunged with enthusiasm into the revelry. To enjoy yourself you only had +to throw your arm round a girl's waist and swing her off wildly to the +beat of the music. If you wanted to let her go you did so; if not, you +talked in the squeaky voice that is the recognized etiquette of the +carnival. On the other hand any girl could catch you in her grip and +sweep you along with her. Your mad career generally ended in a crowd and +a free fight of confetti. There was one fair masquer, however, to whom +Aristide became peculiarly attracted. Her movements were free, her +figure dainty and her repartee, below her mask, more than usually +piquant. + +"This hurly-burly," said he, drawing her into a quiet eddy of the +stream, "is no place for the communion of two twin souls." + +"_Beau masque_," said she, "I perceive that you are a man of much +sensibility." + +"Shall we find a spot where we can mingle the overflow of our exquisite +natures?" + +"As you like." + +"_Allons! Hop!_" cried he, and seizing her round the waist danced +through the masquers to the very far end of the Avenue. + +"There is a sequestered spot round here," he said. + +They turned. The sequestered spot, a seat beneath a plane tree, with a +lonesome arc-lamp shining full upon it, was occupied. + +"It's a pity!" said the fair unknown. + +But Aristide said nothing. He stared. On the seat reposed an amorous +couple. The lady wore a white domino and a black mask. The cavalier, +whose arm was around the lady's waist, wore a pig's head, and a clown or +Pierrot's dress. + +Aristide's eyes fell upon the shoes. On one of them the pompon was +missing. + +The lady's left hand tenderly patted the cardboard snout of her lover. +The fierce light of the arc lamp caught the hand and revealed, on the +fourth finger, a topaz ring, the topaz held in its place by two snakes' +heads. + +Aristide stared for two seconds; it seemed to him two centuries. Then he +turned simply, caught his partner again, and with a "_Allons, Hop!_" +raced back to the middle of the throng. There, in the crush, he +unceremoniously lost her, and sped like a maniac to the entrance gates. +His friend the brigadier happened to be on duty. He unmasked himself, +dragged the police agent aside, and breathless, half-hysterical, +acquainted him with the astounding discovery. + +"I was right, _mon vieux!_ There at the end of the Avenue you will find +them. The pig-headed prowler I saw, with _my_ pompon missing from his +shoe, and his _bonne amie_ wearing the stolen ring. Ah! you police +people with your tape-measures and your Jose Puegas! It is I, Aristide +Pujol, who have to come to Perpignan to teach you your business!" + +"What do you want me to do?" asked the brigadier stolidly. + +"Do?" cried Aristide. "Do you think I want you to kiss them and cover +them with roses? What do you generally do with thieves in Perpignan?" + +"Arrest them," said the brigadier. + +"_Eh bien!_" said Aristide. Then he paused--possibly the drama of the +situation striking him. "No, wait. Go and find them. Don't take your +eyes off them. I will run and fetch Monsieur le Maire and he will +identify his property--_et puis nous aurons la scene a faire_." + +The stout brigadier grunted an assent and rolled monumentally down the +Avenue. Aristide, his pulses throbbing, his heart exulting, ran to the +Mayor's house. He was rather a panting triumph than a man. He had beaten +the police of Perpignan. He had discovered the thief. He was the hero of +the town. Soon would the wedding bells be playing.... He envied the +marble of the future statue. He would like to be on the pedestal +himself. + +He dashed past the maid-servant who opened the door and burst into the +prim salon. Madame Coquereau was alone, just preparing to retire for the +night. Mademoiselle Stephanie had already gone to bed. + +"_Mon Dieu_, what is all this?" she cried. + +"Madame," shouted he, "glorious news. I have found the thief!" + +He told his tale. Where was Monsieur le Maire? + +"He has not yet come back from the cafe." + +"I'll go and find him," said Aristide. + +"And waste time? Bah!" said the iron-faced old lady, catching up a black +silk shawl. "I will come with you and identify the ring of my sainted +sister Philomene. Who should know it better than I?" + +"As you like, Madame," said Aristide. + +Two minutes found them on their journey. Madame Coquereau, in spite of +her sixty-five years trudged along with springing step. + +"They don't make metal like me, nowadays," she said scornfully. + +When they arrived at the gate of the Avenue, the police on guard +saluted. The mother of Monsieur le Maire was a power in Perpignan. + +"Monsieur," said Aristide, in lordly fashion, to a policeman, "will you +have the goodness to make a passage through the crowd for Madame +Coquereau, and then help the Brigadier Pesac to arrest the burglar who +broke into the house of Monsieur le Maire?" + +The man obeyed, went ahead clearing the path with the unceremoniousness +of the law, and Aristide giving his arm to Madame Coquereau followed +gloriously. As the impressive progress continued the revellers ceased +their revels and followed in the wake of Aristide. At the end of the +Avenue Brigadier Pesac was on guard. He approached. + +"They are still there," he said. + +"Good," said Aristide. + +The two police-officers, Aristide and Madame Coquereau turned the +corner. At the sight of the police the guilty couple started to their +feet. Madame Coquereau pounced like a hawk on the masked lady's hand. + +"I identify it," she cried. "Brigadier, give these people in charge for +theft." + +The white masked crowd surged around the group, in the midst of which +stood Aristide transfigured. It was his supreme moment. He flourished in +one hand his red mask and in the other a pompon which he had extracted +from his pocket. + +"This I found," said he, "beneath the wall of Monsieur le Maire's +garden. Behold the shoe of the accused." + +The crowd murmured their applause and admiration. Neither of the +prisoners stirred. The pig's head grinned at the world with its inane, +painted leer. A rumbling voice beneath it said: + +"We will go quietly." + +"_Attention s'il vous plait_," said the policemen, and each holding a +prisoner by the arm they made a way through the crowd. Madame Coquereau +and Aristide followed close behind. + +"What did I tell you?" cried Aristide to the brigadier. + +"It's Puegas, all the same," said the brigadier, over his shoulder. + +"I bet you it's not," said Aristide, and striding swiftly to the back of +the male prisoner whipped off the pig's head, and revealed to the +petrified throng the familiar features of the Mayor of Perpignan. + +Aristide regarded him for two or three seconds open-mouthed, and then +fell back into the arms of the Brigadier Pesac screaming with convulsive +laughter. The crowd caught the infection of merriment. Shrieks filled +the air. The vast mass of masqueraders held their sides, swayed +helplessly, rolled in heaps, men and women, tearing each other's +garments as they fell. + +Aristide, deposited on the ground by the Brigadier Pesac laughed and +laughed. When he recovered some consciousness of surroundings, he found +the Mayor bending over him and using language that would have made +Tophet put its fingers in its ears. He rose. Madame Coquereau shook her +thin fists in his face. + +"Imbecile! Triple fool!" she cried. + +Aristide turned tail and fled. There was nothing else to do. + +And that was the end of his career at Perpignan. Vanished were the +dreams of civic eminence; melted into thin air the statue on the Quai +Sadi-Carnot; faded, too, the vision of the modest Stephanie crowned with +orange-blossom; gone forever the two hundred and fifty thousand francs. +Never since Alnaschar kicked over his basket of crockery was there such +a hideous welter of shattered hopes. + +If the Mayor had been allowed to go disguised to the Police Station, he +could have disclosed his identity and that of the lady in private to +awe-stricken functionaries. He might have forgiven Aristide. But +Aristide had exposed him to the derision of the whole of Roussillon and +the never ending wrath of Madame Coquereau. Ruefully Aristide asked +himself the question: why had the Mayor not taken him into the +confidence of his masquerading escapade? Why had he not told him of the +pretty widow, whom, unknown to his mother, he was courting? Why had he +permitted her to wear the ring which he had given her so as to spite his +sainted Aunt Philomene? And why had he gone on wearing the pig's head +after Aristide had told him of his suspicions? Ruefully Aristide found +no answers save in the general chuckle-headedness of mankind. + +"If it hadn't been such a good farce I should have wept like a cow," +said Aristide, after relating this story. "But every time I wanted to +cry, I laughed. _Nom de Dieu!_ You should have seen his face! And the +face of Madame Coquereau! She opened her mouth wide showing ten yellow +teeth and squealed like a rabbit! Oh, it was a good farce! He was very +cross with me," he added after a smiling pause, "and when I got back to +Paris I tried to pacify him." + +"What did you do?" I asked. + +"I sent him my photograph," said Aristide. + + + + +VI + +THE ADVENTURE OF FLEURETTE + + +One day, when Aristide was discoursing on the inexhaustible subject of +woman, I pulled him up. + +"My good friend," said I, "you seem to have fallen in love with every +woman you have ever met. But for how many of them have you really +cared?" + +"_Mon Dieu!_ For all of them!" he cried, springing from his chair and +making a wind-mill of himself. + +"Come, come," said I; "all that amorousness is just Gallic exuberance. +Have you ever been really in love in your life?" + +"How should I know?" said he. But he lit a cigarette, turned away, and +looked out of window. + +There was a short silence. He shrugged his shoulders, apparently in +response to his own thoughts. Then he turned again suddenly, threw his +cigarette into the fire, and thrust his hands into his pockets. He +sighed. + +"Perhaps there was Fleurette," said he, not looking at me. "_Est-ce +qu'on sait jamais?_ That wasn't her real name--it was Marie-Josephine; +but people called her Fleurette. She looked like a flower, you know." + +I nodded in order to signify my elementary acquaintance with the French +tongue. + +"The most delicate little flower you can conceive," he continued. +"_Tiens_, she was a slender lily--so white, and her hair the flash of +gold on it--and she had eyes--_des yeux de pervenche_, as we say in +French. What is _pervenche_ in English--that little pale-blue flower?" + +"Periwinkle," said I. + +"Periwinkle eyes! My God, what a language! Ah, no! She had _des yeux de +pervenche_.... She was _diaphane_, diaphanous ... impalpable as +cigarette-smoke ... a little nose like nothing at all, with nostrils +like infinitesimal sea-shells. Anyone could have made a mouthful of +her.... Ah! _Cre nom d'un chien!_ Life is droll. It has no common sense. +It is the game of a mountebank.... I've never told you about Fleurette. +It was this way." + +And the story he narrated I will do my best to set down. + + * * * * * + +The good M. Bocardon, of the Hotel de la Curatterie at Nimes, whose +grateful devotion to Aristide has already been recorded, had a brother +in Paris who managed the Hotel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse (strange +conjuncture), a flourishing third-rate hostelry in the neighbourhood of +the Halles Centrales. Thither flocked sturdy Britons in knickerbockers, +stockings, and cloth caps, Teutons with tin botanizing boxes (for lunch +transportation), and American school-marms realizing at last the dream +of their modest and laborious lives. Accommodation was cheap, manners +were easy, and knowledge of the gay city less than rudimentary. + +To M. Bocardon of Paris Aristide, one August morning, brought glowing +letters of introduction from M. and Mme. Bocardon of Nimes. M. Bocardon +of Paris welcomed Aristide as a Provencal and a brother. He brought out +from a cupboard in his private bureau an hospitable bottle of old +Armagnac, and discoursed with Aristide on the seductions of the South. +It was there that he longed to retire--to a dainty little hotel of his +own with a smart clientele. The clientele of the Hotel du Soleil et de +l'Ecosse was not to his taste. He spoke slightingly of his guests. + +"There are people who know how to travel," said he, "and people who +don't. These lost muttons here don't, and they make hotel-keeping a +nightmare instead of a joy. A hundred times a day have I to tell them +the way to Notre Dame. _Pouah!_" said he, gulping down his disgust and +the rest of his Armagnac, "it is back-breaking." + +"_Tu sais, mon vieux_," cried Aristide--he had the most lightning way of +establishing an intimacy--"I have an idea. These lost sheep need a +shepherd." + +"_Eh bien?_" said M. Bocardon. + +"_Eh bien_," said Aristide. "Why should not I be the shepherd, the +official shepherd attached to the Hotel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse?" + +"Explain yourself," said M. Bocardon. + +Aristide, letting loose his swift imagination, explained copiously, and +hypnotized M. Bocardon with his glittering eye, until he had assured to +himself a means of livelihood. From that moment he became the familiar +genius of the hotel. Scorning the title of "guide," lest he should be +associated in the minds of the guests with the squalid scoundrels who +infest the Boulevard, he constituted himself "Directeur de l'Agence +Pujol." An obfuscated Bocardon formed the rest of the agency and +pocketed a percentage of Aristide's earnings, and Aristide, addressed as +"Director" by the Anglo-Saxons, "M. le Directeur" by the Latins, and +"Herr Direktor" by the Teutons, walked about like a peacock in a +barn-yard. + + [Illustration: HE MUST HAVE DEALT OUT PARALYZING INFORMATION] + +At that period, and until he had learned up Baedeker by heart, a process +which nearly gave him brain-fever, and still, he declares, brings terror +into his slumbers, he knew little more of the history, topography, and +art-treasures of Paris than the flock he shepherded. He must have +dealt out paralyzing information. The Britons and the Germans seemed not +to heed; but now and then the American school-marms unmasked the +charlatan. On such occasions his unfaltering impudence reached heights +truly sublime. The sharp-witted ladies looked in his eyes, forgot their +wrongs, and, if he had told them that the Eiffel Tower had been erected +by the Pilgrim Fathers, would have accepted the statement meekly. + +"My friend," said Aristide, with Provencal flourish and braggadocio, "I +never met a woman that would not sooner be misled by me than be taught +by the whole Faculty of the Sorbonne." + +He had been practising this honourable profession for about a month, +lodging with the good Mme. Bidoux at 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honore, when, +one morning, in the vestibule of the hotel, he ran into his old friend +Batterby, whom he had known during the days of his professorship of +French at the Academy for Young Ladies in Manchester. The pair had been +fellow-lodgers in the same house in the Rusholme Road; but, whereas +Aristide lived in one sunless bed-sitting-room looking on a forest of +chimney-pots, Batterby, man of luxury and ease, had a suite of +apartments on the first floor and kept an inexhaustible supply of +whisky, cigars, and such-like etceteras of the opulent, and the very +ugliest prize bull-pup you can imagine. Batterby, in gaudy raiment, +went to an office in Manchester; in gaudier raiment he often attended +race meetings. He had rings and scarf-pins and rattled gold in his +trousers pockets. He might have been an insufferable young man for a +poverty-stricken teacher of French to have as a fellow-lodger; but he +was not. Like all those born to high estate, he made no vulgar parade of +his wealth, and to Aristide he showed the most affable hospitality. A +friendship had arisen between them, which the years had idealized rather +than impaired. So when they met that morning in the vestibule of the +Hotel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse their greetings were fervent and +prolonged. + +In person Batterby tended towards burliness. He had a red, jolly face, +divided unequally by a great black moustache, and his manner was hearty. +He slapped Aristide on the back many times and shook him by the +shoulders. + +"We must have a drink on this straight away, old man," said he. + +"You're so strange, you English," said Aristide. "The moment you have an +emotion you must celebrate it by a drink. 'My dear fellow, I've just +come into a fortune; let us have a drink.' Or, 'My friend, my poor old +father has just been run over by an omnibus; let us have a drink.' My +good Reginald, look at the clock. It is only nine in the morning." + +"Rot!" said Reginald. "Drink is good at any time." + +They went into the dark and deserted smoking-room, where Batterby +ordered Scotch and soda and Aristide, an abstemious man, a plain +vermouth. + +"What's that muck?" asked Batterby, when the waiter brought the drinks. +Aristide explained. "Whisky's good enough for me," laughed the other. +Aristide laughed too, out of politeness and out of joy at meeting his +old friend. + +"With you playing at guide here," said Batterby, when he had learned +Aristide's position in the hotel, "it seems I have come to the right +shop. There are no flies on me, you know, but when a man comes to Paris +for the first time he likes to be put up to the ropes." + +"Your first visit to Paris?" cried Aristide. "_Mon vieux_, what wonders +are going to ravish your eyes! What a time you are going to have!" + +Batterby bit off the end of a great black cigar. + +"If the missus will let me," said he. + +"Missus? Your wife? You are married, my dear Reginald?" Aristide leaped, +in his unexpected fashion, from his chair and almost embraced him. "Ah, +but you are happy, you are lucky. It was always like that. You open your +mouth and the larks fall ready roasted into it! My congratulations. And +she is here, in this hotel, your wife? Tell me about her." + +Batterby lit his cigar. "She's nothing to write home about," he said, +modestly. "She's French." + +"French? No--you don't say so!" exclaimed Aristide, in ecstasy. + +"Well, she was brought up in France from her childhood, but her parents +were Finns. Funny place for people to come from--Finland--isn't it? You +could never expect it--might just as well think of 'em coming from +Lapland. She's an orphan. I met her in London." + +"But that's romantic! And she is young, pretty?" + +"Oh, yes; in a way," said the proprietary Briton. + +"And her name?" + +"Oh, she has a fool name--Fleurette. I wanted to call her Flossie, but +she didn't like it." + +"I should think not," said Aristide. "Fleurette is an adorable name." + +"I suppose it's right enough," said Batterby. "But if I want to call her +good old Flossie, why should she object? You married, old man? No? Well, +wait till you are. You think women are angels all wrapped up in feathers +and wings beneath their toggery, don't you? Well, they're just blooming +porcupines, all bristling with objections." + +"_Mais, allons, donc!_" cried Aristide. "You love her, your beautiful +Finnish orphan brought up in France and romantically met in London, with +the adorable name?" + +"Oh, that's all right," said the easy Batterby, lifting his half-emptied +glass. "Here's luck!" + +"Ah--no!" said Aristide, leaning forward and clinking his wineglass +against the other's tumbler. "Here is to madame." + +When they returned to the vestibule they found Mrs. Batterby patiently +awaiting her lord. She rose from her seat at the approach of the two +men, a fragile flower of a girl, about three-and-twenty, pale as a lily, +with exquisite though rather large features, and with eyes of the blue +of the _pervenche_ (in deference to Aristide I use the French name), +which seemed to smile trustfully through perpetual tears. She was +dressed in pale, shadowy blue--graceful, impalpable, like the smoke, +said Aristide, curling upwards from a cigarette. + +"Reggie has spoken of you many times, monsieur," said Fleurette, after +the introduction had been effected. + +Aristide was touched. "Fancy him remembering me! _Ce bon vieux +Reginald._ Madame," said he, "your husband is the best fellow in the +world." + +"Feed him with sugar and he won't bite," said Batterby; whereat they all +laughed, as if it had been a very good joke. + +"Well, what about this Paris of yours?" he asked, after a while. "The +missus knows as little of it as I do." + +"Really?" asked Aristide. + +"I lived all my life in Brest before I went to England," she said, +modestly. + +"She wants to see all the sights, the Louvre, the Morgue, the Cathedral +of What's-its-name that you've got here. I've got to go round, too. +Pleases her and don't hurt me. You must tote us about. We'll have a cab, +old girl, as you can't do much walking, and good old Pujol will come +with us." + +"But that is ideal!" cried Aristide, flying to the door to order the +cab; but before he could reach it he was stopped by three or four +waiting tourists, who pointed, some to the clock, some to the wagonette +standing outside, and asked the director when the personally-conducted +party was to start. Aristide, who had totally forgotten the +responsibilities attached to the directorship of the Agence Pujol and, +but for this reminder, would have blissfully left his sheep to err and +stray over Paris by themselves, returned crestfallen to his friends and +explained the situation. + +"But we'll join the party," said the cheery Batterby. "The more the +merrier--good old bean-feast! Will there be room?" + +"Plenty," replied Aristide, brightening. "But would it meet the wishes +of madame?" Her pale face flushed ever so slightly and the soft eyes +fluttered at him a half-astonished, half-grateful glance. + +"With my husband and you, monsieur, I should love it," she said. + +So Mr. and Mrs. Batterby joined the personally-conducted party, as they +did the next morning, and the next, and several mornings after, and +received esoteric information concerning the monuments of Paris that is +hidden even from the erudite. The evenings, however, Aristide, being off +duty, devoted to their especial entertainment. He took them to riotous +and perspiring restaurants where they dined gorgeously for three francs +fifty, wine included; to open-air _cafes-concerts_ in the Champs +Elysees, which Fleurette found infinitely diverting, but which bored +Batterby, who knew not French, to stertorous slumber; to crowded +brasseries on the Boulevard, where Batterby awakened, under a steady +flow of whisky, to appreciative contemplation of Paris life. As in the +old days of the Rusholme Road, Batterby flung his money about with +unostentatious generosity. He was out for a beano, he declared, and hang +the expense! Aristide, whose purse, scantily filled (truth to say) by +the profits of the Agence Pujol, could contribute but modestly to this +reckless expenditure, found himself forced to accept his friend's lavish +hospitality. Once or twice, delicately, he suggested withdrawal from the +evening's dissipation. + +"But, my good M. Pujol," said Fleurette, with childish tragicality in +her _pervenche_ eyes, "without you we shall be lost. We shall not enjoy +ourselves at all, at all." + +So Aristide, out of love for his friend, and out of he knew not what for +his friend's wife, continued to show them the sights of Paris. They went +to the cabarets of Montmartre--the _Ciel_, where one is served by +angels; the _Enfer_, where one is served by red devils in a Tartarean +lighting; the _Neant_, where one has coffins for tables--than all of +which vulgarity has imagined no more joy-killing dreariness, but which +caused Fleurette to grip Aristide's hand tight in scared wonderment and +Batterby to chuckle exceedingly. They went to the Bal Bullier and to +various other balls undreamed of by the tourist, where Fleurette danced +with Aristide, as light as an autumn leaf tossed by the wind, and +Batterby absorbed a startling assortment of alcohols. In a word, +Aristide procured for his friends prodigious diversion. + +"How do you like this, old girl?" Batterby asked one night, at the +Moulin de la Galette, a dizzying, not very decorous, and to the +unsophisticated visitor a dangerous place of entertainment. "Better than +Great Coram Street, isn't it?" + +She smiled and laid her hand on his. She was a woman of few words but of +many caressing actions. + +"I ought to let you into a secret," said he. "This is our honeymoon." + +"Who would have thought it?" + + [Illustration: FLEURETTE DANCED WITH ARISTIDE, AS LIGHT AS AN AUTUMN + LEAF TOSSED BY THE WIND] + +"A fortnight ago she was being killed in a Bloomsbury boarding-house. +There were two of 'em--she and a girl called Carrie. I used to call 'em +Fetch and Carrie. This one was Fetch. Well, she fetched me, didn't you, +old girl? And now you're Mrs. Reginald Batterby, living at your ease, +eh?" + +"Madame would grace any sphere," said Aristide. + +"I wish I had more education," said Fleurette, humbly. "M. Pujol and +yourself are so clever that you must laugh at me." + +"We do sometimes, but you mustn't mind us. Remember--at the +what-you-call-it--the little shanty at Versailles----?" + +"The Grand Trianon," replied Aristide. + +"That's it. When you were showing us the rooms. 'What is the Empress +Josephine doing now?'" He mimicked her accent. "Ha! ha! And the poor +soul gone to glory a couple of hundred years ago." + +The little mouth puckered at the corners and moisture gathered in the +blue eyes. + +"_Mais, mon Dieu_, it was natural, the mistake," cried Aristide, +gallantly. "The Empress Eugenie, the wife of another Napoleon, is still +living." + +"_Bien sur_," said Fleurette. "How was I to know?" + +"Never mind, old girl," said Batterby. "You're living all right, and out +of that beastly boarding-house, and that's the chief thing. Another +month of it would have killed her. She had a cough that shook her to +bits. She's looking better already, isn't she, Pujol?" + +After this Aristide learned much of her simple history, which she, at +first, had been too shy to reveal. The child of Finnish sea-folk who had +drifted to Brest and died there, she had been adopted by an old Breton +sea-dog and his wife. On their death she had entered, as maid, the +service of an English lady residing in the town, who afterwards had +taken her to England. After a while reverses of fortune had compelled +the lady to dismiss her, and she had taken the situation in the +boarding-house, where she had ruined her health and met the opulent and +conquering Batterby. She had not much chance, poor child, of acquiring a +profound knowledge of the history of the First Empire; but her manners +were refined and her ways gentle and her voice was soft; and Aristide, +citizen of the world, for whom caste distinctions existed not, thought +her the most exquisite flower grown in earth's garden. He told her so, +much to her blushing satisfaction. + +One night, about three weeks after the Batterbys' arrival in Paris, +Batterby sent his wife to bed and invited Aristide to accompany him for +half an hour to a neighbouring cafe. He looked grave and troubled. + +"I've been upset by a telegram," said he, when drinks had been ordered. +"I'm called away to New York on business. I must catch the boat from +Cherbourg to-morrow evening. Now, I can't take Fleurette with me. Women +and business don't mix. She has jolly well got to stay here. I sha'n't +be away more than a month. I'll leave her plenty of money to go on with. +But what's worrying me is--how is she going to stick it? So look here, +old man, you're my pal, aren't you?" + +He stretched out his hand. Aristide grasped it impulsively. + +"Why, of course, _mon vieux!_" + +"If I felt that I could leave her in your charge, all on the square, as +a real straight pal--I should go away happy." + +"She shall be my sister," cried Aristide, "and I shall give her all the +devotion of a brother.... I swear it--_tiens_--what can I swear it on?" +He flung out his arms and looked round the cafe as if in search of an +object. "I swear it on the head of my mother. Have no fear. I, Aristide +Pujol, have never betrayed the sacred obligations of friendship. I +accept her as a consecrated trust." + +"You only need to have said 'Right-o,' and I would have believed you," +said Batterby. "I haven't told her yet. There'll be blubbering all +night. Let us have another drink." + +When Aristide arrived at the Hotel du Soleil et de l'Ecosse at nine +o'clock the next morning he found that Batterby had left Paris by an +early train. Fleurette he did not meet until he brought back the +sight-seers to the fold in the evening. She had wept much during the +day; but she smiled bravely on Aristide. A woman could not stand in the +way of her husband's business. + +"By the way, what is Reginald's business?" Aristide asked. + +She did not know. Reginald never spoke to her of such things; perhaps +she was too ignorant to understand. + +"But he will make a lot of money by going to America," she said. Then +she was silent for a few moments. "_Mon Dieu!_" she sighed, at last. +"How long the day has been!" + +It was the beginning of many long days for Fleurette. Reginald did not +write from Cherbourg or cable from New York, as he had promised, and the +return American mail brought no letter. The days passed drearily. +Sometimes, for the sake of human society, she accompanied the tourist +parties of the Agence Pujol; but the thrill had passed from the Morgue +and the glory had departed from Versailles. Sometimes she wandered +out by herself into the streets and public gardens; but, pretty, +unprotected, and fragile, she attracted the attention of evil or +careless men, which struck cold terror into her heart. Most often she +sat alone and listless in the hotel, reading the feuilleton of the +_Petit Journal_, and waiting for the post to bring her news. + +"_Mon Dieu_, M. Pujol, what can have happened?" + +"Nothing at all, _chere petite madame_"--question and answer came many +times a day. "Only some foolish mischance which will soon be explained. +The good Reginald has written and his letter has been lost in the post. +He has been obliged to go on business to San Francisco or Buenos +Ayres--_et, que voulez-vous?_ one cannot have letters from those places +in twenty-four hours." + +"If only he had taken me with him!" + +"But, dear Mme. Fleurette, he could not expose you to the hardships +of travel. You, who are as fragile as a cobweb, how could you go to +Patagonia or Senegal or Baltimore, those wild places where there are no +comforts for women? You must be reasonable. I am sure you will get a +letter soon--or else in a day or two he will come, with his good, honest +face as if nothing had occurred--these English are like that--and call +for whisky and soda. Be comforted, _chere petite madame_." + +Aristide did his best to comfort her, threw her in the companionship of +decent women staying at the hotel, and devoted his evenings to her +entertainment. But the days passed, and Reginald Batterby, with the +good, honest face, neither wrote nor ordered whisky and soda. Fleurette +began to pine and fade. + +One day she came to Aristide. + +"M. Pujol, I have no more money left." + +"_Bigre!_" said Pujol. "The good Bocardon will have to give you credit. +I'll arrange it." + +"But I already owe for three weeks," said Fleurette. + +Aristide sought Bocardon. One week more was all the latter dared allow. + +"But her husband will return and pay you. He is my old and intimate +friend. I make myself hoarse in telling it to you, wooden-head that you +are!" + +But Bocardon, who had to account to higher powers, the proprietors of +the hotel, was helpless. At the end of the week Fleurette was called +upon to give up her room. She wept with despair; Aristide wept with +fury; Bocardon wept out of sympathy. Already, said Bocardon, the +proprietors would blame him for not using the legal right to detain +madame's luggage. + +"_Mon Dieu! mon Dieu!_ what is to become of me?" wailed Fleurette. + +"You forget, madame," said Aristide, with one of his fine flourishes, +"that you are the sacred trust of Aristide Pujol." + +"But I can't accept your money," objected Fleurette. + +"_Tron de l'air!_" he cried. "Did your husband put you in my charge or +did he not? Am I your legal guardian, or am I not? If I am your legal +guardian, what right have you to question the arrangements made by your +husband? Answer me that." + +Fleurette, too gentle and too miserable for intricate argument, sighed. + +"But it is your money, all the same." + +Aristide turned to Bocardon. "Try," said he, "to convince a woman! Do +you want proofs? Wait there a minute while I get them from the safe of +the Agence Pujol." + +He disappeared into the bureau, where, secure from observation, he tore +an oblong strip from a sheet of stiff paper, and, using an indelible +pencil, wrote out something fantastic halfway between a cheque and a +bill of exchange, forged as well as he could from memory the signature +of Reginald Batterby--the imitation of handwriting was one of Aristide's +many odd accomplishments--and made the document look legal by means of a +receipt stamp, which he took from Bocardon's drawer. He returned to the +vestibule with the strip folded and somewhat crumpled in his hand. +"_Voila_," said he, handing it boldly to Fleurette. "Here is your +husband's guarantee to me, your guardian, for four thousand francs." + +Fleurette examined the forgery. The stamp impressed her. For the simple +souls of France there is magic in _papier timbre_. + +"It was my husband who wrote this?" she asked, curiously. + +"_Mais, oui_," said Aristide, with an offended air of challenge. + +Fleurette's eyes filled again with tears. + +"I only inquired," she said, "because this is the first time I have seen +his handwriting." + +"_Ma pauvre petite_," said Aristide. + +"I will do whatever you tell me, M. Pujol," said Fleurette, humbly. + +"Good! That is talking like _une bonne petite dame raisonnable_. Now, I +know a woman made up of holy bread whom St. Paul and St. Peter are +fighting to have next them when she goes to Paradise. Her name is Mme. +Bidoux, and she sells cabbages and asparagus and charcoal at No. 213 +bis, Rue Saint-Honore. She will arrange our little affair. Bocardon, +will you have madame's trunks sent to that address?" + +He gave his arm to Fleurette, and walked out of the hotel, with serene +confidence in the powers of the sainted Mme. Bidoux. Fleurette +accompanied him unquestioningly. Of course she might have said: "If you +hold negotiable security from my husband to the amount of four thousand +francs, why should I exchange the comforts of the hotel for the doubtful +accommodation of the sainted Mme. Bidoux who sells cabbages?" But I +repeat that Fleurette was a simple soul who took for granted the wisdom +of so flamboyant and virile a creature as Aristide Pujol. + +Away up at the top of No. 213 bis, Rue Saint-Honore, was a little +furnished room to let, and there Aristide installed his sacred charge. +Mme. Bidoux, who, as she herself maintained, would have cut herself into +four pieces for Aristide--did he not save her dog's life? Did he not +marry her daughter to the brigadier of gendarmes (_sale voyou!_), who +would otherwise have left her lamenting? Was he not the most wonderful +of God's creatures?--Mme. Bidoux, although not quite appreciating +Aristide's quixotic delicacy, took the forlorn and fragile wisp of +misery to her capacious bosom. She made her free of the cabbages and +charcoal. She provided her, at a risible charge, with succulent meals. +She told her tales of her father and mother, of her neighbours, of the +domestic differences between the concierge and his wife (soothing idyll +for an Ariadne!), of the dirty thief of a brigadier of gendarmes, of her +bodily ailments--her body was so large that they were many; of the +picturesque death, through apoplexy, of the late M. Bidoux; the brave +woman, in short, gave her of her heart's best. As far as human hearts +could provide a bed for Fleurette, that bed was of roses. As a matter of +brutal fact, it was narrow and nubbly, and the little uncarpeted room +was ten feet by seven; but to provide it Aristide went to his own bed +hungry. And if the bed of a man's hunger is not to be accounted as one +of roses, there ought to be a vote for the reduction of the Recording +Angel's salary. + +It must not be imagined that Fleurette thought the bed hard. Her bed of +life from childhood had been nubbly. She never dreamed of complaining of +her little room under the stars, and she sat among the cabbages like a +tired lily, quite contented with her material lot. But she drooped and +drooped, and the cough returned and shook her; and Aristide, realizing +the sacredness of his charge, became a prey to anxious terrors. + +"Mere Bidoux," said he, "she must have lots of good, nourishing, tender, +underdone beef, good fillets, and _entrecotes saignantes_." + +Mme. Bidoux sighed. She had a heart, but she also had a pocket which, +like Aristide's, was not over-filled. "That costs dear, my poor friend," +she said. + +"What does it matter what it costs? It is I who provide," said Aristide, +grandly. + +And Aristide gave up tobacco and coffee and the mild refreshment at +cafes essential to the existence of every Frenchman, and degraded his +soul by taking half-franc tips from tourists--a source of income which, +as Director, M. le Directeur, Herr Direktor of the Agence Pujol, he had +hitherto scorned haughtily--in order to provide Fleurette with underdone +beefsteaks. + +All his leisure he devoted to her. She represented something that +hitherto had not come into his life--something delicate, tender, +ethereal, something of woman that was exquisitely adorable, apart from +the flesh. Once, as he was sitting in the little shop, she touched his +temple lightly with her fingers. + +"Ah, you are good to me, Aristide." + +He felt a thrill such as no woman's touch had ever caused to pass +through him--far, far sweeter, cleaner, purer. If the _bon Dieu_ could +have given her to him then and there to be his wife, what bond could +have been holier? But he had bound himself by a sacred obligation. His +friend on his return should find him loyal. + +"Who could help being good to you, little Fleurette?" said he. "Even an +Apache would not tread on a lily of the valley!" + +"But you put me in water and tend me so carefully." + +"So that you can be fresh whenever the dear Reginald comes back." + +She sighed. "Tell me what I can do for you, my good Aristide." + +"Keep well and happy and be a valiant little woman," said he. + +Fleurette tried hard to be valiant; but the effort exhausted her +strength. As the days went on, even Aristide's inexhaustible +conversation failed to distract her from brooding. She lost the trick of +laughter. In the evenings, when he was most with her, she would sit, +either in the shop or in the little room at the back, her blue childish +eyes fixed on him wistfully. At first he tried to lure her into the gay +street; but walking tired her. He encouraged her to sit outside on the +pavement of the Rue Saint-Honore and join with Mme. Bidoux in the gossip +of neighbours; but she listened to them with uncomprehending ears. In +despair Aristide, to coax a smile from her lips, practised his many +queer accomplishments. He conjured with cards; he juggled with oranges; +he had a mountebank's trick of putting one leg round his neck; he +imitated the voices of cats and pigs and ducks, till Mme. Bidoux held +her sides with mirth. He spent time and thought in elaborating what he +called _bonnes farces_, such as dressing himself up in Mme. Bidoux's +raiment and personifying a crabbed customer. + +Fleurette smiled but listlessly at all these comicalities. + +One day she was taken ill. A doctor, summoned, said many learned words +which Aristide and Mme. Bidoux tried hard to understand. + +"But, after all, what is the matter with her?" + + [Illustration: ARISTIDE PRACTISED HIS MANY QUEER ACCOMPLISHMENTS] + +"She has no strength to struggle. She wants happiness." + +"Can you tell me the druggist's where that can be procured?" asked +Aristide. + +The doctor shrugged his shoulders. "I tell you the truth. It is one of +those pulmonary cases. Happy, she will live; unhappy, she will die." + +"My poor Mme. Bidoux, what is to be done?" asked Aristide, after the +doctor had gone off with his modest fee. "How are we to make her happy?" + +"If only she could have news of her husband!" replied Mme. Bidoux. + +Aristide's anxieties grew heavier. It was November, when knickerbockered +and culture-seeking tourists no longer fill the cheap hotels of Paris. +The profits of the Agence Pujol dwindled. Aristide lived on bread and +cheese, and foresaw the time when cheese would be a sinful luxury. +Meanwhile Fleurette had her nourishing food, and grew more like the +ghost of a lily every day. But her eyes followed Aristide, wherever he +went in her presence, as if he were the god of her salvation. + +One day Aristide, with an unexpected franc or two in his pocket, +stopped in front of a _bureau de tabac_. A brown packet of caporal and +a book of cigarette-papers--a cigarette rolled--how good it would be! +He hesitated, and his glance fell on a collection of foreign stamps +exposed in the window. Among them were twelve Honduras stamps all +postmarked. He stared at them, fascinated. + +"_Mon brave Aristide!_" he cried. "If the _bon Dieu_ does not send you +these vibrating inspirations, it is because you yourself have already +conceived them!" + +He entered the shop and emerged, not with caporal and cigarette-papers, +but with the twelve Honduras stamps. + +That night he sat up in his little bedroom at No. 213 bis, Rue +Saint-Honore, until his candle failed, inditing a letter in English to +Fleurette. At the head of his paper he wrote "Hotel Rosario, Honduras." +And at the end of the letter he signed the name of Reginald Batterby. +Where Honduras was, he had but a vague idea. For Fleurette, at any rate, +it would be somewhere at the other end of the world, and she would not +question any want of accuracy in local detail. Just before the light +went out he read the letter through with great pride. Batterby alluded +to the many letters he had posted from remote parts of the globe, gave +glowing forecasts of the fortune that Honduras had in store for him, +reminded her that he had placed sufficient funds for her maintenance in +the hands of Aristide Pujol, and assured her that the time was not far +off when she would be summoned to join her devoted husband. + +"Mme. Bidoux was right," said he, before going to sleep. "This is the +only way to make her happy." + +The next day Fleurette received the letter. The envelope bore the +postmarked Honduras stamp. It had been rubbed on the dusty pavement to +take off the newness. It was in her husband's handwriting. There was no +mistake about it--it was a letter from Honduras. + +"Are you happier now, little doubting female St. Thomas that you are?" +cried Aristide when she had told him the news. + +She smiled at him out of grateful eyes, and touched his hand. + +"Much happier, _mon bon ami_," she said, gently. + +Later in the day she handed him a letter addressed to Batterby. It had +no stamp. + +"Will you post this for me, Aristide?" + +Aristide put the letter in his pocket and turned sharply away, lest she +should see a sudden rush of tears. He had not counted on this innocent +trustfulness. He went to his room. The poor little letter! He had not +the heart to destroy it. No; he would keep it till Batterby came; it was +not his to destroy. So he threw it into a drawer. + +Having once begun the deception, however, he thought it necessary to +continue. Every week, therefore, he invented a letter from Batterby. To +interest her he drew upon his Provencal imagination. He described +combats with crocodiles, lion-hunts, feasts with terrific savages from +the interior, who brought their lady wives chastely clad in petticoats +made out of human teeth; he drew pictures of the town, a kind of +palm-shaded Paris by the sea, where one ate ortolans and oysters as big +as soup-plates, and where Chinamen with pigtails rode about the streets +on camels. It was not a correct description of Honduras, but, all the +same, an exotic atmosphere stimulating and captivating rose from the +pages. With this it was necessary to combine expressions of affection. +At first it was difficult. Essential delicacy restrained him. He had +also to keep in mind Batterby's vernacular. To address Fleurette, +impalpable creation of fairyland, as "old girl" was particularly +distasteful. By degrees, however, the artist prevailed. And then at last +the man himself took to forgetting the imaginary writer and poured out +words of love, warm, true, and passionate. + +And every week Fleurette would smile and tell him the wondrous news, and +would put into his hands an unstamped letter to post, which he, with a +wrench of the heart, would add to the collection in the drawer. + +Once she said, diffidently, with an unwonted blush and her pale blue +eyes swimming: "I write English so badly. Won't you read the letter and +correct my mistakes?" + +But Aristide laughed and licked the flap of the envelope and closed it. +"What has love to do with spelling and grammar? The good Reginald would +prefer your bad English to all the turned phrases of the Academie +Francaise." + +"It is as you like, Aristide," said Fleurette, with wistful eyes. + +Yet, in spite of the weekly letters, Fleurette continued to droop. The +winter came, and Fleurette was no longer able to stay among the cabbages +of Mme. Bidoux. She lay on her bed in the little room, ten feet by +seven, away, away at the top of the house in the Rue Saint Honore. The +doctor, informed of her comparative happiness, again shrugged his +shoulders. There was nothing more to be done. + +"She is dying, monsieur, for want of strength to live." + +Then Aristide went about with a great heartache. Fleurette would die; +she would never see the man she loved again. What would he say when he +returned and learned the tragic story? He would not even know that +Aristide, loving her, had been loyal to him. When the Director of the +Agence Pujol personally conducted the clients of the Hotel du Soleil et +de l'Ecosse to the Grand Trianon and pointed out the bed of the Empress +Josephine he nearly broke down. + +"What is the Empress doing now?" + +What was Fleurette doing now? Going to join the Empress in the world of +shadows. + +The tourists talked after the manner of their kind. + +"She must have found the bed very hard, poor dear." + +"Give me an iron bedstead and a good old spring mattress." + +"Ah, but, my dear sir, you forget. The Empress's bed was slung on the +back of tame panthers which Napoleon brought from Egypt." + +It was hard to jest convincingly to the knickerbockered with death in +one's soul. + +"Most beloved little Flower," ran the last letter that Fleurette +received, "I have just had a cable from Aristide saying that you are +very ill. I will come to you as soon as I can. _Ces petits yeux de +pervenche_--I am learning your language here, you see--haunt me day and +night ..." etcetera, etcetera. + +Aristide went up to her room with a great bunch of chrysanthemums. The +letter peeped from under the pillow. Fleurette was very weak. Mme. +Bidoux, who, during Fleurette's illness, had allowed her green grocery +business to be personally conducted to the deuce by a youth of sixteen +very much in love with the lady who sold sausages and other +_charcuterie_ next door, had spread out the fortune-telling cards on +the bed and was prophesying mendaciously. Fleurette took the flowers +and clasped them to her bosom. + +"No letter for _ce cher Reginald_?" + +She shook her head. "I can write no more," she whispered. + +She closed her eyes. Presently she said, in a low voice:-- + +"Aristide--if you kiss me, I think I can go to sleep." + +He bent down to kiss her forehead. A fragile arm twined itself about his +neck and he kissed her on the lips. + +"She is sleeping," said Mme. Bidoux, after a while. + +Aristide tiptoed out of the room. + +And so died Fleurette. Aristide borrowed money from the kind-hearted +Bocardon for a beautiful funeral, and Mme. Bidoux and Bocardon and a few +neighbours and himself saw her laid to rest. When they got back to the +Rue Saint Honore he told Mme. Bidoux about the letters. She wept and +clasped him, weeping too, in her kind, fat old arms. + +The next evening Aristide, coming back from his day's work at the Hotel +du Soleil et de l'Ecosse, was confronted in the shop by Mme. Bidoux, +hands on broad hips. + +"_Tiens, mon petit_," she said, without preliminary greeting. "You are +an angel. I knew it. But that a man's an angel is no reason for his +being an imbecile. Read this." + +She plucked a paper from her apron pocket and thrust it into his hand. +He read it, and blinked in amazement. + +"Where did you get this, Mere Bidoux?" + +"Where I got many more. In your drawer. The letters you were saving for +this infamous scoundrel. I wanted to know what she had written to him." + +"Mere Bidoux!" cried Aristide. "Those letters were sacred!" + +"Bah!" said Mme. Bidoux, unabashed. "There is nothing sacred to a sapper +or an old grandmother who loves an imbecile. I have read the letters, +_et voila, et voila, et voila!_" And she emptied her pockets of all the +letters, minus the envelopes, that Fleurette had written. + +And, after one swift glance at the first letter, Aristide had no +compunction in reading. They were all addressed to himself. + +They were very short, ill-written in a poor little uncultivated hand. +But they all contained one message, that of her love for Aristide. +Whatever illusions she may have had concerning Batterby had soon +vanished. She knew, with the unerring instinct of woman, that he had +betrayed and deserted her. Aristide's pious fraud had never deceived her +for a second. Too gentle, too timid to let him know what was in her +heart, she had written the secret patiently week after week, hoping +every time that curiosity, or pity, or something--she knew not +what--would induce him to open the idle letter, and wondering in her +simple peasant's soul at the delicacy that caused him to refrain. Once +she had boldly given him the envelope unclosed. + + [Illustration: HE READ IT, AND BLINKED IN AMAZEMENT] + +"She died for want of love, _parbleu_," said Aristide, "and there was +mine quivering in my heart and trembling on my lips all the time.... She +had _des yeux de pervenche_. Ah! _nom d'un chien!_ It is only with me +that Providence plays such tricks." + +He walked to the window and looked out into the grey street. Presently I +heard him murmuring the words of the old French song:-- + + Elle est morte en fevrier; + Pauvre Colinette! + + + + +VII + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE MIRACLE + + +You have seen how Aristide, by attaching himself to the Hotel du Soleil +et de l'Ecosse as a kind of glorified courier, had founded the Agence +Pujol. As he, personally, was the Agence, and the Agence was he, it +happened that when he was not in attendance at the hotel, the Agence +faded into space, and when he made his appearance in the vestibule and +hung up his placard by the bureau, the Agence at once burst again into +the splendour of existence. Apparently the fitful career of the Agence +Pujol lasted some years. Whenever a chance of more remunerative +employment turned up, Aristide took it and dissolved the Agence. +Whenever outrageous fortune chivied him with slings and arrows penniless +to Paris, there was always the Agence waiting to be resuscitated. + +It was during one of these periodic flourishings of the Agence Pujol +that Aristide met the Ducksmiths. + +Business was slack, few guests were at the hotel, and of those few none +desired to be personally conducted to the Louvre or Notre Dame or the +monument in the Place de la Bastille. They mostly wore the placid +expression of folks engaged in business affairs instead of the worried +look of pleasure-seekers. + +"My good Bocardon," said Aristide, lounging by the bureau and addressing +his friend the manager, "this is becoming desperate. In another minute I +shall take you out by main force and show you the Pont Neuf." + +At that moment the door of the stuffy salon opened, and a travelling +Briton, whom Aristide had not seen before, advanced to the bureau and +inquired his way to the Madeleine. Aristide turned on him like a flash. + +"Sir," said he, extracting documents from his pockets with lightning +rapidity, "nothing would give me greater pleasure than to conduct you +thither. My card. My tariff. My advertisement." He pointed to the +placard. "I am the managing director of the Agence Pujol, under the +special patronage of this hotel. I undertake all travelling +arrangements, from the Moulin Rouge to the Pyramids, and, as you see, my +charges are moderate." + +The Briton, holding the documents in a pudgy hand, looked at the +swift-gestured director with portentous solemnity. Then, with equal +solemnity, he looked at Bocardon. + +"Monsieur Ducksmith," said the latter, "you can repose every confidence +in Monsieur Aristide Pujol." + +"Umph!" said Mr. Ducksmith. + +After another solemn inspection of Aristide, he stuck a pair of +gold-rimmed glasses on his fleshy nose and perused the documents. He was +a fat, heavy man of about fifty years of age, and his scanty hair was +turning grey. His puffy cheeks hung jowl-like, giving him the appearance +of some odd dog--a similarity greatly intensified by the eye-sockets, +the lower lids of which were dragged down in the middle, showing the red +like a bloodhound's; but here the similarity ended, for the man's eyes, +dull and blue, had the unspeculative fixity of a rabbit's. His mouth, +small and weak, dribbled away at the corners into the jowls which, in +their turn, melted into two or three chins. He was decently dressed in +grey tweeds, and wore a diamond ring on his little finger. + +"Umph!" said he, at last; and went back to the salon. + +As soon as the door closed behind him Aristide sprang into an attitude +of indignation. + +"Did you ever see such a bear! If I ever saw a bigger one I would eat +him without salt or pepper. _Mais nom d'un chien_, such people ought to +be made into sausages!" + +"_Flegme britannique!_" laughed Bocardon. + +Half an hour passed, and Mr. Ducksmith made no reappearance from the +salon. In the forlorn hope of a client Aristide went in after him. He +found Mr. Ducksmith, glasses on nose, reading a newspaper, and a plump, +black-haired lady, with an expressionless face, knitting a grey woollen +sock. Why they should be spending their first morning--and a crisp, +sunny morning, too--in Paris in the murky staleness of this awful little +salon, Aristide could not imagine. As he entered, Mr. Ducksmith regarded +him vacantly over the top of his gold-rimmed glasses. + +"I have looked in," said Aristide, with his ingratiating smile, "to see +whether you are ready to go to the Madeleine." + +"Madeleine?" the lady inquired, softly, pausing in her knitting. + +"Madame," Aristide came forward, and, hand on heart, made her the lowest +of bows. "Madame, have I the honour of speaking to Madame Ducksmith? +Enchanted, madame, to make your acquaintance," he continued, after a +grunt from Mr. Ducksmith had assured him of the correctness of his +conjecture. "I am Monsieur Aristide Pujol, director of the Agence Pujol, +and my poor services are absolutely at your disposal." + +He drew himself up, twisted his moustache, and met her eyes--they were +rather sad and tired--with the roguish mockery of his own. She turned to +her husband. + +"Are you thinking of going to the Madeleine, Bartholomew?" + +"I am, Henrietta," said he. "I have decided to do it. And I have also +decided to put ourselves in the charge of this gentleman. Mrs. Ducksmith +and I are accustomed to all the conveniences of travel--I may say that +we are great travellers--and I leave it to you to make the necessary +arrangements. I prefer to travel at so much per head per day." + +He spoke in a wheezy, solemn monotone, from which all elements of life +and joy seemed to have been eliminated. His wife's voice, though softer +in timbre, was likewise devoid of colour. + +"My husband finds that it saves us from responsibilities," she remarked. + +"And over-charges, and the necessity of learning foreign languages, +which at our time of life would be difficult. During all our travels we +have not been to Paris before, owing to the impossibility of finding a +personally-conducted tour of an adequate class." + +"Then, my dear sir," cried Aristide, "it is Providence itself that has +put you in the way of the Agence Pujol. I will now conduct you to the +Madeleine without the least discomfort or danger." + +"Put on your hat, Henrietta," said Mr. Ducksmith, "while this gentleman +and I discuss terms." + +Mrs. Ducksmith gathered up her knitting and retired, Aristide dashing +to the door to open it for her. This gallantry surprised her ever so +little, for a faint flush came into her cheek and the shadow of a smile +into her eyes. + +"I wish you to understand, Mr. Pujol," said Mr. Ducksmith, "that being, +I may say, a comparatively rich man, I can afford to pay for certain +luxuries; but I made a resolution many years ago, which has stood me in +good stead during my business life, that I would never be cheated. You +will find me liberal but just." + +He was as good as his word. Aristide, who had never in his life +exploited another's wealth to his own advantage, suggested certain +terms, on the basis of so much per head per day, which Mr. Ducksmith +declared, with a sigh of relief, to be perfectly satisfactory. + +"Perhaps," said he, after further conversation, "you will be good enough +to schedule out a month's railway tour through France, and give me an +inclusive estimate for the three of us. As I say, Mrs. Ducksmith and I +are great travellers--we have been to Norway, to Egypt, to Morocco and +the Canaries, to the Holy Land, to Rome, and lovely Lucerne--but we find +that attention to the trivial detail of travel militates against our +enjoyment." + +"My dear sir," said Aristide, "trust in me, and your path and that of +the charming Mrs. Ducksmith will be strewn with roses." + +Whereupon Mrs. Ducksmith appeared, arrayed for walking out, and +Aristide, having ordered a cab, drove with them to the Madeleine. They +alighted in front of the majestic flight of steps. Mr. Ducksmith stared +at the classical portico supported on its Corinthian columns with his +rabbit-like, unspeculative gaze--he had those filmy blue eyes that never +seem to wink--and after a moment or two turned away. + +"Umph!" said he. + +Mrs. Ducksmith, dutiful and silent, turned away also. + +"This sacred edifice," Aristide began, in his best cicerone manner, "was +built, after a classic model, by the great Napoleon, as a Temple of +Fame. It was afterwards used as a church. You will observe--and, if you +care to, you can count, as a conscientious American lady did last +week--the fifty-six Corinthian columns. You will see they are Corinthian +by the acanthus leaves on the capitals. For the vulgar, who have no +architectural knowledge, I have _memoria technica_ for the instant +recognition of the three orders--Cabbages, Corinthian; horns, Ionic; +anything else, Doric. We will now mount the steps and inspect the +interior." + +He was dashing off in his eager fashion, when Mr. Ducksmith laid a +detaining hand on his arm. + +"No," said he, solemnly. "I disapprove of Popish interiors. Take us to +the next place." + + [Illustration: HE MIGHT AS WELL HAVE POINTED OUT THE MARVELS OF KUBLA + KHAN'S PLEASURE-DOME TO A COUPLE OF GUINEA-PIGS] + +He entered the waiting victoria. His wife meekly followed. + +"I suppose the Louvre is the next place?" said Aristide. + +"I leave it to you," said Mr. Ducksmith. + +Aristide gave the order to the cabman and took the little seat in the +cab facing his employers. On the way down the Rue Royale and the Rue de +Rivoli he pointed out the various buildings of interest--Maxim's, the +Cercle Royal, the Ministere de la Marine, the Hotel Continental. Two +expressionless faces, two pairs of unresponsive eyes, met his merry +glance. He might as well have pointed out the marvels of Kubla Khan's +pleasure-dome to a couple of guinea-pigs. + +The cab stopped at the entrance to the galleries of the Louvre. They +entered and walked up the great staircase on the turn of which the +Winged Victory stands, with the wind of God in her vesture, proclaiming +to each beholder the deathless, ever-soaring, ever-conquering spirit of +man, and heralding the immortal glories of the souls, wind-swept +likewise by the wind of God, that are enshrined in the treasure-houses +beyond. + +"There!" said Aristide. + +"Umph! No head," said Mr. Ducksmith, passing it by with scarcely a +glance. + +"Would it cost very much to get a new one?" asked Mrs. Ducksmith, +timidly. She was three or four paces behind her spouse. + +"It would cost the blood and tears and laughter of the human race," said +Aristide. + +("That was devilish good, wasn't it?" remarked Aristide, when telling me +this story. He always took care not to hide his light under the least +possibility of a bushel.) + +The Ducksmiths looked at him in their lacklustre way, and allowed +themselves to be guided into the picture-galleries, vaguely hearing +Aristide's comments, scarcely glancing at the pictures, and +manifesting no sign of interest in anything whatever. From the Louvre +they drove to Notre Dame, where the same thing happened. The venerable +pile, standing imperishable amid the vicissitudes of centuries (the +phrase was that of the director of the Agence Pujol), stirred in their +bosoms no perceptible emotion. Mr. Ducksmith grunted and declined to +enter; Mrs. Ducksmith said nothing. + +As with pictures and cathedrals, so it was with their food at lunch. +Beyond a solemn statement to the effect that in their quality of +practised travellers they made a point of eating the food and drinking +the wine of the country, Mr. Ducksmith did not allude to the meal. At +any rate, thought Aristide, they don't clamour for underdone chops and +tea. So far they were human. Nor did they maintain an awful silence +during the repast. On the contrary, Mr. Ducksmith loved to talk--in a +dismal, pompous way--chiefly of British politics. His method of +discourse was to place himself in the position of those in authority and +to declare what he would do in any given circumstances. Now, unless the +interlocutor adopts the same method and declares what _he_ would do, +conversation is apt to become one-sided. Aristide, having no notion of a +policy should he find himself exercising the functions of the British +Chancellor of the Exchequer, cheerfully tried to change the ground of +debate. + +"What would you do, Mr. Ducksmith, if you were King of England?" + +"I should try to rule the realm like a Christian statesman," replied Mr. +Ducksmith. + +"I should have a devil of a time!" said Aristide. + +"I beg your pardon?" said Mr. Ducksmith. + +"I should have a--ah, I see--_pardon_. I should----" He looked from +one paralyzing face to the other, and threw out his arms. "_Parbleu!_" +said he, "I should decapitate your Mrs. Grundy, and make it compulsory +for bishops to dance once a week in Trafalgar Square. _Tiens!_ I would +have it a capital offence for any English cook to prepare hashed +mutton without a license, and I would banish all the bakers of the +kingdom to Siberia--ah! your English bread, which you have to eat +stale so as to avoid a horrible death!--and I would open two hundred +thousand _cafes_--_mon Dieu!_ how thirsty I have been there!--and I +would make every English work-girl do her hair properly, and I would +ordain that everybody should laugh three times a day, under pain of +imprisonment for life." + +"I am afraid, Mr. Pujol," remarked Mr. Ducksmith, seriously, "you would +not be acting as a constitutional monarch. There is such a thing as the +British Constitution, which foreigners are bound to admire, even though +they may not understand." + +"To be a king must be a great responsibility," said Mrs. Ducksmith. + +"Madame," said Aristide, "you have uttered a profound truth." And to +himself he murmured, though he should not have done so, "_Nom de Dieu! +Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" + +After lunch they drove to Versailles, which they inspected in the same +apathetic fashion; then they returned to the hotel, where they +established themselves for the rest of the day in the airless salon, Mr. +Ducksmith reading English newspapers and his wife knitting a grey +woollen sock. + +"_Mon vieux!_" said Aristide to Bocardon, "they are people of a +nightmare. They are automata endowed with the faculty of digestion. _Ce +sont des gens invraisemblables._" + +Paris providing them, apparently, with no entertainment, they started, +after a couple of days, _Aristide duce et auspice Pujol_, on their +railway tour through France, to Aristide a pilgrimage of unimaginable +depression. They began with Chartres, continued with the Chateaux of the +Loire, and began to work their way south. Nothing that Aristide could do +roused them from their apathy. They were exasperatingly docile, made few +complaints, got up, entrained, detrained, fed, excursioned, slept, just +as they were bidden. But they looked at nothing, enjoyed nothing (save +perhaps English newspapers and knitting), and uttered nothing by way of +criticism or appreciation when Aristide attempted to review the wonders +through which they had passed. They did not care to know the history, +authentic or Pujolic, of any place they visited; they were impressed by +no scene of grandeur, no corner of exquisite beauty. To go on and on, in +a dull, non-sentient way, so long as they were spared all forethought, +all trouble, all afterthought, seemed to be their ideal of travel. +Sometimes Aristide, after a fruitless effort to capture their interest, +would hold his head, wondering whether he or the Ducksmith couple were +insane. It was a dragon-fly personally conducting two moles through a +rose-garden. + +Once only, during the early part of their journey, did a gleam of +joyousness pierce the dull glaze of Mr. Ducksmith's eyes. He had +procured from the bookstall of a station a pile of English newspapers, +and was reading them in the train, while his wife knitted the +interminable sock. Suddenly he folded a _Daily Telegraph_, and handed +it over to Aristide so that he should see nothing but a half-page +advertisement. The great capitals leaped to Aristide's eyes:-- + + "DUCKSMITH'S DELICATE JAMS." + +"I am _the_ Ducksmith," said he. "I started and built up the business. +When I found that I could retire, I turned it into a limited liability +company, and now I am free and rich and able to enjoy the advantages of +foreign travel." + +Mrs. Ducksmith started, sighed, and dropped a stitch. + +"Did you also make pickles?" asked Aristide. + +"I did manufacture pickles, but I made my name in jam. In the trade you +will find it an honoured one." + +"It is that in every nursery in Europe," Aristide declared, with polite +hyperbole. + +"I have done my best to deserve my reputation," said Mr. Ducksmith, as +impervious to flattery as to impressions of beauty. + +"_Pecaire!_" said Aristide to himself, "how can I galvanize these +corpses?" + +As the soulless days went by this problem grew to be Aristide's main +solicitude. He felt strangled, choked, borne down by an intolerable +weight. What could he do to stir their vitality? Should he fire off +pistols behind them, just to see them jump? But would they jump? Would +not Mr. Ducksmith merely turn his rabbit-eyes, set in their bloodhound +sockets, vacantly on him, and assume that the detonations were part of +the tour's programme? Could he not fill him up with conflicting +alcohols, and see what inebriety would do for him? But Mr. Ducksmith +declined insidious potations. He drank only at meal-times, and +sparingly. Aristide prayed that some Thais might come along, cast her +spell upon him, and induce him to wink. He himself was powerless. His +raciest stories fell on dull ears; none of his jokes called forth a +smile. At last, having taken them to nearly all the historic chateaux of +Touraine, without eliciting one cry of admiration, he gave Mr. Ducksmith +up in despair and devoted his attention to the lady. + +Mrs. Ducksmith parted her smooth black hair in the middle and fastened +it in a knob at the back of her head. Her clothes were good and new, but +some desolate dressmaker had contrived to invest them with an air of +hopeless dowdiness. At her bosom she wore a great brooch, containing +intertwined locks of a grandfather and grandmother long since defunct. +Her mind was as drearily equipped as her person. She had a vague idea +that they were travelling in France; but if Aristide had told her that +it was Japan she would have meekly accepted the information. She had no +opinions. Still she was a woman, and Aristide, firm in his conviction +that when it comes to love-making all women are the same, proceeded +forthwith to make love to her. + +"Madame," said he, one morning--she was knitting in the vestibule of the +Hotel du Faisan at Tours, Mr. Ducksmith being engaged, as usual, in the +salon with his newspapers--"how much more charming that beautiful grey +dress would be if it had a spot of colour." + +His audacious hand placed a deep crimson rose against her corsage, and +he stood away at arm's length, his head on one side, judging the effect. + +"Magnificent! If madame would only do me the honour to wear it." + +Mrs. Ducksmith took the flower hesitatingly. + +"I'm afraid my husband does not like colour," she said. + +"He must be taught," cried Aristide. "You must teach him. I must teach +him. Let us begin at once. Here is a pin." + +He held the pin delicately between finger and thumb, and controlled her +with his roguish eyes. She took the pin and fixed the rose to her dress. + +"I don't know what Mr. Ducksmith will say." + +"What he ought to say, madame, is 'Bountiful Providence, I thank Thee +for giving me such a beautiful wife.'" + +Mrs. Ducksmith blushed and, to conceal her face, bent it over her +resumed knitting. She made woman's time-honoured response. + +"I don't think you ought to say such things, Mr. Pujol." + +"Ah, madame," said he, lowering his voice; "I have tried not to; but, +_que voulez-vous_, it was stronger than I. When I see you going about +like a little grey mouse"--the lady weighed at least twelve stone--"you, +who ought to be ravishing the eyes of mankind, I feel indignation +here"--he thumped his chest; "my Provencal heart is stirred. It is +enough to make one weep." + +"I don't quite understand you, Mr. Pujol," she said, dropping stitches +recklessly. + +"Ah, madame," he whispered--and the rascal's whisper on such occasions +could be very seductive--"that I will never believe." + +"I am too old to dress myself up in fine clothes," she murmured. + +"That's an illusion," said he, with a wide-flung gesture, "that will +vanish at the first experiment." + +Mr. Ducksmith emerged from the salon, _Daily Telegraph_ in hand. Mrs. +Ducksmith shot a timid glance at him and the knitting needles clicked +together nervously. But the vacant eyes of the heavy man seemed no more +to note the rose on her bosom than they noted any point of beauty in +landscape or building. + +Aristide went away chuckling, highly diverted by the success of his +first effort. He had touched some hidden springs of feeling. Whatever +might happen, at any rate, for the remainder of the tour he would not +have to spend his emotional force in vain attempts to knock sparks out +of a jelly-fish. He noticed with delight that at dinner that evening +Mrs. Ducksmith, still wearing the rose, had modified the rigid sweep +of her hair from the mid-parting. It gave just a wavy hint of +coquetry. He made her a little bow and whispered, "Charming!" +Whereupon she coloured and dropped her eyes. And during the meal, +while Mr. Ducksmith discoursed on bounty-fed sugar, his wife and +Aristide exchanged, across the table, the glances of conspirators. +After dinner he approached her. + +"Madame, may I have the privilege of showing you the moon of Touraine?" + +She laid down her knitting. "Bartholomew, will you come out?" + +He looked at her over his glasses and shook his head. + +"What is the good of looking at moonshine? The moon itself I have +already seen." + +So Aristide and Mrs. Ducksmith sat by themselves outside the hotel, and +he expounded to her the beauty of moonlight and its intoxicating effect +on folks in love. + +"Wouldn't you like," said he, "to be lying on that white burnished cloud +with your beloved kissing your feet?" + +"What odd things you think of." + +"But wouldn't you?" he insinuated. + +Her bosom heaved and swelled on a sigh. She watched the strip of silver +for a while and then murmured a wistful "Yes." + +"I can tell you of many odd things," said Aristide. "I can tell you how +flowers sing and what colour there is in the notes of birds. And how a +cornfield laughs, and how the face of a woman who loves can outdazzle +the sun. _Chere madame_," he went on, after a pause, touching her little +plump hand, "you have been hungering for beauty and thirsting for +sympathy all your life. Isn't that so?" + +She nodded. + +"You have always been misunderstood." + +A tear fell. Our rascal saw the glistening drop with peculiar +satisfaction. Poor Mrs. Ducksmith! It was a child's game. _Enfin_, +what woman could resist him? He had, however, one transitory qualm of +conscience, for, with all his vagaries, Aristide was a kindly and +honest man. Was it right to disturb those placid depths? Was it right +to fill this woman with romantic aspirations that could never be +gratified? He himself had not the slightest intention of playing +Lothario and of wrecking the peace of the Ducksmith household. The +realization of the saint-like purity of his aims reassured him. When +he wanted to make love to a woman, _pour tout de bon_, it would not be +to Mrs. Ducksmith. + +"Bah!" said he to himself. "I am doing a noble and disinterested act. I +am restoring sight to the blind. I am giving life to one in a state of +suspended animation. _Tron de l'Air!_ I am playing the part of a +soul-reviver! And, _parbleu!_ it isn't Jean or Jacques that can do that. +It takes an Aristide Pujol!" + +So, having persuaded himself, in his Southern way, that he was executing +an almost divine mission, he continued, with a zest now sharpened by an +approving conscience, to revive Mrs. Ducksmith's soul. + +The poor lady, who had suffered the blighting influence of Mr. Ducksmith +for twenty years with never a ray of counteracting warmth from the +outside, expanded like a flower to the sun under the soul-reviving +process. Day by day she exhibited some fresh timid coquetry in dress and +manner. Gradually she began to respond to Aristide's suggestions of +beauty in natural scenery and exquisite building. On the ramparts of +Angouleme, daintiest of towns in France, she gazed at the smiling +valleys of the Charente and the Son stretching away below, and of her +own accord touched his arm lightly and said: "How beautiful!" She +appealed to her husband. + +"Umph!" said he. + +Once more (it had become a habit) she exchanged glances with Aristide. +He drew her a little farther along, under pretext of pointing out the +dreamy sweep of the Charente. + +"If he appreciates nothing at all, why on earth does he travel?" + +Her eyelids fluttered upwards for a fraction of a second. + +"It's his mania," she said. "He can never rest at home. He must always +be going on--on." + +"How can you endure it?" he asked. + +She sighed. "It is better now that you can teach me how to look at +things." + +"Good!" thought Aristide. "When I leave them she can teach him to look +at things and revive his soul. Truly I deserve a halo." + +As Mr. Ducksmith appeared to be entirely unperceptive of his wife's +spiritual expansion, Aristide grew bolder in his apostolate. He +complimented Mrs. Ducksmith to his face. He presented her daily with +flowers. He scarcely waited for the heavy man's back to be turned to +make love to her. If she did not believe that she was the most +beautiful, the most ravishing, the most delicate-souled woman in the +world, it was through no fault of Aristide. Mr. Ducksmith went his +pompous, unseeing way. At every stopping-place stacks of English +daily papers awaited him. Sometimes, while Aristide was showing them +the sights of a town--to which, by the way, he insisted on being +conducted--he would extract a newspaper from his pocket and read with +dull and dogged stupidity. Once Aristide caught him reading the +advertisements for cooks and housemaids. In these circumstances Mrs. +Ducksmith spiritually expanded at an alarming rate; and, +correspondingly, dwindled the progress of Mr. Ducksmith's sock. + +They arrived at Perigueux, in Perigord, land of truffles, one morning, +in time for lunch. Towards the end of the meal the _maitre d'hotel_ +helped them to great slabs of _pate de foie gras_, made in the +house--most of the hotel-keepers in Perigord make _pate de foie gras_, +both for home consumption and for exportation--and waited expectant of +their appreciation. He was not disappointed. Mr. Ducksmith, after a +hesitating glance at the first mouthful, swallowed it, greedily devoured +his slab, and, after pointing to his empty plate, said, solemnly:-- + +"_Plou._" + +Like Oliver, he asked for more. + +"_Tiens!_" thought Aristide, astounded. "Is he, too, developing a soul?" + +But, alas! there were no signs of it when they went their dreary round +of the town in the usual ramshackle open cab. The cathedral of +Saint-Front, extolled by Aristide and restored by Abadie--a terrible +fellow who has capped with tops of pepper-castors every pre-Gothic +building in France--gave him no thrill; nor did the picturesque, +tumble-down ancient buildings on the banks of the Dordogne, nor the +delicate Renaissance facades in the cool, narrow Rue du Lys. + +"We will now go back to the hotel," said Mr. Ducksmith. + +"But have we seen it all?" asked his wife. + +"By no means," said Aristide. + +"We will go back to the hotel," repeated her husband, in his +expressionless tones. "I have seen enough of Perigueux." + +This was final. They drove back to the hotel. Mr. Ducksmith, without a +word, went straight into the salon, leaving Aristide and his wife +standing in the vestibule. + +"And you, madame," said Aristide; "are you going to sacrifice the glory +of God's sunshine to the manufacture of woollen socks?" + +She smiled--she had caught the trick at last--and said, in happy +submission: "What would you have me do?" + +With one hand he clasped her arm; with the other, in a superb gesture, +he indicated the sunlit world outside. + +"Let us drain together," cried he, "the loveliness of Perigueux to its +dregs!" + +Greatly daring, she followed him. It was a rapturous escapade--the +first adventure of her life. She turned her comely face to him and he +saw smiles round her lips and laughter in her eyes. Aristide, worker +of miracles, strutted by her side choke-full of vanity. They wandered +through the picturesque streets of the old town with the gaiety of +truant children, peeping through iron gateways into old courtyards, +venturing their heads into the murk of black stairways, talking (on +the part of Aristide) with mothers who nursed chuckling babes on their +doorsteps, crossing the thresholds, hitherto taboo, of churches, and +meeting the mystery of coloured glass and shadows and the heavy smell +of incense. + +Her hand was on his arm when they entered the flagged courtyard of an +ancient palace, a stately medley of the centuries, with wrought +ironwork in the balconies, tourelles, oriels, exquisite Renaissance +ornaments on architraves, and a great central Gothic doorway, with +great window-openings above, through which was visible the stone +staircase of honour leading to the upper floors. In a corner stood a +mediaeval well, the sides curiously carved. One side of the courtyard +blazed in sunshine, the other lay cool and grey in shadow. Not a human +form or voice troubled the serenity of the spot. On a stone bench +against the shady wall Aristide and Mrs. Ducksmith sat down to rest. + +"_Voila!_" said Aristide. "Here one can suck in all the past like an +omelette. They had the feeling for beauty, those old fellows." + +"I have wasted twenty years of my life," said Mrs. Ducksmith, with a +sigh. "Why didn't I meet someone like you when I was young? Ah, you +don't know what my life has been, Mr. Pujol." + +"Why not Aristide when we are alone? Why not, Henriette?" + +He too had the sense of adventure, and his eyes were more than usually +compelling and his voice more seductive. For some reason or other, +undivined by Aristide--over-excitement of nerves, perhaps--she burst +into tears. + +"_Henriette! Henriette, ne pleurez pas._" + +His arm crept round her--he knew not how; her head sank on his shoulder, +she knew not why--faithlessness to her lord was as far from her thoughts +as murder or arson; but for one poor little moment in a lifetime it is +good to weep on someone's shoulder and to have someone's sympathetic arm +around one's waist. + +"_Pauvre petite femme!_ And is it love she is pining for?" + +She sobbed; he lifted her chin with his free hand--and what less could +mortal apostle do?--he kissed her on her wet cheek. + +A bellow like that of an angry bull caused them to start asunder. They +looked up, and there was Mr. Ducksmith within a few yards of them, his +face aflame, his rabbit's eyes on fire with rage. He advanced, shook his +fists in their faces. + +"I've caught you! At last, after twenty years, I've caught you!" + +"Monsieur," cried Aristide, starting up, "allow me to explain." + +He swept Aristide aside like an intercepting willow-branch, and poured +forth a torrent of furious speech upon his wife. + +"I have hated you for twenty years. Day by day I have hated you more. +I've watched you, watched you, watched you! But, you sly jade, you've +been too clever for me till now. Yes; I followed you from the hotel. I +dogged you. I foresaw what would happen. Now the end has come. I've +hated you for twenty years--ever since you first betrayed me----" + +Mrs. Ducksmith, who had sat with overwhelmed head in her hands, started +bolt upright, and looked at him like one thunderstruck. + +"I betrayed you?" she gasped, in bewilderment. "My God! When? How? What +do you mean?" + +He laughed--for the first time since Aristide had known him--but it was +a ghastly laugh, that made the jowls of his cheeks spread horribly to +his ears; and again he flooded the calm, stately courtyard with the +raging violence of words. The veneer of easy life fell from him. He +became the low-born, petty tradesman, using the language of the hands +of his jam factory. No, he had never told her. He had awaited his +chance. Now he had found it. He called her names.... + + [Illustration: "I'VE CAUGHT YOU! AT LAST, AFTER TWENTY YEARS, I'VE + CAUGHT YOU!"] + +Aristide interposed, his Southern being athrob with the insults heaped +upon the woman. + +"Say that again, monsieur," he shouted, "and I will take you up in my +arms like a sheep and throw you down that well." + +The two men glared at one another, Aristide standing bent, with crooked +fingers, ready to spring at the other's throat. The woman threw herself +between them. + +"For Heaven's sake," she cried, "listen to me! I have done no wrong. I +have done no wrong now--I never did you wrong, so help me God!" + +Mr. Ducksmith laughed again, and his laugh re-echoed round the quiet +walls and up the vast staircase of honour. + +"You'd be a fool not to say it. But now I've done with you. Here, you, +sir. Take her away--do what you like with her; I'll divorce her. I'll +give you a thousand pounds never to see her again." + +"_Goujat! Triple goujat!_" cried Aristide, more incensed than ever at +this final insult. + +Mrs. Ducksmith, deadly white, swayed sideways, and Aristide caught her +in his arms and dragged her to the stone bench. The fat, heavy man +looked at them for a second, laughed again, and sped through the +_porte-cochere_. Mrs. Ducksmith quickly recovered from her fainting +attack, and gently pushed the solicitous Aristide away. + +"Merciful Heaven!" she murmured. "What is to become of me?" + +The last person to answer the question was Aristide. For once in his +adventurous life resource failed him. He stared at the woman for whom he +cared not the snap of a finger, and who, he knew, cared not the snap of +a finger for him, aghast at the havoc he had wrought. If he had set out +to arouse emotion in these two sluggish breasts he had done so with a +vengeance. He had thought he was amusing himself with a toy cannon, and +he had fired a charge of dynamite. + +He questioned her almost stupidly--for a man in the comic mask does not +readily attune himself to tragedy. She answered with the desolate +frankness of a lost soul. And then the whole meaning--or the lack of +meaning--of their inanimate lives was revealed to him. Absolute +estrangement had followed the birth of their child nearly twenty years +ago. The child had died after a few weeks. Since then he saw--and the +generous blood of his heart froze as the vision came to him--that the +vulgar, half-sentient, rabbit-eyed bloodhound of a man had nursed an +unexpressed, dull, implacable resentment against the woman. It did not +matter that the man's suspicion was vain. To Aristide the woman's blank +amazement at the preposterous charge was proof enough; to the man the +thing was real. For nearly twenty years the man had suffered the cancer +to eat away his vitals, and he had watched and watched his blameless +wife, until now, at last, he had caught her in this folly. No wonder he +could not rest at home; no wonder he was driven, Io-wise, on and on, +although he hated travel and all its discomforts, knew no word of a +foreign language, knew no scrap of history, had no sense of beauty, was +utterly ignorant, as every single one of our expensively State-educated +English lower classes is, of everything that matters on God's earth; no +wonder that, in the unfamiliarity of foreign lands, feeling as helpless +as a ballet-dancer in a cavalry charge, he looked to Cook, or Lunn, or +the Agence Pujol to carry him through his uninspired pilgrimage. For +twenty years he had shown no sign of joy or sorrow or anger, scarcely +even of pleasure or annoyance. A tortoise could not have been more +unemotional. The unsuspected volcano had slumbered. To-day came +disastrous eruption. And what was a mere laughing, crying child of +a man like Aristide Pujol in front of a Ducksmith volcano? + +"What is to become of me?" wailed Mrs. Ducksmith again. + +"_Ma foi!_" said Aristide, with a shrug of his shoulders. "What's going +to become of anyone? Who can foretell what will happen in a minute's +time? _Tiens!_" he added, kindly laying his hand on the sobbing woman's +shoulder. "Be comforted, my poor Henriette. Just as nothing in this +world is as good as we hope, so nothing is as bad as we fear. _Voyons!_ +All is not lost yet. We must return to the hotel." + +She weepingly acquiesced. They walked through the quiet streets like +children whose truancy had been discovered and who were creeping back to +condign punishment at school. When they reached the hotel, Mrs. +Ducksmith went straight up to the woman's haven, her bedroom. + +Aristide tugged at his Vandyke beard in dire perplexity. The situation +was too pregnant with tragedy for him to run away and leave the pair +to deal with it as best they could. But what was he to do? He sat down +in the vestibule and tried to think. The landlord, an unstoppable +gramophone of garrulity, entering by the street-door and bearing down +upon him, put him to flight. He, too, sought his bedroom, a cool +apartment with a balcony outside the French window. On this balcony, +which stretched along the whole range of first-floor bedrooms, he +stood for a while, pondering deeply. Then, in an absent way, he +overstepped the limit of his own room-frontage. A queer sound startled +him. He paused, glanced through the open window, and there he saw a +sight which for the moment paralyzed him. + + [Illustration: THERE HE SAW A SIGHT WHICH FOR THE MOMENT PARALYZED HIM] + +Recovering command of his muscles, he tiptoed his way back. He +remembered now that the three rooms adjoined. Next to his was Mr. +Ducksmith's, and then came Mrs. Ducksmith's. It was Mr. Ducksmith whom +he had seen. Suddenly his dark face became luminous with laughter, his +eyes glowed, he threw his hat in the air and danced with glee about the +room. Having thus worked off the first intoxication of his idea, he +flung his few articles of attire and toilet necessaries into his bag, +strapped it, and darted, in his dragon-fly way, into the corridor and +tapped softly at Mrs. Ducksmith's door. She opened it. He put his finger +to his lips. + +"Madame," he whispered, bringing to bear on her all the mocking +magnetism of his eyes, "if you value your happiness you will do exactly +what I tell you. You will obey me implicitly. You must not ask +questions. Pack your trunks at once. In ten minutes' time the porter +will come for them." + +She looked at him with a scared face. "But what am I going to do?" + +"You are going to revenge yourself on your husband." + +"But I don't want to," she replied, piteously. + +"I do," said he. "Begin, _chere madame_. Every moment is precious." + +In a state of stupefied terror the poor woman obeyed him. He saw her +start seriously on her task and then went downstairs, where he held a +violent and gesticulatory conversation with the landlord and with a man +in a green baize apron summoned from some dim lair of the hotel. After +that he lit a cigarette and smoked feverishly, walking up and down the +pavement. In ten minutes' time his luggage with that of Mrs. Ducksmith +was placed upon the cab. Mrs. Ducksmith appeared trembling and +tear-stained in the vestibule. + + * * * * * + +The man in the green baize apron knocked at Mr. Ducksmith's door and +entered the room. + +"I have come for the baggage of monsieur," said he. + +"Baggage? What baggage?" asked Mr. Ducksmith, sitting up. + +"I have descended the baggage of Monsieur Pujol," said the porter in his +stumbling English, "and of madame, and put them in a cab, and I +naturally thought monsieur was going away, too." + +"Going away!" He rubbed his eyes, glared at the porter, and dashed into +his wife's room. It was empty. He dashed into Aristide's room. It was +empty, too. Shrieking inarticulate anathema, he rushed downstairs, the +man in the green baize apron following at his heels. + +Not a soul was in the vestibule. No cab was at the door. Mr. Ducksmith +turned upon his stupefied satellite. + +"Where are they?" + +"They must have gone already. I filled the cab. Perhaps Monsieur Pujol +and madame have gone before to make arrangements." + +"Where have they gone to?" + +"In Perigueux there is nowhere to go to with baggage but the railway +station." + +A decrepit vehicle with a gaudy linen canopy hove in sight. Mr. +Ducksmith hailed it as the last victims of the Flood must have hailed +the Ark. He sprang into it and drove to the station. + +There, in the _salle d'attente_, he found Aristide mounting guard over +his wife's luggage. He hurled his immense bulk at his betrayer. + +"You blackguard! Where is my wife?" + +"Monsieur," said Aristide, puffing a cigarette, sublimely impudent and +debonair, "I decline to answer any questions. Your wife is no longer +your wife. You offered me a thousand pounds to take her away. I am +taking her away. I did not deign to disturb you for such a trifle as a +thousand pounds, but, since you are here----" + +He smiled engagingly and held out his curved palm. Mr. Ducksmith foamed +at the corners of the small mouth that disappeared into the bloodhound +jowls. + +"My wife!" he shouted. "If you don't want me to throw you down and +trample on you." + +A band of loungers, railway officials, peasants, and other travellers +awaiting their trains, gathered round. As the altercation was conducted +in English, which they did not understand, they could only hope for the +commencement of physical hostilities. + +"My dear sir," said Aristide, "I do not understand you. For twenty years +you hold an innocent and virtuous woman under an infamous suspicion. She +meets a sympathetic soul, and you come across her pouring into his ear +the love and despair of a lifetime. You have more suspicion. You tell me +you will give me a thousand pounds to go away with her. I take you at +your word. And now you want to stamp on me. _Ma foi!_ it is not +reasonable." + +Mr. Ducksmith seized him by the lapels of his coat. A gasp of +expectation went round the crowd. But Aristide recognized an agonized +appeal in the eyes now bloodshot. + +"My wife!" he said hoarsely. "I want my wife. I can't live without her. +Give her back to me. Where is she?" + +"You had better search the station," said Aristide. + +The heavy man unconsciously shook him in his powerful grasp, as a child +might shake a doll. + +"Give her to me! Give her to me, I say! She won't regret it." + + [Illustration: MR. DUCKSMITH SEIZED HIM BY THE LAPELS OF HIS COAT] + +"You swear that?" asked Aristide, with lightning quickness. + +"I swear it, by God! Where is she?" + +Aristide disengaged himself, waved his hand airily towards Perigueux, +and smiled blandly. + +"In the salon of the hotel, waiting for you to prostrate yourself on +your knees before her." + +Mr. Ducksmith gripped him by the arm. + +"Come back with me. If you're lying I'll kill you." + +"The luggage?" queried Aristide. + +"Confound the luggage!" said Mr. Ducksmith, and dragged him out of the +station. + +A cab brought them quickly to the hotel. Mr. Ducksmith bolted like an +obese rabbit into the salon. A few moments afterwards Aristide, +entering, found them locked in each other's arms. + +They started alone for England that night, and Aristide returned to the +directorship of the Agence Pujol. But he took upon himself enormous +credit for having worked a miracle. + + * * * * * + +"One thing I can't understand," said I, after he had told me the story, +"is what put this sham elopement into your crazy head. What did you see +when you looked into Mr. Ducksmith's bedroom?" + +"Ah, _mon vieux_, I did not tell you. If I had told you, you would not +have been surprised at what I did. I saw a sight that would have melted +the heart of a stone. I saw Ducksmith wallowing on his bed and sobbing +as if his heart would break. It filled my soul with pity. I said: 'If +that mountain of insensibility can weep and sob in such agony, it is +because he loves--and it is I, Aristide, who have reawakened that +love.'" + +"Then," said I, "why on earth didn't you go and fetch Mrs. Ducksmith and +leave them together?" + +He started from his chair and threw up both hands. + +"_Mon Dieu!_" cried he. "You English! You are a charming people, but you +have no romance. You have no dramatic sense. I will help myself to a +whisky and soda." + + + + +VIII + +THE ADVENTURE OF THE FICKLE GODDESS + + +It may be remembered that Aristide Pujol had aged parents, browned and +wrinkled children of the soil, who had passed all their days in the +desolation of Aigues-Mortes, the little fortified, derelict city in the +salt marshes of Provence. Although they regarded him with the same +unimaginative wonder as a pair of alligators might regard an Argus +butterfly, their undoubted but freakish progeny, and although Aristide +soared high above their heads in all phases of thought and emotion, the +mutual ties remained strong and perdurable. Scarcely a year passed +without Aristide struggling somehow south to visit _ses vieux_, as he +affectionately called them, and whenever Fortune shed a few smiles on +him, one or two at least were sure to find their way to Aigues-Mortes in +the shape of, say, a silver-mounted umbrella for his father or a deuce +of a Paris hat for the old lady's Sunday wear. Monsieur and Madame Pujol +had a sacred museum of these unused objects--the pride of their lives. +Aristide was entirely incomprehensible, but he was a good son. A bad son +in France is rare. + +But once Aristide nearly killed his old people outright. An envelope +from him contained two large caressive slips of bluish paper, which when +scrutinized with starting eyes turned out to be two one-thousand-franc +notes. Mon Dieu! What had happened? Had Aristide been robbing the Bank +of France? They stood paralyzed and only recovered motive force when a +neighbour suggested their reading the accompanying letter. It did not +explain things very clearly. He was in Aix-les-Bains, a place which they +had never heard of, making his fortune. He was staying at the Hotel de +l'Europe, where Queen Victoria (they had heard of Queen Victoria) had +been contented to reside, he was a glittering figure in a splendid +beau-monde, and if _ses vieux_ would buy a few cakes and a bottle of vin +cachete with the enclosed trifle, to celebrate his prosperity, he would +deem it the privilege of a devoted son. But Pujol senior, though +wondering where the devil he had fished all that money from, did not +waste it in profligate revelry. He took the eighty pounds to the bank +and exchanged the perishable paper for one hundred solid golden louis +which he carried home in a bag curiously bulging beneath his woollen +jersey and secreted it with the savings of his long life in the mattress +of the conjugal bed. + +"If only he hasn't stolen it," sighed the mother. + +"What does it matter, since it is sewn up there all secure?" said the +old man. "No one can find it." + +The Provencal peasant is as hard-headed and practical as a Scottish +miner, and if left alone by the fairies would produce no imaginative +effect whatever upon his generation; but in his progeniture he is more +preposterously afflicted with changelings than any of his fellows the +world over, which, though ethnologically an entirely new proposition, +accounts for a singular number of things and _inter alia_ for my +dragon-fly friend, Aristide Pujol. + +Now, Aristide, be it said at the outset, had not stolen the money. It +(and a vast amount more) had been honestly come by. He did not lie when +he said that he was staying at the Hotel de l'Europe, Aix-les-Bains, +honoured by the late Queen Victoria (pedantic accuracy requires the +correction that the august lady rented the annexe, the Villa Victoria, +on the other side of the shady way--but no matter--an hotel and its +annexe are the same thing) nor did he lie in boasting of his prodigious +prosperity. Aristide was in clover. For the first, and up to now as I +write, the only, time in his life he realized the gorgeous visions of +pallid years. He was leading the existence of the amazing rich. He could +drink champagne--not your miserable _tisane_ at five francs a quart--but +real champagne, with year of vintage and _gout american_ or _gout +anglais_ marked on label, fabulously priced; he could dine lavishly at +the Casino restaurants or at Nikola's, prince of restaurateurs, among +the opulent and the fair; he could clothe himself in attractive raiment; +he could step into a fiacre and bid the man drive and not care whither +he went or what he paid; he could also distribute five-franc pieces to +lame beggars. He scattered his money abroad with both hands, according +to his expansive temperament; and why not, when he was drawing wealth +out of an inexhaustible fount? The process was so simple, so sure. All +you had to do was to believe in the cards on which you staked your +money. If you knew you were going to win, you won. Nothing could be +easier. + +He had drifted into Aix-les-Bains from Geneva on the lamentable +determination of a commission agency in the matter of some patent fuel, +with a couple of louis in his pocket forlornly jingling the tale of his +entire fortune. As this was before the days when you had to exhibit +certificates of baptism, marriage, sanity and bank-balance before being +allowed to enter the baccarat rooms, Aristide paid his two francs and +made a bee line for the tables. I am afraid Aristide was a gambler. He +was never so happy as when taking chances; his whole life was a gamble, +with Providence holding the bank. Before the night was over he had +converted his two louis into fifty. The next day they became five +hundred. By the end of a week his garments were wadded with bank notes +whose value amounted to a sum so stupendous as to be beyond need of +computation. He was a celebrity in the place and people nudged each +other as he passed by. And Aristide passed by with a swagger, his head +high and the end of his pointed beard sticking joyously up in the air. + +We see him one August morning, in the plentitude of his success, +lounging in a wicker chair on the shady lawn of the Hotel de l'Europe. +He wore white buckskin shoes--I begin with these as they were the first +point of his person to attract the notice of the onlooker--lilac silk +socks, a white flannel suit with a zig-zag black stripe, a violet tie +secured by a sapphire and diamond pin, and a rakish panama hat. On his +knees lay the _Matin_; the fingers of his left hand held a fragrant +corona; his right hand was uplifted in a gesture, for he was talking. He +was talking to a couple of ladies who sat near by, one a mild-looking +Englishwoman of fifty, dressed in black, the other, her daughter, a +beautiful girl of twenty-four. That Aristide should fly to feminine +charms, like moth to candle, was a law of his being; that he should lie, +with shriveled wings, at Miss Errington's feet was the obvious result. +Her charms were of the winsome kind to which he was most susceptible. +She had an oval face, a little mouth like crumpled rose petals (so +Aristide himself described it), a complexion the mingling of ivory and +peach blossom (Aristide again), a straight little nose, appealing eyes +of the deepest blue veiled by sweeping lashes and fascinating fluffiness +of dark hair over a pure brow. She had a graceful figure, and the +slender foot below her white pique skirt was at once the envy and +admiration of Aix-les-Bains. + +Aristide talked. The ladies listened, with obvious amusement. In the +easy hotel way he had fallen into their acquaintance. As the man of +wealth, the careless player who took five-hundred-louis banks at the +table with the five-louis minimum, and cleared out the punt, he felt it +necessary to explain himself. I am afraid he deviated from the narrow +path of truth. + +"What perfect English you speak," Miss Errington remarked, when he had +finished his harangue and had put the corona between his lips. Her voice +was a soft contralto. + +"I have mixed much in English society, since I was a child," replied +Aristide, in his grandest manner. "Fortune has made me know many of your +county families and members of Parliament." + +Miss Errington laughed. "Our M. P.'s are rather a mixed lot, Monsieur +Pujol." + +"To me an English Member of Parliament is a high-bred conservative. I +do not recognize the others," said Aristide. + +"Unfortunately we have to recognize them," said the elder lady with a +smile. + +"Not socially, madame. They exist as mechanical factors of the +legislative machine; but that is all." He swelled as if the blood of the +Montmorencys and the Colignys boiled in his veins. "We do not ask them +into our drawing rooms. We do not allow them to marry our daughters. We +only salute them with cold politeness when we pass them in the street." + +"It's astonishing," said Miss Errington, "how strongly the aristocratic +principle exists in republican France. Now, there's our friend, the +Comte de Lussigny, for instance----" + +A frown momentarily darkened the cloudless brow of Aristide Pujol. He +did not like the Comte de Lussigny---- + +"With Monsieur de Lussigny," he interposed, "it is a matter of +prejudice, not of principle." + +"And with you?" + +"The reasoned philosophy of a lifetime, mademoiselle," answered +Aristide. He turned to Mrs. Errington. + +"How long have you known Monsieur de Lussigny, madame?" + +She looked at her daughter. "It was in Monte Carlo the winter before +last, wasn't it, Betty? Since then we have met him frequently in +England and Paris. We came across him, just lately, at Trouville. I +think he's charming, don't you?" + +"He's a great gambler," said Aristide. + +Betty Errington laughed again. "But so are you. So is mamma. So am I, in +my poor little way." + +"We gamble for amusement," said Aristide loftily. + +"I'm sure I don't," cried Miss Betty, with merry eyes--and she looked +adorable--"When I put my despised five-franc piece down on the table I +want desperately to win, and when the horrid croupier rakes it up I want +to hit him--Oh! I want to hit him hard." + +"And when you win?" + +"I'm afraid I don't think of the croupier at all," said Miss Betty. + +Her mother smiled indulgently and exchanged a glance with Aristide. +This pleased him; there was an agreeable little touch of intimacy in +it. It confirmed friendly relations with the mother. What were his +designs as regards the daughter he did not know. They were not evil, +certainly. For all his southern blood, Latin traditions and +devil-may-care upbringing, Aristide, though perhaps not reaching our +divinely set and therefore unique English standard of morality, was a +decent soul; further, partly through his pedagogic sojourn among them, +and partly through his childish adoration of the frank, fair-cheeked, +northern goddesses talking the quick, clear speech, who passed him by +when he was a hunted little devil of a _chasseur_ in the Marseilles +cafe, he had acquired a peculiarly imaginative reverence for English +girls. The reverence, indeed, extended to English ladies generally. +Owing to the queer circumstances of his life they were the only women +of a class above his own, with whom he had associated on terms of +equality. He had, then, no dishonorable designs as regards Miss Betty +Errington. On the other hand, the thoughts of marriage had as yet not +entered his head. You see, a Frenchman and an Englishman or an +American, view marriage from entirely different angles. The +Anglo-Saxon of honest instincts, attracted towards a pretty girl at +once thinks of the possibilities of marriage; if he finds them +infinitely remote, he makes romantic love to her in the solitude of +his walks abroad or of his sleepless nights, and, in her presence, is +as dumb and dismal as a freshly hooked trout. The equally honest Gaul +does nothing of the kind. The attraction in itself is a stimulus to +adventure. He makes love to her, just because it is the nature of a +lusty son of Adam to make love to a pretty daughter of Eve. He lives +in the present. The rest doesn't matter. He leaves it to chance. I am +speaking, be it understood, not of deep passions--that is a different +matter altogether--but of the more superficial sexual attractions +which we, as a race, take so seriously and puritanically, often to our +most disastrous undoing, and which the Latin light-heartedly regards +as essential, but transient phenomena of human existence. Aristide +made the most respectful love in the world to Betty Errington, because +he could not help himself. "_Tonnerre de Dieu!_" he cried when from my +Britannic point of view, I talked to him on the subject. "You English +whom I try to understand and can never understand are so funny! It +would have been insulting to Miss Betty Errington--_tiens!_--a purple +hyacinth of spring--that was what she was--not to have made love to +her. Love to a pretty woman is like a shower of rain to hyacinths. It +passes, it goes. Another one comes. _Qu'importe?_ But the shower is +necessary--Ah! _sacre gredin_, when will you comprehend?" + +All this to make as clear as an Englishman, in the confidence of a +changeling child of Provence can hope to do, the attitude of Aristide +Pujol towards the sweet and innocent Betty Errington with her mouth like +crumpled rose-petals, her ivory and peach-blossom complexion, her soft +contralto voice, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, as per foregoing bald +description, and as per what can, by imaginative effort, be pictured +from the Pujolic hyperbole, by which I, the unimportant narrator of +these chronicles, was dazzled and overwhelmed. + +"I'm afraid I don't think of the croupier at all," said Betty. + +"Do you think of no one who brings you good fortune?" asked Aristide. He +threw the _Matin_ on the grass, and, doubling himself up in his chair +regarded her earnestly. "Last night you put five louis into my bank----" + +"And I won forty. I could have hugged you." + +"Why didn't you? Ah!" His arms spread wide and high. "What I have lost!" + +"Betty!" cried Mrs. Errington. + +"Alas, Madame," said Aristide, "that is the despair of our artificial +civilization. It prohibits so much spontaneous expression of emotion." + +"You'll forgive me, Monsieur Pujol," said Mrs. Errington dryly, "but I +think our artificial civilization has its advantages." + +"If you will forgive me, in your turn," said Aristide, "I see a doubtful +one advancing." + +A man approached the group and with profuse gestures took off a straw +hat which he thrust under his right arm, exposing an amazingly flat head +on which the closely cropped hair stood brush-fashion upright. He had an +insignificant pale face to which a specious individuality was given by a +moustache with ends waxed up to the eyes and by a monocle with a +tortoise shell rim. He was dressed (his valet had misjudged things--and +valets like the rest of us are fallible) in what was yesterday a fairly +white flannel suit. + +"Madame--Mademoiselle." He shook hands with charming grace. "Monsieur." +He bowed stiffly. Aristide doffed his Panama hat with adequate ceremony. +"May I be permitted to join you?" + +"With pleasure, Monsieur de Lussigny," said Mrs. Errington. + +Monsieur de Lussigny brought up a chair and sat down. + +"What time did you get to bed, last night?" asked Betty Errington. She +spoke excellently pure French, and so did her mother. + +"Soon after we parted, mademoiselle, quite early for me but late for +you. And you look this morning as if you had gone to bed at sundown and +got up at dawn." + +Miss Betty's glance responsive to the compliment filled Aristide with +wrath. What right had the Comte de Lussigny, a fellow who consorted with +Brazilian Rastaquoueres and perfumed Levantine nondescripts, to win such +a glance from Betty Errington? + +"If Mademoiselle can look so fresh," said he, "in the artificial +atmosphere of Aix, what is there of adorable that she must not resemble +in the innocence of her Somersetshire home?" + +"You cannot imagine it, Monsieur," said the Count; "but I have had the +privilege to see it." + +"I hope Monsieur Pujol will visit us also in our country home, when we +get back," said Mrs. Errington with intent to pacificate. "It is modest, +but it is old-world and has been in our family for hundreds of years." + +"Ah, these old English homes!" said Aristide. + +"Would you care to hear about it?" + +"I should," said he. + +He drew his chair courteously a foot or so nearer that of the mild lady; +Monsieur de Lussigny took instant advantage of the move to establish +himself close to Miss Betty. Aristide turned one ear politely to Mrs. +Errington's discourse, the other ragingly and impotently to the +whispered conversation between the detached pair. + +Presently a novel fell from the lady's lap. Aristide sprang to his feet +and restored it. He remained standing. Mrs. Errington consulted a watch. +It was nearing lunch time. She rose, too. Aristide took her a pace or +two aside. + +"My dear Mrs. Errington," said he, in English. "I do not wish to be +indiscreet--but you come from your quiet home in Somerset and your +beautiful daughter is so young and inexperienced, and I am a man of the +world who has mingled in all the society of Europe--may I warn you +against admitting the Comte de Lussigny too far into your intimacy." + +She turned an anxious face. "Monsieur Pujol, is there anything against +the Count?" + +Aristide executed the large and expressive shrug of the Southerner. + +"I play high at the tables for my amusement--I know the principal +players, people of high standing. Among them Monsieur de Lussigny's +reputation is not spotless." + +"You alarm me very much," said Mrs. Errington, troubled. + +"I only put you on your guard," said he. + +The others who had risen and followed, caught them up. At the entrance +to the hotel the ladies left the men elaborately saluting. The latter, +alone, looked at each other. + +"Monsieur." + +"Monsieur." + +Each man raised his hat, turned on his heel and went his way. Aristide +betook himself to the cafe on the Place Carnot on the side of the square +facing the white Etablissement des Bains, with a stern sense of having +done his duty. It was monstrous that this English damask rose should +fall a prey to so detestable a person as the Comte de Lussigny. He +suspected him of disgraceful things. If only he had proof. Fortune, ever +favoring him, stood at his elbow. She guided him straight to a table in +the front row of the terrace where sat a black-haired, hard-featured +though comely youth deep in thought, in front of an untouched glass of +beer. At Aristide's approach he raised his head, smiled, nodded and +said: "Good morning, sir. Will you join me?" + +Aristide graciously accepted the invitation and sat down. The young +man was another hotel acquaintance, one Eugene Miller of Atlanta, +Georgia, a curious compound of shrewdness and simplicity, to whom +Aristide had taken a fancy. He was twenty-eight and ran a colossal +boot-factory in partnership with another youth and had a consuming +passion for stained-glass windows. From books he knew every square +foot of old stained-glass in Europe. But he had crossed the Atlantic +for the first time only six weeks before, and having indulged his +craving immoderately, had rested for a span at Aix-les-Bains to +recover from aesthetic indigestion. He had found these amenities +agreeable to his ingenuous age. He had also, quite recently, come +across the Comte de Lussigny. Hence the depth of thought in which +Aristide discovered him. Now, the fact that North is North and South +is South and that never these twain shall meet is a proposition all +too little considered. One of these days when I can retire from the +dull but exacting avocation of tea-broking in the City, I think I +shall write a newspaper article on the subject. Anyhow, I hold +the theory that the Northerners of all nations have a common +characteristic and the Southerners of all nations have a common +characteristic, and that it is this common characteristic in each +case that makes North seek and understand North and South seek and +understand South. I will not go further into the general proposition; +but as a particular instance I will state that the American of the +South and the Frenchman of the South found themselves in essential +sympathy. Eugene Miller had the unfearing frankness of Aristide Pujol. + +"I used rather to look down upon Europe as a place where people knew +nothing at all," said he. "We're sort of trained to think it's an +extinct volcano, but it isn't. It's alive. My God! It's alive. It's Hell +in the shape of a Limburger cheese. I wish the whole population of +Atlanta, Georgia, would come over and just see. There's a lot to be +learned. I thought I knew how to take care of myself, but this +tortoise-shell-eyed Count taught me last night that I couldn't. He +cleaned me out of twenty-five hundred dollars----" + +"How?" asked Aristide, sharply. + +"Ecarte." + +Aristide brought his hand down with a bang on the table and uttered +anathemas in French and Provencal entirely unintelligible to Eugene +Miller; but the youth knew by instinct that they were useful, +soul-destroying curses and he felt comforted. + +"Ecarte! You played ecarte with Lussigny? But my dear young friend, do +you know anything of ecarte?" + +"Of course," said Miller. "I used to play it as a child with my +sisters." + +"Do you know the _jeux de regle_?" + +"The what?" + +"The formal laws of the game--the rules of discards----" + +"Never heard of them," said Eugene Miller. + +"But they are as absolute as the Code Napoleon," cried Aristide. "You +can't play without knowing them. You might as well play chess without +knowing the moves." + +"Can't help it," said the young man. + +"Well, don't play ecarte any more." + +"I must," said Miller. + +"_Comment?_" + +"I must. I've fixed it up to get my revenge this afternoon--in my +sitting room at the hotel." + +"But it's imbecile!" + +The sweep of Aristide's arm produced prismatic chaos among a tray-full +of drinks which the waiter was bringing to the family party at the next +table. "It's imbecile," he cried, as soon as order was apologetically +and pecuniarily restored. "You are a little mutton going to have its +wool taken off." + +"I've fixed it up," said Miller. "I've never gone back on an engagement +yet in my own country and I'm not going to begin this side." + +Aristide argued. He argued during the mechanical absorption of four +glasses of _vermouth-cassis_--after which prodigious quantity of black +currant syrup he rose and took the Gadarene youth to Nikola's where he +continued the argument during dejeuner. Eugene Miller's sole concession +was that Aristide should be present at the encounter and, backing his +hand, should have the power (given by the rules of the French game) to +guide his play. Aristide agreed and crammed his young friend with the +_jeux de regle_ and _pate de foie gras_. + +The Count looked rather black when he found Aristide Pujol in Miller's +sitting room. He could not, however, refuse him admittance to the game. +The three sat down, Aristide by Miller's side, so that he could overlook +the hand and, by pointing, indicate the cards that it was advisable to +play. The game began. Fortune favored Mr. Eugene Miller. The Count's +brow grew blacker. + +"You are bringing your own luck to our friend, Monsieur Pujol," said he, +dealing the cards. + +"He needs it," said Aristide. + +"_Le roi_," said the Count, turning up the king. + +The Count won the vole, or all five tricks, and swept the stakes towards +him. Then, fortune quickly and firmly deserted Mr. Miller. The Count +besides being an amazingly fine player, held amazingly fine hands. The +pile of folded notes in front of him rose higher and higher. Aristide +tugged at his beard in agitation. Suddenly, as the Count dealt a king as +trump card, he sprang to his feet knocking over the chair behind him. + +"You cheat, monsieur. You cheat!" + +"Monsieur!" cried the outraged dealer. + +"What has he done?" + +"He has been palming kings and neutralizing the cut. I've been watching. +Now I catch him," cried Aristide in great excitement. "_Ah, sale voleur! +Maintenant je vous tiens!_" + +"Monsieur," said the Comte de Lussigny with dignity, stuffing his +winnings into his jacket pocket. "You insult me. It is an infamy. Two of +my friends will call upon you." + +"And Monsieur Miller and I will kick them over Mont Revard." + +"You cannot treat _gens d'honneur_ in such a way, monsieur." He turned +to Miller, and said haughtily in his imperfect English, "Did you see the +cheat, you?" + +"I can't say that I did," replied the young man. "On the other hand that +torch-light procession of kings doesn't seem exactly natural." + +"But you did not see anything! _Bon!_" + +"But I saw. Isn't that enough, _hein_?" shouted Aristide brandishing his +fingers in the Count's face. "You come here and think there's nothing +easier than to cheat young foreigners who don't know the rules of +ecarte. You come here and think you can carry off rich young English +misses. Ah, _sale escroc!_ You never thought you would have to reckon +with Aristide Pujol. You call yourself the Comte de Lussigny. Bah! I +know you----" he didn't, but that doesn't matter--"your _dossier_ is in +the hands of the prefect of Police. I am going to get that _dossier_. +Monsieur Lepine is my intimate friend. Every autumn we shoot together. +Aha! You send me your two galley-birds and see what I do to them." + +The Comte de Lussigny twirled the tips of his moustache almost to his +forehead and caught up his hat. + +"My friends shall be officers in the uniform of the French Army," he +said, by the door. + +"And mine shall be two gendarmes," retorted Aristide. "_Nom de Dieu!_" +he cried, after the other had left the room. "We let him take the +money!" + +"That's of no consequence. He didn't get away with much anyway," said +young Miller. "But he would have if you hadn't been here. If ever I can +do you a return service, just ask." + +Aristide went out to look for the Erringtons. But they were not to be +found. It was only late in the afternoon that he met Mrs. Errington in +the hall of the hotel. He dragged her into a corner and in his +impulsive fashion told her everything. She listened white faced, in +great distress. + +"My daughter's engaged to him. I've only just learned," she faltered. + +"Engaged? _Sacrebleu!_ Ah, _le goujat!_"--for the second he was +desperately, furiously, jealously in love with Betty Errington. "_Ah, le +sale type! Voyons!_ This engagement must be broken off. At once! You are +her mother." + +"She will hear of nothing against him." + +"You will tell her this. It will be a blow; but----" + +Mrs. Errington twisted a handkerchief between helpless fingers. "Betty +is infatuated. She won't believe it." She regarded him piteously. "Oh, +Monsieur Pujol, what can I do? You see she has an independent fortune +and is over twenty-one. I am powerless." + +"I will meet his two friends," exclaimed Aristide magnificently--"and I +will kill him. _Voila!_" + +"Oh, a duel? No! How awful!" cried the mild lady horror-stricken. + +He thrust his cane dramatically through a sheet of a newspaper, which he +had caught up from a table. "I will run him through the body like +that"--Aristide had never handled a foil in his life--"and when he is +dead, your beautiful daughter will thank me for having saved her from +such an execrable fellow." + +"But you mustn't fight. It would be too dreadful. Is there no other +way?" + +"You must consult first with your daughter," said Aristide. + +He dined in the hotel with Eugene Miller. Neither the Erringtons nor the +Comte de Lussigny were anywhere to be seen. After dinner, however, he +found the elder lady waiting for him in the hall. They walked out into +the quiet of the garden. She had been too upset to dine, she explained, +having had a terrible scene with Betty. Nothing but absolute proofs of +her lover's iniquity would satisfy her. The world was full of slanderous +tongues; the noblest and purest did not escape. For herself, she had +never been comfortable with the Comte de Lussigny. She had noticed too +that he had always avoided the best French people in hotels. She would +give anything to save her daughter. She wept. + +"And the unhappy girl has written him compromising letters," she +lamented. + +"They must be got back." + +"But how? Oh, Monsieur Pujol, do you think he would take money for +them?" + +"A scoundrel like that would take money for his dead mother's shroud," +said Aristide. + +"A thousand pounds?" + +She looked very haggard and helpless beneath the blue arc-lights. +Aristide's heart went out to her. He knew her type--the sweet +gentlewoman of rural England who comes abroad to give her pretty +daughter a sight of life, ingenuously confident that foreign +watering-places are as innocent as her own sequestered village. + +"That is much money, _chere madame_," said Aristide. + +"I am fairly well off," said Mrs. Errington. + +Aristide reflected. At the offer of a smaller sum the Count would +possibly bluff. But to a Knight of Industry, as he knew the Count to be, +a certain thousand pounds would be a great temptation. And after all to +a wealthy Englishwoman what was a thousand pounds? + +"Madame," said he, "if you offer him a thousand pounds for the letters, +and a written confession that he is not the Comte de Lussigny, but a +common adventurer, I stake my reputation that he will accept." + +They walked along for a few moments in silence; the opera had begun at +the adjoining Villa des Fleurs and the strains floated through the still +August air. After a while she halted and laid her hand on his sleeve. + +"Monsieur Pujol, I have never been faced with such a thing, before. Will +you undertake for me this delicate and difficult business?" + +"Madame," said he, "my life is at the service of yourself and your most +exquisite daughter." She pressed his hand. "Thank God, I've got a friend +in this dreadful place," she said brokenly. "Let me go in." And when +they reached the lounge, she said, "Wait for me here." + +She entered the lift. Aristide waited. Presently the lift descended and +she emerged with a slip of paper in her hand. + +"Here is a bearer cheque, Monsieur Pujol, for a thousand pounds. Get the +letters and the confession if you can, and a mother's blessing will go +with you." + +She left him and went upstairs again in the lift. Aristide athirst with +love, living drama and unholy hatred of the Comte de Lussigny, cocked +his black, soft-felt evening hat at an engaging angle on his head and +swaggered into the Villa des Fleurs. As he passed the plebeian crowd +round the petits-chevaux table--these were the days of little horses and +not the modern equivalent of _la boule_--he threw a louis on the square +marked 5, waited for the croupier to push him his winnings, seven louis +and his stake on the little white horse, and walked into the baccarat +room. A bank was being called for thirty louis at the end table. + +"_Quarante_," said Aristide. + +"_Ajuge a quarante louis_," cried the croupier, no one bidding higher. + +Aristide took the banker's seat and put down his forty louis. Looking +round the long table he saw the Comte de Lussigny sitting in the punt. +The two men glared at each other defiantly. Someone went "banco." +Aristide won. The fact of his holding the bank attracted a crowd round +the table. The regular game began. Aristide won, lost, won again. Now it +must be explained, without going into the details of the game, that the +hand against the bank is played by the members of the punt in turn. + +Suddenly, before dealing the cards, Aristide asked, "_A qui la main?_" + +"_C'est a Monsieur_," said the croupier, indicating Lussigny. + +"_Il y a une suite_," said Aristide, signifying, as was his right, that +he would retire from the bank with his winnings. "The face of that +gentleman does not please me." + +There was a hush at the humming table. The Count grew dead white and +looked at his fingernails. Aristide superbly gathered up his notes and +gold, and tossing a couple of louis to the croupiers, left the table, +followed by all eyes. It was one of the thrilling moments of Aristide's +life. He had taken the stage, commanded the situation. He had publicly +offered the Comte de Lussigny the most deadly insult and the Comte de +Lussigny sat down beneath it like a lamb. He swaggered slowly through +the crowded room, twirling his moustache, and went into the cool of the +moonlit deserted garden beyond, where he waited gleefully. He had a +puckish knowledge of human nature. After a decent interval, and during +the absorbing interest of the newly constituted bank, the Comte de +Lussigny slipped unnoticed from the table and went in search of +Aristide. He found him smoking a large corona and lounging in one wicker +chair with his feet on another, beside a very large whisky and soda. + +"Ah, it's you," said he without moving. + +"Yes," said the Count furiously. + +"I haven't yet had the pleasure of kicking your friends over Mont +Revard," said Aristide. + +"Look here, _mon petit_, this has got to finish," cried the Count. + +"_Parfaitement._ I should like nothing better than to finish. But let us +finish like well-bred people," said Aristide suavely. "We don't want the +whole Casino as witnesses. You'll find a chair over there. Bring it up." + +He was enjoying himself immensely. The Count glared at him, turned and +banged a chair over by the side of the table. + +"Why do you insult me like this?" + +"Because," said Aristide, "I've talked by telephone this evening with my +good friend Monsieur Lepine, Prefect of Police of Paris." + +"You lie," said the Count. + +"_Vous verrez._ In the meantime, perhaps we might have a little +conversation. Will you have a whisky and soda? It is one of my English +habits." + +"No," said the Count emphatically. + +"You permit me then?" He drank a great draught. "You are wrong. It helps +to cool one's temper. _Eh bien_, let us talk." + +He talked. He put before the Count the situation of the beautiful Miss +Errington. He conducted the scene like the friend of the family whose +astuteness he had admired as a boy in the melodramas that found their +way to Marseilles. + +"Look," said he, at last, having vainly offered from one hundred to +eight hundred pounds for poor Betty Errington's compromising letters. +"Look----" He drew the cheque from his note-case. "Here are twenty-five +thousand francs. The signature is that of the charming Madame Errington +herself. The letters, and a little signed word, just a little word. +'Mademoiselle, I am a _chevalier d'industrie_. I have a wife and five +children. I am not worthy of you. I give you back your promise.' Just +that. And twenty-five thousand francs, _mon ami_." + +"Never in life!" exclaimed the Count rising. "You continue to insult +me." + +Aristide for the first time abandoned his lazy and insolent attitude and +jumped to his feet. + +"And I'll continue to insult you, _canaille_ that you are, all through +that room," he cried, with a swift-flung gesture towards the brilliant +doorway. "You are dealing with Aristide Pujol. Will you never +understand? The letters and a confession for twenty-five thousand +francs." + +"Never in life," said the Count, and he moved swiftly away. + +Aristide caught him by the collar as he stood on the covered terrace, a +foot or two from the threshold of the gaming-room. + +"I swear to you, I'll make a scandal that you won't survive." + +The Count stopped and pushed Aristide's hand away. + +"I admit nothing," said he. "But you are a gambler and so am I. I will +play you for those documents against twenty-five thousand francs." + +"Eh?" said Aristide, staggered for the moment. + +The Comte de Lussigny repeated his proposition. + +"_Bon_," said Aristide. "_Tres bon. C'est entendu. C'est fait._" + +If Beelzebub had arisen and offered to play beggar-my-neighbour for his +soul, Aristide would have agreed; especially after the large whisky and +soda and the Mumm Cordon Rouge and the Napoleon brandy which Eugene +Miller had insisted on his drinking at dinner. + +"I have a large room at the hotel," said he. + +"I will join you," said the Count. "Monsieur," he took off his hat very +politely. "Go first. I will be there in three minutes." + +Aristide trod on air during the two minutes' walk to the Hotel de +l'Europe. At the bureau he ordered a couple of packs of cards and a +supply of drinks and went to his palatial room on the ground floor. In a +few moments the Comte de Lussigny appeared. Aristide offered him a two +francs corona which was ceremoniously accepted. Then he tore the +wrapping off one of the packs of cards and shuffled. + +"Monsieur," said he, still shuffling. "I should like to deal two hands +at ecarte. It signifies nothing. It is an experiment. Will you cut?" + +"_Volontiers_," said the Count. + +Aristide took up the pack, dealt three cards to the Count, three cards +to himself, two cards to the Count, two to himself and turned up the +King of Hearts as the eleventh card. + +"Monsieur," said he, "expose your hand and I will expose mine." + +Both men threw their hands face uppermost on the table. Aristide's was +full of trumps, the Count's of valueless cards. + +He looked at his adversary with his roguish, triumphant smile. The Count +looked at him darkly. + +"The ordinary card player does not know how to deal like that," he said +with sinister significance. + +"But I am not ordinary in anything, my dear sir," laughed Aristide, in +his large boastfulness. "If I were, do you think I would have agreed to +your absurd proposal? _Voyons_, I only wanted to show you that in +dealing cards I am your equal. Now, the letters----" The Count threw a +small packet on the table. "You will permit me? I do not wish to read +them. I verify only. Good," said he. "And the confession?" + +"What you like," said the Count, coldly. Aristide scribbled a few lines +that would have been devastating to the character of a Hyrcanean tiger +and handed the paper and fountain pen to the Count. + +"Will you sign?" + +The Count glanced at the words and signed. + +"_Voila_," said Aristide, laying Mrs. Errington's cheque beside the +documents. "Now let us play. The best of three games?" + +"Good," said the Count. "But you will excuse me, monsieur, if I claim to +play for ready money. The cheque will take five days to negotiate and if +I lose, I shall evidently have to leave Aix to-morrow morning." + +"That's reasonable," said Aristide. + +He drew out his fat note-case and counted twenty-five one-thousand-franc +notes on to the table. And then began the most exciting game of cards he +had ever played. In the first place he was playing with another person's +money for a fantastic stake, a girl's honour and happiness. Secondly he +was pitted against a master of ecarte. And thirdly he knew that his +adversary would cheat if he could and that his adversary suspected him +of fraudulent designs. So as they played, each man craned his head +forward and looked at the other man's fingers with fierce intensity. + +Aristide lost the first game. He wiped the sweat from his forehead. In +the second game, he won the vole in one hand. The third and final game +began. They played slowly, carefully, with keen quick eyes. Their +breathing came hard. The Count's lips parted beneath his uptwisted +moustache showed his teeth like a cat's. Aristide lost sense of all +outer things in the thrill of the encounter. They snarled the +stereotyped phrases necessary for the conduct of the game. At last the +points stood at four for Aristide and three for his adversary. It was +Aristide's deal. Before turning up the eleventh card he paused for the +fraction of a second. If it was the King, he had won. He flicked it +neatly face upward. It was not the King. + +_"J'en donne."_ + +_"Non. Le roi."_ + +The Count played and marked the King. Aristide had no trumps. The game +was lost. + +He sat back white, while the Count smiling gathered up the bank-notes. + +"And now, Monsieur Pujol," said he impudently, "I am willing to sell +you this rubbish for the cheque." + +Aristide jumped to his feet. "Never!" he cried. Madness seized him. +Regardless of the fact that he had nothing like another thousand pounds +left wherewith to repay Mrs. Errington if he lost, he shouted: "I will +play again for it. Not ecarte. One cut of the cards. Ace lowest." + +"All right," said the Count. + +"Begin, you." + +Aristide watched his hand like cat, as he cut. He cut an eight. Aristide +gave a little gasp of joy and cut quickly. He held up a Knave and +laughed aloud. Then he stopped short as he saw the Count about to pounce +on the documents and the cheque. He made a swift movement and grabbed +them first, the other man's hand on his. + +"_Canaille!_" + +He dashed his free hand into the adventurer's face. The man staggered +back. Aristide pocketed the precious papers. The Count scowled at him +for an undecided second, and then bolted from the room. + +"Whew!" said Aristide, sinking into his chair and wiping his face. "That +was a narrow escape." + +He looked at his watch. It was only ten o'clock. It had seemed as if his +game with Lussigny had lasted for hours. He could not go to bed and +stood confronted with anti-climax. After a while he went in search of +Eugene Miller and having found him in solitary meditation on stained +glass windows in the dim-lit grounds of the Villa, sat down by his side +and for the rest of the evening poured his peculiar knowledge of Europe +into the listening ear of the young man from Atlanta. + +On the following morning, as soon as he was dressed, he learned from the +Concierge that the Comte de Lussigny had left for Paris by the early +train. + +"Good," said Aristide. + +A little later Mrs. Errington met him in the lounge and accompanied him +to the lawn where they had sat the day before. + +"I have no words to thank you, Monsieur Pujol," she said with tears in +her eyes. "I have heard how you shamed him at the tables. It was brave +of you." + +"It was nothing." He shrugged his shoulders as if he were in the habit +of doing deeds like that every day of his life. "And your exquisite +daughter, Madame?" + +"Poor Betty! She is prostrate. She says she will never hold up her head +again. Her heart is broken." + +"It is young and will be mended," said Aristide. + +She smiled sadly. "It will be a question of time. But she is grateful to +you, Monsieur Pujol. She realizes from what a terrible fate you have +saved her." She sighed. There was a brief silence. + +"After this," she continued, "a further stay in Aix would be too +painful. We have decided to take the Savoy express this evening and get +back to our quiet home in Somerset." + +"Ah, madame," said Aristide earnestly. "And shall I not have the +pleasure of seeing the charming Miss Betty again?" + +"You will come and stay with us in September. Let me see? The fifteenth. +Why not fix a date? You have my address? No? Will you write it down?" +she dictated: "Wrotesly Manor, Burnholme, Somerset. There I'll try to +show you how grateful I am." + +She extended her hand. He bowed over it and kissed it in his French way +and departed a very happy man. + +The Erringtons left that evening. Aristide waylaid them as they were +entering the hotel omnibus, with a preposterous bouquet of flowers which +he presented to Betty, whose pretty face was hidden by a motor-veil. He +bowed, laid his hand on his heart and said: "_Adieu, mademoiselle._" + +"No," she said in a low voice, but most graciously, "_Au revoir_, +Monsieur Pujol." + +For the next few days Aix seemed to be tame and colourless. In an +inexplicable fashion, too, it had become unprofitable. Aristide no +longer knew that he was going to win; and he did not win. He lost +considerably. So much so that on the morning when he was to draw the +cash for the cheque, at the Credit Lyonnais, he had only fifty pounds +and some odd silver left. Aristide looking at the remainder rather +ruefully made a great resolution. He would gamble no more. Already he +was richer than he had ever been in his life. He would leave Aix. +_Tiens!_ why should he not go to his good friends the Bocardons at +Nimes, bringing with him a gold chain for Bocardon and a pair of +ear-rings for the adorable Zette? There he would look about him. He +would use the thousand pounds as a stepping-stone to legitimate fortune. +Then he would visit the Erringtons in England, and if the beautiful Miss +Betty smiled on him--why, after all, _sacrebleu_ he was an honest man, +without a feather on his conscience. + +So, jauntily swinging his cane, he marched into the office of the Credit +Lyonnais, went into the inner room and explained his business. + +"Ah, your cheque, monsieur, that we were to collect. I am sorry. It has +come back from the London bankers." + +"How come back?" + +"It has not been honoured. See, monsieur. 'Not known. No account.'" The +cashier pointed to the grim words across the cheque. + +"_Comprends pas_," faltered Aristide. + +"It means that the person who gave you the cheque has no account at this +bank." + +Aristide took the cheque and looked at it in a dazed way. + +"Then I do not get my twenty-five thousand francs?" + +"Evidently not," said the cashier. + +Aristide stood for a while stunned. What did it mean? His thousand +pounds could not be lost. It was impossible. There was some mistake. It +was an evil dream. With a heavy weight on the top of his head, he went +out of the Credit Lyonnais and mechanically crossed the little street +separating the Bank from the cafe on the Place Carnot. There he sat +stupidly and wondered. The waiter hovered in front of him. "_Monsieur +desire?_" Aristide waved him away absently. Yes, it was some mistake. +Mrs. Errington in her agitation must have used the wrong cheque book. +But even rich English people do not carry about with them a circulating +library assortment of cheque books. It was incomprehensible--and +meanwhile, his thousand pounds.... + +The little square blazed before him in the August sunshine. Opposite +flashed the white mass of the Etablissement des Bains. There was the old +Roman Arch of Titus, gray and venerable. There were the trees of the +gardens in riotous greenery. There on the right marking the hour of +eleven on its black face was the clock of the Comptoir National. It was +Aix; familiar Aix; not a land of dreams. And there coming rapidly across +from the Comptoir National was the well knit figure of the young man +from Atlanta. + +"_Nom de Dieu_," murmured Aristide. "_Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" + +Eugene Miller, in a fine frenzy, threw himself into a chair beside +Aristide. + +"See here. Can you understand this?" + +He thrust into his hand a pink strip of paper. It was a cheque for a +hundred pounds, made payable to Eugene Miller, Esquire, signed by Mary +Errington, and marked "Not known. No account." + +"_Tonnerre de Dieu!_" cried Aristide. "How did you get this?" + +"How did I get it? I cashed it for her--the day she went away. She said +urgent affairs summoned her from Aix--no time to wire for funds--wanted +to pay her hotel bill--and she gave me the address of her old English +home in Somerset and invited me to come there in September. Fifteenth of +September. Said that you were coming. And now I've got a bum cheque. I +guess I can't wander about this country alone. I need blinkers and +harness and a man with a whip." + +He went on indignantly. Aristide composed his face into an expression of +parental interest; but within him there was shivering and sickening +upheaval. He saw it all, the whole mocking drama.... + +He, Aristide Pujol, was the most sweetly, the most completely swindled +man in France. + +The Comte de Lussigny, the mild Mrs. Errington and the beautiful Betty +were in league together and had exquisitely plotted. They had conspired, +as soon as he had accused the Count of cheating. The rascal must have +gone straight to them from Miller's room. No wonder that Lussigny, when +insulted at the tables, had sat like a tame rabbit and had sought him in +the garden. No wonder he had accepted the accusation of adventurer. No +wonder he had refused to play for the cheque which he knew to be +valueless. But why, thought Aristide, did he not at once consent to sell +the papers on the stipulation that he should be paid in notes? Aristide +found an answer. He wanted to get everything for nothing, afraid of the +use that Aristide might make of a damning confession, and also relying +for success on his manipulation of the cards. Finally he had desired to +get hold of a dangerous cheque. In that he had been foiled. But the trio +has got away with his thousand pounds, his wonderful thousand pounds. He +reflected, still keeping an attentive eye on young Eugene Miller and +interjecting a sympathetic word, that after he had paid his hotel bill, +he would be as poor on quitting Aix-les-Bains as he was when he had +entered it. _Sic transit_.... As it was in the beginning with Aristide +Pujol, is now and ever shall be.... + +"But I have my clothes--such clothes as I've never had in my life," +thought Aristide. "And a diamond and sapphire tie-pin and a gold watch, +and all sorts of other things. _Tron de l'air_, I'm still rich." + +"Who would have thought she was like that?" said he. "And a hundred +pounds, too. A lot of money." + +For nothing in the world would he have confessed himself a +fellow-victim. + +"I don't care a cent for the hundred pounds," cried the young man. "Our +factory turns out seven hundred and sixty-seven million pairs of boots +per annum." (Aristide, not I, is responsible for the statistics.) "But I +have a feeling that in this hoary country I'm just a little toddling +child. And I hate it. I do, sir. I want a nurse to take me round." + +Aristide flashed the lightning of his wit upon the young man from +Atlanta, Georgia. + +"You do, my dear young friend. I'll be your nurse, at a weekly +salary--say a hundred francs--it doesn't matter. We will not quarrel." +Eugene Miller was startled. "Yes," said Aristide, with a convincing +flourish. "I'll clear robbers and sirens and harpies from your path. +I'll show you things in Europe--from Tromsoe to Cap Spartivento that you +never dreamed of. I'll lead you to every stained glass window in the +world. I know them all." + +"I particularly want to see those in the church of St. Sebald in +Nuremberg." + +"I know them like my pocket," said Aristide. "I will take you there. We +start to-day." + +"But, Mr. Pujol," said the somewhat bewildered Georgian. "I thought you +were a man of fortune." + +"I am more than a man. I am a soldier. I am a soldier of Fortune. The +fickle goddess has for the moment deserted me. But I am loyal. I have +for all worldly goods, two hundred and fifty dollars, with which I shall +honorably pay my hotel bill. I say I am a soldier of Fortune. But," he +slapped his chest, "I am the only honorable one on the Continent of +Europe." + +The young man fixed upon him the hard blue eyes, not of the enthusiast +for stained glass windows, but of the senior partner in the boot factory +of Atlanta, Georgia. + +"I believe you," said he. "It's a deal. Shake." + +"And now," said Aristide, after having shaken hands, "come and lunch +with me at Nikola's for the last time." + +He rose, stretched out both arms in a wide gesture and smiled with his +irresistible Ancient Mariner's eyes at the young man. + +"We lunch. We eat ambrosia. Then we go out together and see the +wonderful world through the glass-blood of saints and martyrs and +apostles and the good Father Abraham and Louis Quatorze. _Viens, mon +cher ami._ It is the dream of my life." + +Practically penniless and absolutely disillusioned, the amazing man was +radiantly happy. + + + + +IX + +THE ADVENTURE OF A SAINT MARTIN'S SUMMER + + +My good friend Blessington, who is a mighty man in the Bordeaux +wine-trade, happening one day to lament the irreparable loss of a +deceased employe, an Admirable Crichton of a myriad accomplishments and +linguistic attainments whose functions it had been, apparently, to +travel about between London, Bordeaux, Marseilles and Algiers, I +immediately thought of a certain living and presumably unemployed +paragon of my acquaintance. + +"I know the very man you're looking for," said I. + +"Who is he?" + +"He's a kind of human firework," said I, "and his name is Aristide +Pujol." + +I sketched the man--in my desire to do a good turn to Aristide, perhaps +in exaggerated colour. + +"Let me have a look at him," said Blessington. + +"He may be anywhere on the continent of Europe," said I. "How long can +you give me to produce him?" + +"A week. Not longer." + +"I'll do my best," said I. + +By good luck my telegram, sent off about four o'clock, found him at 213 +_bis_ Rue Saint-Honore. He had just returned to Paris after some mad +dash for fortune (he told me afterwards a wild and disastrous story of a +Russian Grand-Duke, a Dancer and a gold mine in the Dolomites) and had +once more resumed the dreary conduct of the Agence Pujol at the Hotel du +Soleil et de l'Ecosse. My summons being imperative, he abandoned the +Agence Pujol as a cat jumps off a wall, and, leaving the guests of the +Hotel guideless, to the indignation of Monsieur Bocardon, whom he had +served this trick several times before, paid his good landlady, Madam +Bidoux, what he owed her, took a third-class ticket to London, bought, +lunatic that he was, a ripe Brie cheese, a foot in diameter, a present +to myself, which he carried in his hand most of the journey, and turned +up at my house at eight o'clock the next morning with absolutely empty +pockets and the happiest and most fascinating smile that ever irradiated +the face of man. As a matter of fact, he burst his way past my +scandalized valet into my bedroom and woke me up. + +"Here I am, my dear friend, and here is something French you love that I +have brought you," and he thrust the Brie cheese under my nose. + +"-- -- --," said I. + +If you were awakened by a Brie cheese, an hour before your time, you +would say the same. Aristide sat at the foot of the bed and laughed till +the tears ran down his beard. + +As soon as it was decent I sent him into the city to interview +Blessington. Three hours afterward he returned more radiant than ever. +He threw himself into my arms; before I could disentagle myself, he +kissed me on both cheeks; then he danced about the room. + +"_Me voici_," he said, "accredited representative of the great Maison +Dulau et Compagnie. I have hundreds of pounds a year. I go about. I +watch. I control. I see that the Great British Public can assuage its +thirst with the pure juice of the grape and not with the dregs of a +laboratory. I test vintages. I count barrels. I enter them in books. I +smile at Algerian wine growers and say, 'Ha! ha! none of your _petite +piquette frelatee_ for me but good sound wine.' It is diplomacy. It is +as simple as kissing hands. And I have a sustained income. Now I can be +_un bon bourgeois_ instead of a stray cat. And all due to you, _mon cher +ami_. I am grateful--_voyons_--if anybody ever says Aristide Pujol is +ungrateful, he is a liar. You believe me! Say you believe me." + +He looked at me earnestly. + +"I do, old chap," said I. + +I had known Aristide for some years, and in all kinds of little ways he +had continuously manifested his gratitude for the trifling service I had +rendered him, at our first meeting, in delivering him out of the hands +of the horrific Madam Gougasse. That gratitude is the expectation of +favors to come was, in the case of Aristide, a cynical and inapplicable +proposition. And here, as this (as far as I can see) is the last of +Aristide's adventures I have to relate, let me make an honest and +considered statement:-- + +During the course of an interesting and fairly prosperous life, I have +made many delightful Bohemian, devil-may-care acquaintances, but among +them all Aristide stands as the one bright star who has never asked me +to lend him money. I have offered it times without number, but he has +refused. I believe there is no man living to whom Aristide is in debt. +In the depths of the man's changeling and feckless soul is a principle +which has carried him untarnished through many a wild adventure. If +he ever accepted money--money to the Provencal peasant is the +transcendental materialised, and Aristide (save by the changeling +theory) was Provencal peasant bone and blood--it was always for what he +honestly thought was value received. If he met a man who wanted to take +a mule ride among the Mountains of the Moon, Aristide would at once have +offered himself as guide. The man would have paid him; but Aristide, by +some quaint spiritual juggling, would have persuaded him that the +ascent of Primrose Hill was equal to any lunar achievement, seeing that, +himself, Aristide Pujol, was keeper of the Sun, Moon and Seven Stars; +and the gift to that man of Aristide's dynamic personality would have +been well worth anything that he would have found in the extinct volcano +we know to be the moon. + +"The only thing I would suggest, if you would allow me to do so," said +I, "is not to try to make the fortune of Messrs. Dulau & Co. by some +dazzling but devastating _coup_ of your own." + +He looked at me in his bright, shrewd way. "You think it time I +restrained my imagination?" + +"Exactly." + +"I will read The Times and buy a family Bible," said Aristide. + +A week after he had taken up his work in the City, under my friend +Blessington, I saw the delighted and prosperous man again. It was a +Saturday and he came to lunch at my house. + +"_Tiens!_" said he, when he had recounted his success in the office, "it +is four years since I was in England?" + +"Yes," said I, with a jerk of memory. "Time passes quickly." + +"It is three years since I lost little Jean." + +"Who is little Jean?" I asked. + +"Did I not tell you when I saw you last in Paris?" + +"No." + +"It is strange. I have been thinking about him and my heart has been +aching for him all the time. You must hear. It is most important." He +lit a cigar and began. + +It was then that he told me the story of which I have already related +in these chronicles:[A] how he was scouring France in a ramshackle +automobile as the peripatetic vendor of a patent corn cure and found a +babe of nine months lying abandoned in the middle of that silent road +through the wilderness between Salon and Arles; how instead of +delivering it over to the authorities, he adopted it and carried it +about with him from town to town, a motor accessory sometimes +embarrassing, but always divinely precious; how an evil day came upon +him at Aix-en-Provence when, the wheezing automobile having uttered +its last gasp, he found his occupation gone; how, no longer being able +to care for _le petit_ Jean, he left him with a letter and half his +fortune outside the door of a couple of English maiden ladies who, +staying in the same hotel, had manifested great interest in the baby +and himself; and how, in the dead of the night, he had tramped away +from Aix-en-Provence in the rain, his pockets light and his heart as +heavy as lead. + + [A] The Adventures of the Foundling. + +"And I have never heard of my little Jean again," said Aristide. + +"Why didn't you write?" I asked. + +"I knew their names, Honeywood; Miss Janet was the elder, Miss Anne the +younger. But the name of the place they lived at I have never been able +to remember. It was near London--they used to come up by train to +matinees and afternoon concerts. But what it is called, _mon Dieu_, I +have racked my brain for it. _Sacre mille tonnerres!_" He leaped to his +feet in his unexpected, startling way, and pounced on a Bradshaw's +Railway Guide lying on my library table. "Imbecile, pig, triple ass that +I am! Why did I not think of this before? It is near London. If I look +through all the stations near London on every line, I shall find it." + +"All right," said I, "go ahead." + +I lit a cigarette and took up a novel. I had not read very far when a +sudden uproar from the table caused me to turn round. Aristide danced +and flourished the Bradshaw over his head. + +"Chislehurst! Chislehurst! Ah, _mon ami_, now I am happy. Now I have +found my little Jean. You will forgive me--but I must go now and embrace +him." + +He held out his hand. + +"Where are you off to?" I demanded. + +"The Chislehurst, where else?" + +"My dear fellow," said I, rising, "do you seriously suppose that these +two English maiden ladies have taken on themselves the responsibility of +that foreign brat's upbringing?" + +"_Mon Dieu!_" said he taken aback for the moment, hypothesis having +entered his head. Then, with a wide gesture, he flung the preposterous +idea to the winds. "Of course. They have hearts, these English women. +They have maternal instincts. They have money." He looked at Bradshaw +again, then at his watch. "I have just time to catch a train. _Au +revoir, mon vieux._" + +"But," I objected, "why don't you write? It's the natural thing to do." + +"Write? _Bah!_ Did you ever hear of a Provencal writing when he could +talk?" He tapped his lips, and in an instant, like a whirlwind, he +passed from my ken. + + * * * * * + +Aristide on his arrival at Chislehurst looked about the pleasant, leafy +place--it was a bright October afternoon and the wooded hillside blazed +in russet and gold--and decided it was the perfect environment for Miss +Janet and Miss Anne, to say nothing of little Jean. A neat red brick +house with a trim garden in front of it looked just the kind of a house +wherein Miss Janet and Miss Anne would live. He rang the bell. A +parlour-maid, in spotless black and white, tutelary nymph of Suburbia, +the very parlour-maid who would minister to Miss Janet and Miss Anne, +opened the door. + +"Miss Honeywood?" he inquired. + +"Not here, sir," said the parlour-maid. + +"Where is she? I mean, where are they?" + +"No one of that name lives here," said the parlour-maid. + +"Who does live here?" + +"Colonel Brabazon." + +"And where do the two Miss Honeywood live?" he asked with his engaging +smile. + +But English suburban parlour-maids are on their guard against smiles, no +matter how engaging. She prepared to shut the door. + +"I don't know." + +"How can I find out?" + +"You might enquire among the tradespeople." + +"Thank you, mademoiselle, you are a most intelligent young----" + +The door shut in his face. Aristide frowned. She was a pretty +parlour-maid, and Aristide didn't like to be so haughtily treated by a +pretty woman. But his quest being little Jean and not the eternal +feminine, he took the maid's advice and made enquiries at the prim and +respectable shops. + +"Oh, yes," said a comely young woman in a fragrant bakers' and +confectioners'. "They were two ladies, weren't they? They lived at Hope +Cottage. We used to supply them. They left Chislehurst two years ago." + +"_Sacre nom d'un chien!_" said Aristide. + +"Beg pardon?" asked the young woman. + +"I am disappointed," said Aristide. "Where did they go to?" + +"I'm sure I can't tell you." + +"Do you remember whether they had a baby?" + +"They were maiden ladies," said the young woman rebukingly. + +"But anybody can keep a baby without being its father or mother. I want +to know what has become of the baby." + +The young woman gazed through the window. + +"You had better ask the policeman." + +"That's an idea," said Aristide, and, leaving her, he caught up the +passing constable. + +The constable knew nothing of maiden ladies with a baby, but he directed +him to Hope Cottage. He found a pretty half-timber house lying back from +the road, with a neat semi-circular gravelled path leading to a porch +covered thick with Virginia creeper. Even more than the red brick +residence of Colonel Brabazon did it look, with its air of dainty +comfort, the fitting abode of Miss Janet and Miss Anne. He rang the bell +and interviewed another trim parlour-maid. More susceptible to smiles +than the former, she summoned her master, a kindly, middle-aged man, who +came out into the porch. Yes, Honeywood was the name of the previous +tenants. Two ladies, he believed. He had never seen them and knew +nothing about a child. Messrs. Tompkin & Briggs, the estate agents in +the High Street, could no doubt give him information. Aristide thanked +him and made his way to Messrs. Tompkin & Briggs. A dreary spectacled +youth in resentful charge of the office--his principals, it being +Saturday afternoon, were golfing the happy hours away--professed blank +ignorance of everything. Aristide fixed him with his glittering eye and +flickered his fingers and spoke richly. The youth in a kind of mesmeric +trance took down a battered, dog's eared book and turned over the pages. + +"Honeywood--Miss--Beverly Stoke--near St. Albans--Herts. That's it," he +said. + +Aristide made a note of the address. "Is that all you can tell me?" + +"Yes," said the youth. + +"I thank you very much, my young friend," said Aristide, raising his +hat, "and here is something to buy a smile with," and, leaving a +sixpence on the table to shimmer before the youth's stupefied eyes, +Aristide strutted out of the office. + + * * * * * + +"You had much better have written," said I, when he came back and told +me of his experiences. "The post-office would have done all that for +you." + +"You have no idea of business, _mon cher ami_"--(I--a successful +tea-broker of twenty-five years' standing!--the impudence of the +fellow!)--"If I had written to-day, the letter would have reached +Chislehurst on Monday morning. It would be redirected and reach +Hertfordshire on Tuesday. I should not get any news till Wednesday. I go +down to Beverly Stoke to-morrow, and then I find at once Miss Janet and +Miss Anne and my little Jean! The secret of business men, and I am a +business man, the accredited representative of Dulau et Compagnie--never +forget that--the secret of business is no delay." + +He darted across the room to Bradshaw. + +"For God's sake," said I, "put that nightmare of perpetual motion in +your pocket and go mad over it in the privacy of your own chamber." + +"Very good," said he, tucking the brain-convulsing volume under his arm. +"I will put it on top of The Times and the family Bible and I will say +'Ha! now I am British. Now I am very respectable!' What else can I do?" + +"Rent a pew in a Baptist chapel," said I. + + * * * * * + +After a three-mile trudge from St. Albans Aristide, following +directions, found himself on a high road running through the middle of a +straggy common decked here and there with great elms splendid in autumn +bravery, and populated chiefly by geese, who when he halted in some +perplexity--for on each side, beyond the green, were indications of a +human settlement--advanced in waddling flocks towards him and signified +their disapproval of his presence. A Sundayfied youth in a rainbow tie +rode past on a bicycle. Aristide took off his hat. The youth nearly fell +off the bicycle, but British doggedness saved him from disaster. + +"Beverly Stoke? Will you have the courtesy----" + +"Here," bawled the youth, with a circular twist of his head, and, eager +to escape from a madman, he rode on furiously. + +Aristide looked to left and right at the little houses beyond the +green--some white and thatched and dilapidated, others horridly new and +perky--but all poor and insignificant. As his eyes became accustomed to +the scene they were aware of human forms dotted sparsely about the +common. He struck across and accosted one, an elderly woman with a +prayer-book. "Miss Honeywood? A lady from London?" + +"That house over there--the third beyond the poplar." + +"And little Jean--a beautiful child about four years old?" + +"That I don't know, sir. I live at Wilmer's End, a good half mile from +here." + +Aristide made for the third house past the poplar. First there was a +plank bridge across a grass-grown ditch; then a tiny patch of garden; +then a humble whitewashed cottage with a small leaded casement window on +each side of the front door. Unlike Hope Cottage, it did not look at all +the residence of Miss Janet and Miss Anne. Its appearance, indeed, was +woe-begone. Aristide, however, went up to the door; as there was neither +knocker nor bell, he rapped with his knuckles. The door opened, and +there, poorly dressed in blouse and skirt, stood Miss Anne. + +She regarded him for a moment in a bewildered way, then, recognizing +him, drew back into the stone flagged passage with a sharp cry. + +"You? You--Mr. Pujol?" + +"_Oui, Mademoiselle, c'est moi._ It is I, Aristide Pujol." + +She put her hands on her bosom. "It is rather a shock seeing you--so +unexpectedly. Will you come in?" + +She led the way into a tiny parlour, very clean, very simple with its +furniture of old oak and brass, and bade him sit. She looked a little +older than when he had seen her at Aix-en-Provence. A few lines had +marred the comely face and there was here and there a touch of grey in +the reddish hair, and, though still buxom, she had grown thinner. Care +had set its stamp upon her. + +"Miss Honeywood," said Aristide. "It is on account of little Jean that I +have come----" + +She turned on him swiftly. "Not to take him away!" + +"Then he is here!" He jumped to his feet and wrung both her hands and +kissed them to her great embarrassment. "Ah, mademoiselle, I knew it. I +felt it. When such an inspiration comes to a man, it is the _bon Dieu_ +who sends it. He is here, actually here, in this house?" + +"Yes," said Miss Anne. + +Aristide threw out his arms. "Let me see him. _Ah, le cher petit!_ I +have been yearning after him for three years. It was my heart that I +ripped out of my body that night and laid at your threshold." + +"Hush!" said Miss Anne, with an interrupting gesture. "You must not talk +so loud. He is asleep in the next room. You mustn't wake him. He is very +ill." + +"Ill? Dangerously ill?" + +"I'm afraid so." + +"_Mon Dieu_," said he, sitting down again in the oak settle. To Aristide +the emotion of the moment was absorbing, overwhelming. His attitude +betokened deepest misery and dejection. + +"And I expected to see him full of joy and health!" + +"It is not my fault, Mr. Pujol," said Miss Anne. + +He started. "But no. How could it be? You loved him when you first set +eyes on him at Aix-en-Provence." + +Miss Anne began to cry. "God knows," said she, "what I should do without +him. The dear mite is all that is left to me." + +"All? But there is your sister, the dear Miss Janet." + +Miss Anne's eyes were hidden in her handkerchief. "My poor sister died +last year, Mr. Pujol." + +"I am very sorry. I did not know," said Aristide gently. + +There was a short silence. "It was a great sorrow to you," he said. + +"It was God's will," said Anne. Then, after another pause, during which +she dried her eyes, she strove to smile. "Tell me about yourself. How do +you come to be here?" + +Aristide replied in a hesitating way. He was in the presence of grief +and sickness and trouble; the Provencal braggadocio dropped from him and +he became the simple and childish creature that he was. He accounted +very truthfully, very convincingly, for his queer life; for his +abandonment of little Jean, for his silence, for his sudden and +unexpected appearance. During the ingenuous _apologia pro vita sua_ Miss +Anne regarded him with her honest candour. + +"Janet and I both understood," she said. "Janet was gifted with a divine +comprehension and pity. The landlady at the hotel, I remember, said some +unkind things about you; but we didn't believe them. We felt that you +were a good man--no one but a good man could have written that +letter--we cried over it--and when she tried to poison our minds we said +to each other: 'What does it matter? Here God in his mercy has given us +a child.' But, Mr. Pujol, why didn't you take us into your confidence?" + +"My dear Miss Anne," said Aristide, "we of the South do things +impulsively, by lightning flashes. An idea comes suddenly. _Vlan!_ we +carry it out in two seconds. We are not less human than the Northerner, +who reflects two months." + +"That is almost what dear, wise Janet told me," said Miss Anne. + +"Then you know in your heart," said Aristide, after a while, "that if I +had not been only a football at the feet of fortune, I should never have +deserted little Jean?" + +"I do, Mr. Pujol. My sister and I have been footballs, too." She added +with a change of tone: "You tell me you saw our dear home at +Chislehurst?" + +"Yes," said Aristide. + +"And you see this. There is a difference." + +"What has happened?" asked Aristide. + +She told him the commonplace pathetic story. Their father had left them +shares in the company of which he had been managing director. For many +years they had enjoyed a comfortable income. Then the company had become +bankrupt and only a miserable ninety pounds a year had been saved from +the wreckage. The cottage at Beverly Stoke belonging to them--it had +been their mother's--they had migrated thither with their fallen +fortunes and little Jean. And then Janet had died. She was delicate and +unaccustomed to privation and discomfort--and the cottage had its +disadvantages. She, Anne herself, was as strong as a horse and had never +been ill in her life, but others were not quite so hardy. "However"--she +smiled--"one has to make the best of things." + +"_Parbleu_," said Aristide. + +Miss Anne went on to talk of Jean, a miraculous infant of infinite +graces and accomplishments. Up to now he had been the sturdiest and +merriest fellow. + +"At nine months old he saw that life was a big joke," said Aristide. +"How he used to laugh." + +"There's not much laugh left in him, poor darling," she sighed. And she +told how he had caught a chill which had gone to his lungs and how the +night before last she thought she had lost him. + +She sat up and listened. "Will you excuse me for a moment?" + +She went out and presently returned, standing at the doorway. "He is +still asleep. Would you like to see him? Only"--she put her fingers on +her lips--"you must be very, very quiet." + +He followed her into the next room and looked about him shyly, +recognizing that it was Miss Anne's own bedroom; and there, lying in a +little cot beside the big bed, he saw the sleeping child, his brown face +flushed with fever. He had a curly shock of black hair and well formed +features. An old woolly lamb nose to nose with him shared his pillow. +Aristide drew from his pocket a Teddy bear, and, having asked Miss +Anne's permission with a glance, laid it down gently on the coverlid. + +His eyes were wet when they returned to the parlour. So were Miss +Anne's. The Teddy bear was proof of the simplicity of his faith in her. + +After a while, conscious of hunger, he rose to take leave. He must be +getting back to St. Albans. But might he be permitted to come back later +in the afternoon? Miss Anne reddened. It outraged her sense of +hospitality to send a guest away from her house on a three-mile walk for +food. And yet---- + +"Mr. Pujol," she said bravely, "I would ask you to stay to luncheon if I +had anything to offer you. But I am single handed, and, with Jean's +illness, I haven't given much thought to housekeeping. The woman who +does some of the rough work won't be back till six. I hate to let you go +all those miles--I am so distressed----" + +"But, mademoiselle," said Aristide. "You have some bread. You have +water. It has been a banquet many a day to me, and this time it would +be the most precious banquet of all." + +"I can do a little better than that," faltered Miss Anne. "I have plenty +of eggs and there is bacon." + +"Eggs--bacon!" cried Aristide, his bright eyes twinkling and his hands +going up in the familiar gesture. "That is superb. _Tiens!_ you shall +not do the cooking. You shall rest. I will make you an _omelette au +lard_--_ah!_"--he kissed the tips of his fingers--"such an omelette as +you have not eaten since you were in France--and even there I doubt +whether you have ever eaten an omelette like mine." His soul simmering +with omelette, he darted towards the door. "The kitchen--it is this +way?" + +"But, Mr. Pujol----!" Miss Anne laughed, protestingly. Who could be +angry with the vivid and impulsive creature? + +"It is the room opposite Jean's--not so?" + +She followed him into the clean little kitchen, half amused, half +flustered. Already he had hooked off the top of the kitchen range. "Ah! +a good fire. And your frying-pan?" He dived into the scullery. + +"Please don't be in such a hurry," she pleaded. "You will have made the +omelette before I've had time to lay the cloth, and it will get cold. +Besides, I want to learn how to do it." + +"_Tres bien_," said Aristide, laying down the frying-pan. "You shall see +how it is made--the omelette of the universe." + +So he helped Miss Anne to lay the cloth on the gate-legged oak table in +the parlour and to set it out with bread and butter and the end of a +tinned tongue and a couple of bottles of stout. After which they went +back to the little kitchen, where in a kind of giggling awe she watched +him shred the bacon and break the eggs with his thin, skilful fingers +and perform his magic with the frying-pan and turn out the great golden +creation into the dish. + +"Now," said he, pulling her in his enthusiasm, "to table while it is +hot." + +Miss Anne laughed. She lost her head ever so little. The days had been +drab and hopeless of late and she was still young; so, if she felt +excited at this unhoped for inrush of life and colour, who shall blame +her? The light sparkled once more in her eyes and the pink of her +naturally florid complexion shone on her cheek as they sat down to +table. + +"It is I who help it," said Aristide. "Taste that." He passed the plate +and waited, with the artist's expectation for her approval. + +"It's delicious." + +It was indeed the perfection of omelette, all its suave juiciness +contained in film as fine as goldbeater's skin. + +"Yes, it's good." He was delighted, childlike, at the success of his +cookery. His gaiety kept the careworn woman in rare laughter during the +meal. She lost all consciousness that he was a strange man plunged down +suddenly in the midst of her old maidish existence--and a strange man, +too, who had once behaved in a most outrageous fashion. But that was +ever the way of Aristide. The moment you yielded to his attraction he +made you feel that you had known him for years. His fascination +possessed you. + +"Miss Anne," said he, smoking a cigarette, at her urgent invitation, "is +there a poor woman in Beverly Stoke with whom I could lodge?" + +She gasped. "You lodge in Beverly Stoke?" + +"Why yes," said Aristide, as if it were the most natural thing in the +world. "I am engaged in the city from ten to five every day. I can't +come here and go back to London every night, and I can't stay a whole +week without my little Jean. And I have my duty to Jean. I stand to him +in the relation of a father. I must help you to nurse him and make him +better. I must give him soup and apples and ice cream and----" + +"You would kill the darling in five minutes," interrupted Miss Anne. + +He waved his forefinger in the air. "No, no, I have nursed the sick in +my time. My dear friend," said he, with a change of tone, "when did you +go to bed last?" + +"I don't know," she answered in some confusion. "The district nurse has +helped me--and the doctor has been very good. Jean has turned the corner +now. Please don't worry. And as for your coming to live down here, it's +absurd." + +"Of course, if you formally forbid me to do so, mademoiselle, and if you +don't want to see me----" + +"How can you say a thing like that? Haven't I shown you to-day that you +are welcome?" + +"Dear Miss Anne," said he, "forgive me. But what is that great vast town +of London to me who know nobody there? Here in this tiny spot is +concentrated all I care for in the world. Why shouldn't I live in it?" + +"You would be so dreadfully uncomfortable," said Miss Anne, weakly. + +"Bah!" cried Aristide. "You talk of discomfort to an old client of +_L'Hotel de la Belle Etoile_?" + +"The Hotel of the Beautiful Star? Where is that?" asked the innocent +lady. + +"Wherever you like," said Aristide. "Your bed is dry leaves and your +bed-curtains, if you demand luxury, are a hedge, and your ceiling, if +you are fortunate, is ornamented with stars." + +She looked at him wide-eyed, in great concern. + +"Do you mean that you have ever been homeless?" + +He laughed. "I think I've been everything imaginable, except married." + +"Hush!" she said. "Listen!" Her keen ear had caught a child's cry. "It's +Jean. I must go." + +She hurried out. Aristide prepared to light another cigarette. But a +second before the application of the flaring match an idea struck him. +He blew out the match, replaced the cigarette in his case, and with a +dexterity that revealed the professional of years ago, began to clear +the table. He took the things noiselessly into the kitchen, shut the +door, and master of the kitchen and scullery washed up. Then, the most +care-free creature in the world, he stole down the stone passage into +the wilderness of Beverly Stoke. + +An hour afterwards he knocked at the front door, Anne Honeywood admitted +him. + +"I have arranged with the good Mrs. Buttershaw. She lives a hundred +yards down the road. I bring my baggage to-morrow evening." + +Anne regarded him in a humorous, helpless way. "I can't prevent you," +she said, "but I can give you a piece of advice." + +"What is it?" + +"Don't wash up for Mrs. Buttershaw." + + * * * * * + +So it came to pass that Aristide Pujol took up his residence at +Beverly Stoke, trudging every morning three miles to catch his +business train at St. Albans, and trudging back every evening three +miles to Beverly Stoke. Every morning he ran into the cottage for a +sight of little Jean and every evening after a digestion-racking meal +prepared by Mrs. Buttershaw he went to the cottage armed with toys +and weird and injudicious food for little Jean and demanded an account +of the precious infant's doings during the day. Gradually Jean +recovered of his congestion, being a sturdy urchin, and, to Aristide's +delight, resumed the normal life of childhood. + +"_Moi, je suis papa_," said Aristide. "He has got to speak French, and +he had better begin at once. It is absurd that anyone born between Salon +and Arles should not speak French and Provencal; we'll leave Provencal +till later. _Moi, je suis papa, Jean._ Say _papa_." + +"I don't quite see how he can call you that, Mr. Pujol," said Anne, with +the suspicion of a flush on her cheek. + +"And why not? Has the poor child any other papa in the whole wide world? +And at four years old not to have a father is heart-breaking. Do you +want us to bring him up an orphan? No. You shan't be an orphan, _mon +brave_," he continued, bending over the child and putting his little +hands against his bearded face, "you couldn't bear such a calamity, +could you? And so you will call me _papa_." + +"_Papa_," said Jean, with a grin. + +"There, he has settled it," said Aristide. "_Moi je suis papa._ And you, +mademoiselle?" + +"I am Auntie Anne," she replied demurely. + +Saturday afternoons and Sundays were Aristide's days of delight. He +could devote himself entirely to Jean. The thrill of the weeks when he +had paraded the child in the market places of France while he sold his +corn cure again ran through his veins. The two rows of cottages +separated by the common, which was the whole of Beverly Stoke, became +too small a theatre for his parental pride. He bewailed the loss of his +automobile that had perished of senile decay at Aix-en-Provence. If he +only had it now he could exhibit Jean to the astonished eyes of St. +Albans, Watford--nay London itself! + +"I wish I could take him to Dulau & Company," said he. + +"Good Heavens!" cried Miss Anne in alarm, for Aristide was capable of +everything. "What in the world would you do with him there?" + +"What would I do with him?" replied Aristide, picking the child up in +his arms--the three were strolling on the common--"_Parbleu!_ I would +use him to strike the staff of Dulau & Company green with envy. Do you +think the united efforts of the whole lot of them, from the good Mr. +Blessington to the office boy, could produce a hero like this? You are a +hero, Jean, aren't you?" + +"Yes, papa," said Jean. + +"He knows it," shouted Aristide with a delighted gesture which nearly +cast Jean to the circumambient geese. "Miss Anne, we have the most +wonderful child in the universe." + +This, as far as Anne was concerned, was a proposition which for the past +three years she had regarded as incontrovertible. She smiled at +Aristide, who smiled at her, and Jean, seeing them happy, smiled largely +at them both. + +In a very short time Aristide, who could magically manufacture boats +and cocks and pigs and giraffes out of bits of paper, who could bark +like a dog and quack like a goose, who could turn himself into a horse +or a bear at a minute's notice, whose pockets were a perennial mine of +infantile ecstasy, established himself in Jean's mind as a kind of +tame, necessary and beloved jinn. Being a loyal little soul, the child +retained his affection for Auntie Anne, but he was swept off his +little feet by his mirific parent. The time came when, if he was not +dressed in his tiny woollen jersey and knee breeches and had not his +nose glued against the parlour window in readiness to scramble to the +front door for Aristide's morning kiss, he would have thought that +chaos had come again. And Anne, humouring the child, hastened to get +him washed and dressed in time; until at last, so greatly was she +affected by his obsession, she got into the foolish habit of watching +the clock and saying to herself: "In another minute he will be here," +or: "He is a minute late. What can have happened to him?" + +So Aristide, in his childlike way, found remarkable happiness in +Beverly Stoke. A very wet summer had been followed by a dry and mellow +autumn. Aristide waxed enthusiastic over the English climate and +rejoiced in the mild country air. He was also happy under my friend +Blessington, who spoke of him to me in glowing terms. At the back of +all Aristide's eccentricities was the Provencal peasant's shrewdness. +He realized that, for the first time in his life, he had taken up a +sound and serious avocation. Also, he was no longer irresponsible. He +had found little Jean. Jean's future was in his hands. Jean was to be +an architect--God knows why--but Aristide settled it, definitely, +off-hand. He would have to be educated. "And, my dear friend," said +he, when we were discussing Jean--and for months I heard nothing but +Jean, Jean, Jean, so that I loathed the brat, until I met the +brown-skinned, black-eyed, merry little wretch and fell, like +everybody else, fatuously in love with him--"my dear friend," said he, +"an architect, to be the architect that I mean him to be, must have +universal knowledge. He must know the first word of the classic, the +last word of the modern. He must be steeped in poetry, his brain must +vibrate with science. He must be what you call in England a gentleman. +He must go to one of your great public schools--Eton, Winchester, +Rugby, Harrow--you see I know them all--he must go to Cambridge or +Oxford. Ah, I tell you, he is to be a big man. I, Aristide Pujol, did +not pick him up on that deserted road, in the Arabia Petrea of +Provence, between Salon and Arles, for nothing. He was wrapped, as I +have told you, in an old blanket--and _ma foi_ it smelt bad--and I +dressed him in my pyjamas and made a Neapolitan cap for him out of one +of my socks. The _bon Dieu_ sent him, and I shall arrange just as the +_bon Dieu_ intended. Poor Miss Anne Honeywood with her ninety pounds a +year, what can she do? Pouf! It is for me to look after the future of +little Jean." + +By means of such discourse he convinced Miss Anne that Jean was +predestined to greatness and that Providence had appointed him, +Aristide, as the child's agent in advance. Very much bewildered by his +riotous flow of language and very reluctant to sacrifice her woman's +pride, she agreed to allow him to contribute towards Jean's upbringing. + +"Dear Miss Anne," said he, "it is my right. It is Jean's right. You +would love to put him on top of the pinnacle of fame, would you not?" + +"Of course," said Miss Anne. + +"_Eh bien!_ we will work together. You will give him what can be given +by a beautiful and exquisite woman, and I will do all that can be done +by the accredited agent of Dulau et Compagnie, Wine Shippers of +Bordeaux." + +So, I repeat, Aristide was entirely happy. His waking dreams were of the +four-year-old child. The glad anticipation of the working day in Great +Tower St., E. C., was the evening welcome from the simple but capable +gentlewoman and the sense of home and intimacy in her little parlour no +bigger than the never-entered and nerve-destroying salon of his parents +at Aigues Mortes, but smiling with the grace of old oak and faded +chintz. At Aigues Mortes the salon was a comfortless, tasteless +convention, set apart for the celebrations of baptisms and marriages and +deaths, a pride and a terror to the inhabitants. But here everything +seemed to be as much a warm bit of Anne Honeywood as the tortoise-shell +comb in her hair and the square of Brussels lace that rose and fell on +the bosom of her old evening frock. For, you see, since she expected a +visitor in the evenings, Anne had taken to dressing for her sketch of a +dinner. For all her struggle with poverty she had retained the charm +that four years before had made her touch upon Jean seem a consecration +to the impressionable man. And now that he entered more deeply into her +life and thoughts, he found himself in fragrant places that were very +strange to him. He discovered, too, with some surprise, that a man who +has been at fierce grips with Fortune all his life from ten to forty is +ever so little tired in spirit and is glad to rest. In the tranquility +of Anne Honeywood's presence his soul was singularly at peace. He also +wondered why Anne Honeywood seemed to grow younger, and, in her gentle +fashion, more laughter-loving, every day. + +The Saint Martin's summer lasted to the beginning of December, and then +it came to an end, and with it the idyll of Aristide and Anne Honeywood. + +One Saturday afternoon, when the rain was falling dismally, she received +him with an embarrassment she could scarcely conceal. The usual +heightened colour no longer gave youth to her cheek; an anxious frown +knitted her candid brows; and there was no laughter in her eyes. He +looked at her questioningly. Was anything the matter with Jean? But Jean +answered the question for himself by running down the passage and +springing like a puppy into Aristide's arms. Anne turned her face away, +as if the sight pained her, and, pleading a headache and the desire to +lie down, she left the two together. Returning after a couple of hours +with the tea-tray, she found them on the floor breathlessly absorbed in +the erection of card pagodas. She bit her lip and swallowed a sob. +Aristide jumped up and took the tray. Was not the headache better? He +was so grieved. Jean must be very quiet and drink up his milk quietly +like a hero because Auntie was suffering. Tea was a very subdued affair. +Then Anne carried off Jean to bed, refusing Aristide's helpful +ministrations. It was his Saturday and Sunday joy to bath Jean amid a +score of crawly tin insects which he had provided for the child's +ablutionary entertainment, and it formed the climax of Jean's blissful +day. But this afternoon Anne tore the twain asunder. Aristide looked +mournfully over the rain-swept common through the leaded panes, and +speculated on the enigma of woman. A man, feeling ill, would have been +only too glad for somebody to do his work; but a woman, just because she +was ill, declined assistance. Surely women were an intellect-baffling +sex. + +She came back, having put Jean to bed. + +"My dear friend," she said, with a blurt of bravery, "I have something +very hard to say, but I must say it. You must go away from Beverly +Stoke." + +"Ah!" cried Aristide, "is it I, then, that give you a headache?" + +"It's not your fault," she said gently. "You have been everything that a +loyal gentleman could be--and it's because you're a loyal gentleman that +you must go." + +"I don't understand," said he, puzzled. "I must go away because I give +you a headache, although it is not my fault." + +"It's nothing to do with headaches," she explained. "Don't you see? +People around here are talking." + +"About you and me?" + +"Yes," said Miss Anne, faintly. + +"_Saprelotte!_" cried Aristide, with a fine flourish, "let them talk!" + +"Against Jean and myself?" + +The reproach brought him to his feet. "No," said he. "No. Sooner than +they should talk, I would go out and strangle every one of them. But it +is infamous. What do they say?" + +"How can I tell you? What would they say in your own country?" + +"France is France and England is England." + +"And a little cackling village is the same all the world over. No, my +dear friend--for you are my dear friend--you must go back to London, for +the sake of my good name and Jean's." + +"But let us leave the cackling village." + +"There are geese on every common," said Anne. + +"_Nom de Dieu!_" muttered Aristide, walking about the tiny parlour. +"_Nom de Dieu de nom de Dieu!_" He stood in front of her and flung out +his arms wide. "But without Jean and you life will have no meaning for +me. I shall die. I shall fade away. I shall perish. Tell me, dear Miss +Anne, what they are saying, the miserable peasants with souls of mud." + +But Anne could tell him no more. It had been hateful and degrading to +tell him so much. She shivered through all her purity. After a barren +discussion she held out her hand, large and generous like herself. + +"Good-bye"--she hesitated for the fraction of a second--"Good-bye, +Aristide. I promise you shall provide for Jean's future. I will bring +him up to London now and then to see you. We will find some way out of +the difficulty. But you see, don't you, that you must leave Beverly +Stoke?" + +Aristide went back to his comfortless lodgings aflame with bewilderment, +indignation and despair. He fell upon Mrs. Buttershaw, a slatternly and +sour-visaged woman, and hurled at her a tornado of questions. She +responded with the glee of a hag, and Aristide learned the amazing fact +that in the matter of sheer uncharitableness, unkindness and foulness of +thought Beverly Stoke, with its population of three hundred hinds, could +have brought down upon it the righteous indignation of Sodom, Gomorrah, +Babylon, Paris, and London. For a fortnight or so Anne Honeywood's life +in the village had been that of a pariah dog. + +"And now you've spoke of it yourself," said Mrs. Buttershaw, her hands +on her hips, "I'm glad. I'm a respectable woman, I am, and go to church +regularly, and I don't want to be mixed up in such goings on. And I +never have held with foreigners, anyway. And the sooner you find other +lodgings, the better." + +For the first and only time in his life words failed Aristide Pujol. He +stood in front of the virtuous harridan, his lips working, his fingers +convulsively clutching the air. + +"You--you--you--you naughty woman!" he gasped, and, sweeping her away +from the doorway of his box of a sitting-room, he rushed up to his +tinier bedroom and in furious haste packed his portmanteau. + +"I would rather die than sleep another night beneath your slanderous +roof," he cried at the foot of the stairs. "Here is more than your +week's money." He flung a couple of gold coins on the floor and dashed +out into the darkness and the rain. + +He hammered at Anne Honeywood's door. She opened it in some alarm. + +"You?--but----" she stammered. + +"I have come," said he, dumping his portmanteau in the passage, "to take +you and Jean away from this abomination of a place. It is a Tophet +reserved for those who are not good enough for hell. In hell there is +dignity, _que diable!_ Here there is none. I know what you have +suffered. I know how they insult you. I know what they say. You cannot +stay one more night here. Pack up all your things. Pack up all Jean's +things. I have my valise here. I walk to St. Albans and I come back for +you in an automobile. You lock up the door. I tell the policeman to +guard the cottage. You come with me. We take a train to London. You and +Jean will stay at a hotel. I will go to my good friend who saved me +from Madam Gougasse. After that we will think." + +"That's just like you," she said, smiling in spite of her trouble, "you +act first and think afterwards. Unfortunately I'm in the habit of doing +the reverse." + +"But it's I who am doing all the thinking for you. I have thought till +my brain is red hot." He laughed in his luminous and excited way, and, +seizing both her hands, kissed them one after the other. "There!" said +he, "be ready by the time I return. Do not hesitate. Do not look back. +Remember Lot's wife!" He flourished his hat and was gone like a flash +into the heavy rain and darkness of the December evening. Anne cried +after him, but he too remembering Lot's wife would not turn. He marched +on buoyantly, heedless of the wet and the squirting mud from unseen +puddles. It was an adventure such as he loved. It was a knightly errand, +_parbleu!_ Was he not delivering a beautiful lady from the dragon of +calumny? And in an automobile, too! His imagination fondled the idea. + +At a garage in St. Albans he readily found a car for hire. He was all +for driving it himself--that is how he had pictured the rescue--but the +proprietor, dull and unimaginative tradesman, declined firmly. It was a +hireling who drove the car to Beverly Stoke. Anne, unhatted and +uncloaked, admitted him. + +"You are not ready?" + +"My dear friend, how can I----?" + +"You are not coming?" His hands dropped to his sides and his face was +the incarnation of disappointment. + +"Let us talk things over reasonably," she urged, opening the parlour +door. + +"But I have brought the automobile." + +"He can wait for five minutes, can't he?" + +"He can wait till Doomsday," said Aristide. + +"Take off your dripping coat. You must be wet through. Oh, how impulsive +you are!" + +He took off his overcoat dejectedly and followed her into the parlour, +where she tried to point out the impossibility of his scheme. How could +she abandon her home at a moment's notice? Failing to convince him, she +said at last in some embarrassment, but with gentle dignity: "Suppose we +did run away together in your romantic fashion, would it not confirm the +scandal in the eyes of this wretched village?" + +"You are right," said Aristide. "I had not thought of it." + +He knew himself to be a madman. It was not thus that ladies were rescued +from calumny. But to leave her alone to face it for time indefinite was +unthinkable. And, meanwhile, what would become of him severed from her +and little Jean? He sighed and looked around the little room where he +had been so happy, and at the sweet-faced woman whose companionship had +been so dear to him. And then the true meaning of all the precious +things that had been his life for the past two months appeared before +him like a smiling valley hitherto hidden and now revealed by dissolving +mist. A great gladness gathered round his heart. He leaned across the +table by which he was sitting and looked at her and for the first time +noticed that her eyes were red. + +"You have been crying, dear Anne," said he, using her name boldly. +"Why?" + +A man ought not to put a question like that at a woman's head and bid +her stand and deliver. How is she to answer? Anne felt Aristide's bright +eyes upon her and the colour mounted and mounted and deepened on her +cheeks and brow. + +"I don't like changes," she said in a low voice. + +Aristide slipped noiselessly to the side of her chair and knelt on one +knee and took her hand. + +"Anne--my beloved Anne!" said he. + +And Anne neither moved nor protested, but looked away from him into the +fire. + + * * * * * + +And that is all that Aristide told me. There are sacred and beautiful +things in life that one man does not tell to another. He did, however, +mention that they forgot all about the unfortunate chauffeur sitting in +the rain till about three hours afterwards, when Aristide sped away to a +St. Albans hotel in joyous solitude. + +The very next day he burst in upon me in a state of bliss bordering on +mania. + +"But there is a tragic side to it," he said when the story was over. +"For half the year I shall be exiled to Bordeaux, Marseilles and Algiers +as the representative of Dulau et Compagnie." + +"The very best thing that could happen for your domestic happiness," +said I. + +"What? With my heart"--he thumped his heart--"with my heart hurting like +the devil all the time?" + +"So long as your heart hurts," said I, "you know it isn't dead." + +A short while afterwards they were married in London. I was best man and +Jean, specklessly attired, was page of honour, and the vicar of her own +church at Chislehurst performed the ceremony. The most myopic of +creatures could have seen that Anne was foolishly in love with her +rascal husband. How could she help it? + +As soon as the newly wedded pair had received the exhortation, Aristide, +darting to the altar-rail, caught Jean up in his arms, and, to the +consternation of the officiating clergy, the verger, and Anne's +conventional friends, cried out exultingly: + +"_Ah, mon petit._ It was a lucky day for both of us when I picked you +up on the road between Salon and Arles. Put your hands together as you +do when you're saying your prayers, _mon brave_, and say, 'God bless +father and mother.'" + +Jean obediently adopted the attitude of the infant Samuel in the +pictures. + +"God bless father and mother," said he, and the childish treble rang out +queerly in the large, almost empty church. + +There was a span of silence and then all the women-folk fell on little +Jean and that was the end of that wedding. + + + THE END. + + + * * * * * + + + + + THE GLORY OF CLEMENTINA + BY + William J. Locke + + Author of "The Beloved Vagabond," "Simon the Jester," etc. + + _Cloth_ _12mo_ _$1.30 net_ _Postage 12 cents_ + + Illustrations by Arthur I. Keller + +"Mr. Locke has succeeded in uniting with the firm carefulness of his +early work the rapid, fluent, vibrating style that makes his later books +so delightful; therefore it is easy to make the deduction that +'Clementina' is the best piece of work he has done."--_New York Evening +Sun_ + +"Among the novels of the past five years no books have more consistently +produced an effect at once certain, satisfactory and delightful than +those of William J. Locke. This latest addition to his shelf is full of +life and laughter and the love not only of man for woman but of man for +man and for humanity. Mr. Locke is a born story-teller and a master of +the art of expression."--_The Outlook_ + +"The book contains a mass of good material, with original +characterization, and is written in a style piquant and clever."--_The +Literary Digest_ + +"A story containing the essence of humanity, with an abundance of +sensible and sensitive, casual and unobtrusive commentary upon life and +man, and especially upon woman."--_Boston Evening Transcript_ + +"It contains even more of the popular qualities than are usually +associated with the writings of this noted author."--_Boston Times_ + +"Mr. Locke's flights into the realms of fancy have been a delight to +many readers. He has a lightness of touch that is entirely captivating, +and his remarkable characterization of inconsequent people gives them a +reality that is very insistent."--_Baltimore Evening Sun_ + +"Never has he drawn so deeply from that well that is the human heart; +never so near those invisible heights which are the soul; and, if we are +not altogether mistaken, 'The Glory of Clementina' will also prove to be +that of its author."--_Baltimore News_ + +"A fascinating story with delicate, whimsical touches."--_Albany +Times-Union_ + +"The book seems destined to live longer than any written by the author +to date, because it is so sane and so fundamentally +true."--_Philadelphia Enquirer_ + + +JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK + + + + + MANALIVE + BY + Gilbert K. Chesterton + + Author of "The Innocence of Father Brown," "Heretics," "Orthodoxy," etc. + + _Cloth_ _12mo_ _$1.30 net_ _Postage 12 cents_ + + Frontispiece and Jacket Illustration by Will Foster + +"Mr. Chesterton has undertaken in this quaint narrative to make +burlesque the vehicle of a sermon and a philosophy. It is all a part of +the author's war upon artificial attitudes which enclose the living men +like a shell and make for human purposes a dead man of him. He speaks +here in a parable--a parable of his own kind, having about it a broad +waggishness like that of Mr. Punch and a distinct flavor of that sort of +low comedy which one finds in Dickens and Shakespeare. You are likely to +find, before you are done with the parable, that there has been forced +upon your attention a possible view of the life worth living. 'Manalive' +is a 'Peterpantheistic' novel full of Chestertonisms."--_New York Times_ + +"One of the oddest books Mr. Chesterton has yet given us."--_New York +Evening Globe_ + +"The fun of the book (and there is plenty of it) comes quite as much +from the extraordinary and improbable characters as from the situations. +Epigrams, witticisms, odd fancies, queer conceits, singular whimsies, +follow after one another in quick succession."--_Brooklyn Eagle_ + + +"One of the most humorous tales of modern fiction, combined with a very +tender and appealing love story."--_Cleveland Plain Dealer_ + +"The book is certain to have a wide circulation, not only because of the +name of the author attached to it, but because of its own intrinsic +worth."--_Buffalo Commercial_ + +"There can be no doubt as to the iridescent brilliance of the book. Page +after page--full of caustic satire, humorous sally and profound +epigram--fairly bristles with merriment. 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