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Cadine and Marjolin, however, preferred the provincial quietness of
the Rue des Bourdonnais, where one can play at marbles without fear of
being run over. The girl perked her head affectedly as she passed the
wholesale glove and hosiery stores, at each door of which bareheaded
assistants, with their pens stuck in their ears, stood watching her
with a weary gaze. And she and her lover had yet a stronger preference
for such bits of olden Paris as still existed: the Rue de la Poterie
and the Rue de la Lingerie, with their butter and egg and cheese
dealers; the Rue de la Ferronerie and the Rue de l'Aiguillerie (the
beautiful streets of far-away times), with their dark narrow shops;
and especially the Rue Courtalon, a dank, dirty by-way running from
the Place Sainte Opportune to the Rue Saint Denis, and intersected by
foul-smelling alleys where they had romped in their younger days. In
the Rue Saint Denis they entered into the land of dainties; and they
smiled upon the dried apples, the "Spanishwood," the prunes, and the
sugar-candy in the windows of the grocers and druggists. Their
ramblings always set them dreaming of a feast of good things, and
inspired them with a desire to glut themselves on the contents of the
windows. To them the district seemed like some huge table, always laid
with an everlasting dessert into which they longed to plunge their
fingers.

They devoted but a moment to visiting the other blocks of tumble-down
old houses, the Rue Pirouette, the Rue de Mondetour, the Rue de la
Petite Truanderie, and the Rue de la Grande Truanderie, for they took
little interest in the shops of the dealers in edible snails, cooked
vegetables, tripe, and drink. In the Rue de la Grand Truanderie,
however, there was a soap factory, an oasis of sweetness in the midst
of all the foul odours, and Marjolin was fond of standing outside it
till some one happened to enter or come out, so that the perfume which
swept through the doorway might blow full in his face. Then with all
speed they returned to the Rue Pierre Lescot and the Rue Rambuteau.
Cadine was extremely fond of salted provisions; she stood in
admiration before the bundles of red-herrings, the barrels of
anchovies and capers, and the little casks of gherkins and olives,
standing on end with wooden spoons inside them. The smell of the
vinegar titillated her throat; the pungent odour of the rolled cod,
smoked salmon, bacon and ham, and the sharp acidity of the baskets of
lemons, made her mouth water longingly. She was also fond of feasting
her eyes on the boxes of sardines piled up in metallic columns amidst
the cases and sacks. In the Rue Montorgueil and the Rue Montmartre
were other tempting-looking groceries and restaurants, from whose
basements appetising odours were wafted, with glorious shows of game
and poultry, and preserved-provision shops, which last displayed
beside their doors open kegs overflowing with yellow sour-krout
suggestive of old lacework. Then they lingered in the Rue Coquilliere,
inhaling the odour of truffles from the premises of a notable dealer
in comestibles, which threw so strong a perfume into the street that
Cadine and Marjolin closed their eyes and imagined they were
swallowing all kinds of delicious things. These perfumes, however,
distressed Claude. They made him realise the emptiness of his stomach,
he said; and, leaving the "two animals" to feast on the odour of the
truffles--the most penetrating odour to be found in all the
neighbourhood--he went off again to the corn market by way of the Rue
Oblin, studying on his road the old women who sold green-stuff in the
doorways and the displays of cheap pottery spread out on the foot-
pavements.

Such were their rambles in common; but when Cadine set out alone with
her bunches of violets she often went farther afield, making it a
point to visit certain shops for which she had a particular
partiality. She had an especial weakness for the Taboureau bakery
establishment, one of the windows of which was exclusively devoted to
pastry. She would follow the Rue Turbigo and retrace her steps a dozen
times in order to pass again and again before the almond cakes, the
/savarins/, the St. Honore tarts, the fruit tarts, and the various
dishes containing bunlike /babas/ redolent of rum, eclairs combining
the finger biscuit with chocolate, and /choux a la crème/, little
rounds of pastry overflowing with whipped white of egg. The glass jars
full of dry biscuits, macaroons, and /madeleines/ also made her mouth
water; and the bright shop with its big mirrors, its marble slabs, its
gilding, its bread-bins of ornamental ironwork, and its second window
in which long glistening loaves were displayed slantwise, with one end
resting on a crystal shelf whilst above they were upheld by a brass
rod, was so warm and odoriferous of baked dough that her features
expanded with pleasure when, yielding to temptation, she went in to
buy a /brioche/ for two sous.

Another shop, one in front of the Square des Innocents, also filled
her with gluttonous inquisitiveness, a fever of longing desire. This
shop made a specialty of forcemeat pasties. In addition to the
ordinary ones there were pasties of pike and pasties of truffled /foie
gras/; and the girl would gaze yearningly at them, saying to herself
that she would really have to eat one some day.

Cadine also had her moments of vanity and coquetry. When these fits
were on her, she bought herself in imagination some of the magnificent
dresses displayed in the windows of the "Fabriques de France" which
made the Pointe Saint Eustache gaudy with their pieces of bright stuff
hanging from the first floor to the footway and flapping in the
breeze. Somewhat incommoded by the flat basket hanging before her,
amidst the crowd of market women in dirty aprons gazing at future
Sunday dresses, the girl would feel the woollens, flannels, and
cottons to test the texture and suppleness of the material; and she
would promise herself a gown of bright-coloured flannelling, flowered
print, or scarlet poplin. Sometimes even from amongst the pieces
draped and set off to advantage by the window-dressers she would
choose some soft sky-blue or apple-green silk, and dream of wearing it
with pink ribbons. In the evenings she would dazzle herself with the
displays in the windows of the big jewellers in the Rue Montmartre.
That terrible street deafened her with its ceaseless flow of vehicles,
and the streaming crowd never ceased to jostle her; still she did not
stir, but remained feasting her eyes on the blazing splendour set out
in the light of the reflecting lamps which hung outside the windows.
On one side all was white with the bright glitter of silver: watches
in rows, chains hanging, spoons and forks laid crossways, cups, snuff-
boxes, napkin-rings, and combs arranged on shelves. The silver
thimbles, dotting a porcelain stand covered with a glass shade, had an
especial attraction for her. Then on the other side the windows
glistened with the tawny glow of gold. A cascade of long pendant
chains descended from above, rippling with ruddy gleams; small ladies'
watches, with the backs of their cases displayed, sparkled like fallen
stars; wedding rings clustered round slender rods; bracelets,
broaches, and other costly ornaments glittered on the black velvet
linings of their cases; jewelled rings set their stands aglow with
blue, green, yellow, and violet flamelets; while on every tier of the
shelves superposed rows of earrings and crosses and lockets hung
against the crystal like the rich fringes of altar-cloths. The glow of
this gold illumined the street half way across with a sun-like
radiance. And Cadine, as she gazed at it, almost fancied that she was
in presence of something holy, or on the threshold of the Emperor's
treasure chamber. She would for a long time scrutinise all this show
of gaudy jewellery, adapted to the taste of the fish-wives, and
carefully read the large figures on the tickets affixed to each
article; and eventually she would select for herself a pair of earrings
--pear-shaped drops of imitation coral hanging from golden roses.

One morning Claude caught her standing in ecstasy before a hair-
dresser's window in the Rue Saint Honore. She was gazing at the
display of hair with an expression of intense envy. High up in the
window was a streaming cascade of long manes, soft wisps, loose
tresses, frizzy falls, undulating comb-curls, a perfect cataract of
silky and bristling hair, real and artificial, now in coils of a
flaming red, now in thick black crops, now in pale golden locks, and
even in snowy white ones for the coquette of sixty. In cardboard boxes
down below were cleverly arranged fringes, curling side-ringlets, and
carefully combed chignons glossy with pomade. And amidst this
framework, in a sort of shrine beneath the ravelled ends of the
hanging locks, there revolved the bust of a woman, arrayed in a
wrapper of cherry-coloured satin fastened between the breasts with a
brass brooch. The figure wore a lofty bridal coiffure picked out with
sprigs of orange blossom, and smiled with a dollish smile. Its eyes
were pale blue; its eyebrows were very stiff and of exaggerated
length; and its waxen cheeks and shoulders bore evident traces of the
heat and smoke of the gas. Cadine waited till the revolving figure
again displayed its smiling face, and as its profile showed more
distinctly and it slowly went round from left to right she felt
perfectly happy. Claude, however, was indignant, and, shaking Cadine,
he asked her what she was doing in front of "that abomination, that
corpse-like hussy picked up at the Morgue!" He flew into a temper with
the "dummy's" cadaverous face and shoulders, that disfigurement of the
beautiful, and remarked that artists painted nothing but that unreal
type of woman nowadays. Cadine, however, remained unconvinced by his
oratory, and considered the lady extremely beautiful. Then, resisting
the attempts of the artist to drag her away by the arm, and scratching
her black mop in vexation, she pointed to an enormous ruddy tail,
severed from the quarters of some vigorous mare, and told him she
would have liked to have a crop of hair like that.

During the long rambles when Claude, Cadine, and Marjolin prowled
about the neighbourhood of the markets, they saw the iron ribs of the
giant building at the end of every street. Wherever they turned they
caught sudden glimpses of it; the horizon was always bounded by it;
merely the aspect under which it was seen varied. Claude was
perpetually turning round, and particularly in the Rue Montmartre,
after passing the church. From that point the markets, seen obliquely
in the distance, filled him with enthusiasm. A huge arcade, a giant,
gaping gateway, was open before him; then came the crowding pavilions
with their lower and upper roofs, their countless Venetian shutters
and endless blinds, a vision, as it were, of superposed houses and
palaces; a Babylon of metal of Hindoo delicacy of workmanship,
intersected by hanging terraces, aerial galleries, and flying bridges
poised over space. The trio always returned to this city round which
they strolled, unable to stray more than a hundred yards away. They
came back to it during the hot afternoons when the Venetian shutters
were closed and the blinds lowered. In the covered ways all seemed to
be asleep, the ashy greyness was streaked by yellow bars of sunlight
falling through the high windows. Only a subdued murmur broke the
silence; the steps of a few hurrying passers-by resounded on the
footways; whilst the badge-wearing porters sat in rows on the stone
ledges at the corners of the pavilions, taking off their boots and
nursing their aching feet. The quietude was that of a colossus at
rest, interrupted at times by some cock-crow rising from the cellars
below.

Claude, Cadine, and Marjolin then often went to see the empty hampers
piled upon the drays, which came to fetch them every afternoon so that
they might be sent back to the consignors. There were mountains of
them, labelled with black letters and figures, in front of the
salesmen's warehouses in the Rue Berger. The porters arranged them
symmetrically, tier by tier, on the vehicles. When the pile rose,
however, to the height of a first floor, the porter who stood below
balancing the next batch of hampers had to make a spring in order to
toss them up to his mate, who was perched aloft with arms extended.
Claude, who delighted in feats of strength and dexterity, would stand
for hours watching the flight of these masses of osier, and would
burst into a hearty laugh whenever too vigorous a toss sent them
flying over the pile into the roadway beyond. He was fond, too, of the
footways of the Rue Rambuteau and the Rue du Pont Neuf, near the fruit
market, where the retail dealers congregated. The sight of the
vegetables displayed in the open air, on trestle-tables covered with
damp black rags, was full of charm for him. At four in the afternoon
the whole of this nook of greenery was aglow with sunshine; and Claude
wandered between the stalls, inspecting the bright-coloured heads of
the saleswomen with keen artistic relish. The younger ones, with their
hair in nets, had already lost all freshness of complexion through the
rough life they led; while the older ones were bent and shrivelled,
with wrinkled, flaring faces showing under the yellow kerchiefs bound
round their heads. Cadine and Marjolin refused to accompany him
hither, as they could perceive old Mother Chantemesse shaking her fist
at them, in her anger at seeing them prowling about together. He
joined them again, however, on the opposite footway, where he found a
splendid subject for a picture in the stallkeepers squatting under
their huge umbrellas of faded red, blue, and violet, which, mounted
upon poles, filled the whole market-side with bumps, and showed
conspicuously against the fiery glow of the sinking sun, whose rays
faded amidst the carrots and the turnips. One tattered harridan, a
century old, was sheltering three spare-looking lettuces beneath an
umbrella of pink silk, shockingly split and stained.

Cadine and Marjolin had struck up an acquaintance with Leon, Quenu's
apprentice, one day when he was taking a pie to a house in the
neighbourhood. They saw him cautiously raise the lid of his pan in a
secluded corner of the Rue de Mondetour, and delicately take out a
ball of forcemeat. They smiled at the sight, which gave them a very
high opinion of Leon. And the idea came to Cadine that she might at
last satisfy one of her most ardent longings. Indeed, the very next
time that she met the lad with his basket she made herself very
agreeable, and induced him to offer her a forcemeat ball. But,
although she laughed and licked her fingers, she experienced some
disappointment. The forcemeat did not prove nearly so nice as she had
anticipated. On the other hand, the lad, with his sly, greedy phiz and
his white garments, which made him look like a girl going to her first
communion, somewhat took her fancy.

She invited him to a monster lunch which she gave amongst the hampers
in the auction room at the butter market. The three of them--herself,
Marjolin, and Leon--completely secluded themselves from the world
within four walls of osier. The feast was laid out on a large flat
basket. There were pears, nuts, cream-cheese, shrimps, fried potatoes,
and radishes. The cheese came from a fruiterer's in the Rue de la
Cossonnerie, and was a present; and a "frier" of the Rue de la Grande
Truanderie had given Cadine credit for two sous' worth of potatoes.
The rest of the feast, the pears, the nuts, the shrimps, and the
radishes, had been pilfered from different parts of the market. It was
a delicious treat; and Leon, desirous of returning the hospitality,
gave a supper in his bedroom at one o'clock in the morning. The bill
of fare included cold black-pudding, slices of polony, a piece of salt
pork, some gherkins, and some goose-fat. The Quenu-Gradelles' shop had
provided everything. And matters did not stop there. Dainty suppers
alternated with delicate luncheons, and invitation upon invitation.
Three times a week there were banquets, either amidst the hampers or
in Leon's garret, where Florent, on the nights when he lay awake,
could hear a stifled sound of munching and rippling laughter until day
began to break.

The loves of Cadine and Marjolin now took another turn. The youth
played the gallant, and just as another might entertain his
/innamorata/ at a champagne supper /en tete a tete/ in a private room,
he led Cadine into some quiet corner of the market cellars to munch
apples or sprigs of celery. One day he stole a red-herring, which they
devoured with immense enjoyment on the roof of the fish market beside
the guttering. There was not a single shady nook in the whole place
where they did not indulge in secret feasts. The district, with its
rows of open shops full of fruit and cakes and preserves, was no
longer a closed paradise, in front of which they prowled with greedy,
covetous appetites. As they passed the shops they now extended their
hands and pilfered a prune, a few cherries, or a bit of cod. They also
provisioned themselves at the markets, keeping a sharp look-out as
they made their way between the stalls, picking up everything that
fell, and often assisting the fall by a push of their shoulders.

In spite, however, of all the marauding, some terrible scores had to
be run up with the "frier" of the Rue de la Grand Truanderie. This
"frier," whose shanty leaned against a tumble-down house, and was
propped up by heavy joists, green with moss, made a display of boiled
mussels lying in large earthenware bowls filled to the brim with clear
water; of dishes of little yellow dabs stiffened by too thick a
coating of paste; of squares of tripe simmering in a pan; and of
grilled herrings, black and charred, and so hard that if you tapped
them they sounded like wood. On certain weeks Cadine owed the frier as
much as twenty sous, a crushing debt, which required the sale of an
incalculable number of bunches of violets, for she could count upon no
assistance from Marjolin. Moreover, she was bound to return Leon's
hospitalities; and she even felt some little shame at never being able
to offer him a scrap of meat. He himself had now taken to purloining
entire hams. As a rule, he stowed everything away under his shirt; and
at night when he reached his bedroom he drew from his bosom hunks of
polony, slices of /pate de foie gras/, and bundles of pork rind. They
had to do without bread, and there was nothing to drink; but no
matter. One night Marjolin saw Leon kiss Cadine between two mouthfuls;
however, he only laughed. He could have smashed the little fellow with
a blow from his fist, but he felt no jealousy in respect of Cadine. He
treated her simply as a comrade with whom he had chummed for years.

Claude never participated in these feasts. Having caught Cadine one
day stealing a beet-root from a little hamper lined with hay, he had
pulled her ears and given her a sound rating. These thieving
propensities made her perfect as a ne'er-do-well. However, in spite of
himself, he could not help feeling a sort of admiration for these
sensual, pilfering, greedy creatures, who preyed upon everything that
lay about, feasting off the crumbs that fell from the giant's table.

At last Marjolin nominally took service under Gavard, happy in having
nothing to do except to listen to his master's flow of talk, while
Cadine still continued to sell violets, quite accustomed by this time
to old Mother Chantemesse's scoldings. They were still the same
children as ever, giving way to their instincts and appetites without
the slightest shame--they were the growth of the slimy pavements of
the market district, where, even in fine weather, the mud remains
black and sticky. However, as Cadine walked along the footways,
mechanically twisting her bunches of violets, she was sometimes
disturbed by disquieting reveries; and Marjolin, too, suffered from an
uneasiness which he could not explain. He would occasionally leave the
girl and miss some ramble or feast in order to go and gaze at Madame
Quenu through the windows of her pork shop. She was so handsome and
plump and round that it did him good to look at her. As he stood
gazing at her, he felt full and satisfied, as though he had just eaten
or drunk something extremely nice. And when he went off, a sort of
hunger and thirst to see her again suddenly came upon him. This had
been going on for a couple of months. At first he had looked at her
with the respectful glance which he bestowed upon the shop-fronts of
the grocers and provision dealers; but subsequently, when he and
Cadine had taken to general pilfering, he began to regard her smooth
cheeks much as he regarded the barrels of olives and boxes of dried
apples.

For some time past Marjolin had seen handsome Lisa every day, in the
morning. She would pass Gavard's stall, and stop for a moment or two
to chat with the poultry dealer. She now did her marketing herself, so
that she might be cheated as little as possible, she said. The truth,
however, was that she wished to make Gavard speak out. In the pork
shop he was always distrustful, but at his stall he chatted and talked
with the utmost freedom. Now, Lisa had made up her mind to ascertain
from him exactly what took place in the little room at Monsieur
Lebigre's; for she had no great confidence in her secret police
office, Mademoiselle Saget. In a short time she learnt from the
incorrigible chatterbox a lot of vague details which very much alarmed
her. Two days after her explanation with Quenu she returned home from
the market looking very pale. She beckoned to her husband to follow
her into the dining-room, and having carefully closed the door she
said to him: "Is your brother determined to send us to the scaffold,
then? Why did you conceal from me what you knew?"

Quenu declared that he knew nothing. He even swore a great oath that
he had not returned to Monsieur Lebigre's, and would never go there
again.

"You will do well not to do so," replied Lisa, shrugging her
shoulders, "unless you want to get yourself into a serious scrape.
Florent is up to some evil trick, I'm certain of it! I have just
learned quite sufficient to show me where he is going. He's going back
to Cayenne, do you hear?"

Then, after a pause, she continued in calmer ones: "Oh, the unhappy
man! He had everything here that he could wish for. He might have
redeemed his character; he had nothing but good examples before him.
But no, it is in his blood! He will come to a violent end with his
politics! I insist upon there being an end to all this! You hear me,
Quenu? I gave you due warning long ago!"

She spoke the last words very incisively. Quenu bent his head, as if
awaiting sentence.

"To begin with," continued Lisa, "he shall cease to take his meals
here. It will be quite sufficient if we give him a bed. He is earning
money; let him feed himself."

Quenu seemed on the point of protesting, but his wife silenced him by
adding energetically:

"Make your choice between him and me. If he remains here, I swear to
you that I will go away, and take my daughter with me. Do you want me
to tell you the whole truth about him? He is a man capable of
anything; he has come here to bring discord into our household. But I
will set things right, you may depend on it. You have your choice
between him and me; you hear me?"

Then, leaving her husband in silent consternation, she returned to the
shop, where she served a customer with her usual affable smile. The
fact was that, having artfully inveigled Gavard into a political
discussion, the poultry dealer had told her that she would soon see
how the land lay, that they were going to make a clean sweep of
everything, and that two determined men like her brother-in-law and
himself would suffice to set the fire blazing. This was the evil trick
of which she had spoken to Quenu, some conspiracy to which Gavard was
always making mysterious allusions with a sniggering grin from which
he seemingly desired a great deal to be inferred. And in imagination
Lisa already saw the gendarmes invading the pork shop, gagging
herself, her husband, and Pauline, and casting them into some
underground dungeon.

In the evening, at dinner, she evinced an icy frigidity. She made no
offers to serve Florent, but several times remarked: "It's very
strange what an amount of bread we've got through lately."

Florent at last understood. He felt that he was being treated like a
poor relation who is gradually turned out of doors. For the last two
months Lisa had dressed him in Quenu's old trousers and coats; and, as
he was as thin as his brother was fat, these ragged garments had a
most extraordinary appearance upon him. She also turned her oldest
linen over to him: pocket-handkerchiefs which had been darned a score
of times, ragged towels, sheets which were only fit to be cut up into
dusters and dish-cloths, and worn-out shirts, distended by Quenu's
corpulent figure, and so short that they would have served Florent as
under-vests. Moreover, he no longer found around him the same good-
natured kindliness as in the earlier days. The whole household seemed
to shrug its shoulders after the example set by handsome Lisa. Auguste
and Augustine turned their backs upon him, and little Pauline, with
the cruel frankness of childhood, let fall some bitter remarks about
the stains on his coat and the holes in his shirt. However, during the
last days he suffered most at table. He scarcely dared to eat, as he
saw the mother and daughter fix their gaze upon him whenever he cut
himself a piece of bread. Quenu meantime peered into his plate, to
avoid having to take any part in what went on.

That which most tortured Florent was his inability to invent a reason
for leaving the house. During a week he kept on revolving in his mind
a sentence expressing his resolve to take his meals elsewhere, but
could not bring himself to utter it. Indeed, this man of tender nature
lived in such a world of illusions that he feared he might hurt his
brother and sister-in-law by ceasing to lunch and dine with them. It
had taken him over two months to detect Lisa's latent hostility; and
even now he was sometimes inclined to think that he must be mistaken,
and that she was in reality kindly disposed towards him. Unselfishness
with him extended to forgetfulness of his requirements; it was no
longer a virtue, but utter indifference to self, an absolute
obliteration of personality. Even when he recognised that he was being
gradually turned out of the house, his mind never for a moment dwelt
upon his share in old Gradelle's fortune, or upon the accounts which
Lisa had offered him. He had already planned out his expenditure for
the future; reckoning that with what Madame Verlaque still allowed him
to retain of his salary, and the thirty francs a month which a pupil,
obtained through La Normande, paid him he would be able to spend
eighteen sous on his breakfast and twenty-six sous on his dinner.
This, he thought, would be ample. And so, at last, taking as his
excuse the lessons which he was giving his new pupil, he emboldened
himself one morning to pretend that it would be impossible for him in
future to come to the house at mealtimes. He blushed as he gave
utterance to this laboriously constructed lie, which had given him so
much trouble, and continued apologetically:

"You mustn't be offended; the boy only has those hours free. I can
easily get something to eat, you know; and I will come and have a chat
with you in the evenings."

Beautiful Lisa maintained her icy reserve, and this increased
Florent's feeling of trouble. In order to have no cause for self-
reproach she had been unwilling to send him about his business,
preferring to wait till he should weary of the situation and go of his
own accord. Now he was going, and it was a good riddance; and she
studiously refrained from all show of kindliness for fear it might
induce him to remain. Quenu, however, showed some signs of emotion,
and exclaimed: "Don't think of putting yourself about; take your meals
elsewhere by all means, if it is more convenient. It isn't we who are
turning you way; you'll at all events dine with us sometimes on
Sundays, eh?"

Florent hurried off. His heart was very heavy. When he had gone, the
beautiful Lisa did not venture to reproach her husband for his
weakness in giving that invitation for Sundays. She had conquered, and
again breathed freely amongst the light oak of her dining-room, where
she would have liked to burn some sugar to drive away the odour of
perverse leanness which seemed to linger about. Moreover, she
continued to remain on the defensive; and at the end of another week
she felt more alarmed than ever. She only occasionally saw Florent in
the evenings, and began to have all sorts of dreadful thoughts,
imagining that her brother-in-law was constructing some infernal
machine upstairs in Augustine's bedroom, or else making signals which
would result in barricades covering the whole neighbourhood. Gavard,
who had become gloomy, merely nodded or shook his head when she spoke
to him, and left his stall for days together in Marjolin's charge. The
beautiful Lisa, however, determined that she would get to the bottom
of affairs. She knew that Florent had obtained a day's leave, and
intended to spend it with Claude Lantier, at Madame Francois's, at
Nanterre. As he would start in the morning, and remain away till
night, she conceived the idea of inviting Gavard to dinner. He would
be sure to talk freely, at table, she thought. But throughout the
morning she was unable to meet the poultry dealer, and so in the
afternoon she went back again to the markets.

Marjolin was in the stall alone. He used to drowse there for hours,
recouping himself from the fatigue of his long rambles. He generally
sat upon one chair with his legs resting upon another, and his head
leaning against a little dresser. In the wintertime he took a keen
delight in lolling there and contemplating the display of game; the
bucks hanging head downwards, with their fore-legs broken and twisted
round their necks; the larks festooning the stall like garlands; the
big ruddy hares, the mottled partridges, the water-fowl of a bronze-
grey hue, the Russian black cocks and hazel hens, which arrived in a
packing of oat straw and charcoal;
  • and the pheasants, the
    magnificent pheasants, with their scarlet hoods, their stomachers of
    green satin, their mantles of embossed gold, and their flaming tails,
    that trailed like trains of court robes. All this show of plumage
    reminded Marjolin of his rambles in the cellars with Cadine amongst
    the hampers of feathers.

  • The baskets in which these are sent to Paris are identical with
        those which in many provinces of Russia serve the /moujiks/ as
        cradles for their infants.--Translator.

    That afternoon the beautiful Lisa found Marjolin in the midst of the
    poultry. It was warm, and whiffs of hot air passed along the narrow
    alleys of the pavilion. She was obliged to stoop before she could see
    him stretched out inside the stall, below the bare flesh of the birds.
    From the hooked bar up above hung fat geese, the hooks sticking in the
    bleeding wounds of their long stiffened necks, while their huge bodies
    bulged out, glowing ruddily beneath their fine down, and, with their
    snowy tails and wings, suggesting nudity encompassed by fine linen.
    And also hanging from the bar, with ears thrown back and feet parted
    as though they were bent on some vigorous leap, were grey rabbits
    whose turned-up tails gleamed whitely, whilst their heads, with sharp
    teeth and dim eyes, laughed with the grin of death. On the counter of
    the stall plucked fowls showed their strained fleshy breasts; pigeons,
    crowded on osier trays, displayed the soft bare skin of innocents;
    ducks, with skin of rougher texture, exhibited their webbed feet; and
    three magnificent turkeys, speckled with blue dots, like freshly-
    shaven chins, slumbered on their backs amidst the black fans of their
    expanded tails. On plates near by were giblets, livers, gizzards,
    necks, feet, and wings; while an oval dish contained a skinned and
    gutted rabbit, with its four legs wide apart, its head bleeding, and
    is kidneys showing through its gashed belly. A streamlet of dark
    blood, after trickling along its back to its tail, had fallen drop by
    drop, staining the whiteness of the dish. Marjolin had not even taken
    the trouble to wipe the block, near which the rabbit's feet were still
    lying. He reclined there with his eyes half closed, encompassed by
    other piles of dead poultry which crowded the shelves of the stall,
    poultry in paper wrappers like bouquets, rows upon rows of protuberant
    breasts and bent legs showing confusedly. And amidst all this mass of
    food, the young fellow's big, fair figure, the flesh of his cheeks,
    hands, and powerful neck covered with ruddy down seemed as soft as
    that of the magnificent turkeys, and as plump as the breasts of the
    fat geese.

    When he caught sight of Lisa, he at once sprang up, blushing at having
    been caught sprawling in this way. He always seemed very nervous and
    ill at ease in Madame Quenu's presence; and when she asked him if
    Monsieur Gavard was there, he stammered out: "No, I don't think so. He
    was here a little while ago, but he want away again."

    Lisa looked at him, smiling; she had a great liking for him. But
    feeling something warm brush against her hand, which was hanging by
    her side, she raised a little shriek. Some live rabbits were thrusting
    their noses out of a box under the counter of the stall, and sniffing
    at her skirts.

    "Oh," she exclaimed with a laugh, "it's your rabbits that are tickling
    me."

    Then she stooped and attempted to stroke a white rabbit, which darted
    in alarm into a corner of the box.

    "Will Monsieur Gavard be back soon, do you think?" she asked, as she
    again rose erect.

    Marjolin once more replied that he did not know; then in a hesitating
    way he continued: "He's very likely gone down into the cellars. He
    told me, I think, that he was going there."

    "Well, I think I'll wait for him, then," replied Lisa. "Could you let
    him know that I am here? or I might go down to him, perhaps. Yes,
    that's a good idea; I've been intending to go and have a look at the
    cellars for these last five years. You'll take me down, won't you, and
    explain things to me?"

    Marjolin blushed crimson, and, hurrying out of the stall, walked on in
    front of her, leaving the poultry to look after itself. "Of course I
    will," said he. "I'll do anything you wish, Madame Lisa."

    When they got down below, the beautiful Lisa felt quite suffocated by
    the dank atmosphere of the cellar. She stood at the bottom step, and
    raised her eyes to look at the vaulted roofing of red and white bricks
    arching slightly between the iron ribs upheld by small columns. What
    made her hesitate more than the gloominess of the place was a warm,
    penetrating odour, the exhalations of large numbers of living
    creatures, which irritated her nostrils and throat.

    "What a nasty smell!" she exclaimed. "It must be very unhealthy down
    here."

    "It never does me any harm," replied Marjolin in astonishment.
    "There's nothing unpleasant about the smell when you've got accustomed
    to it; and it's very warm and cosy down here in the wintertime."

    As Lisa followed him, however, she declared that the strong scent of
    the poultry quite turned her stomach, and that she would certainly not
    be able to eat a fowl for the next two months. All around her, the
    storerooms, the small cabins where the stallkeepers keep their live
    stock, formed regular streets, intersecting each other at right
    angles. There were only a few scattered gas lights, and the little
    alleys seemed wrapped in sleep like the lanes of a village where the
    inhabitants have all gone to bed. Marjolin made Lisa feel the close-
    meshed wiring, stretched on a framework of cast iron; and as she made
    her way along one of the streets she amused herself by reading the
    names of the different tenants, which were inscribed on blue labels.

    "Monsieur Gavard's place is quite at the far end," said the young man,
    still walking on.

    They turned to the left, and found themselves in a sort of blind
    alley, a dark, gloomy spot where not a ray of light penetrated. Gavard
    was not there.

    "Oh, it makes no difference," said Marjolin. "I can show you our birds
    just the same. I have a key of the storeroom."

    Lisa followed him into the darkness.

    "You don't suppose that I can see your birds in this black oven, do
    you?" she asked, laughing.

    Marjolin did not reply at once; but presently he stammered out that
    there was always a candle in the storeroom. He was fumbling about the
    lock, and seemed quite unable to find the keyhole. As Lisa came up to
    help him, she felt a hot breath on her neck; and when the young man
    had at last succeeded in opening the door and lighted the candle, she
    saw that he was trembling.

    "You silly fellow!" she exclaimed, "to get yourself into such a state
    just because a door won't open! Why, you're no better than a girl, in
    spite of your big fists!"

    She stepped inside the storeroom. Gavard had rented two compartments,
    which he had thrown into one by removing the partition between them.
    In the dirt on the floor wallowed the larger birds--the geese,
    turkeys, and ducks--while up above, on tiers of shelves, were boxes
    with barred fronts containing fowls and rabbits. The grating of the
    storeroom was so coated with dust and cobwebs that it looked as though
    covered with grey blinds. The woodwork down below was rotting, and
    covered with filth. Lisa, however, not wishing to vex Marjolin,
    refrained from any further expression of disgust. She pushed her
    fingers between the bars of the boxes, and began to lament the fate of
    the unhappy fowls, which were so closely huddled together and could
    not even stand upright. Then she stroked a duck with a broken leg
    which was squatting in a corner, and the young man told her that it
    would be killed that very evening, for fear lest it should die during
    the night.

    "But what do they do for food?" asked Lisa.

    Thereupon he explained to her that poultry would not eat in the dark,
    and that it was necessary to light a candle and wait there till they
    had finished their meal.

    "It amuses me to watch them," he continued; "I often stay here with a
    light for hours altogether. You should see how they peck away; and
    when I hide the flame of the candle with my hand they all stand stock-
    still with their necks in the air, just as though the sun had set. It
    is against the rules to leave a lighted candle here and go away. One
    of the dealers, old Mother Palette--you know her, don't you?--nearly
    burned the whole place down the other day. A fowl must have knocked
    the candle over into the straw while she was away."

    "A pretty thing, isn't it," said Lisa, "for fowls to insist upon
    having the chandeliers lighted up every time they take a meal?"

    This idea made her laugh. Then she came out of the storeroom, wiping
    her feet, and holding up her skirts to keep them from the filth.
    Marjolin blew out the candle and locked the door. Lisa felt rather
    nervous at finding herself in the dark again with this big young
    fellow, and so she hastened on in front.

    "I'm glad I came, all the same," she presently said, as he joined her.
    "There is a great deal more under these markets than I ever imagined.
    But I must make haste now and get home again. They'll wonder what has
    become of me at the shop. If Monsieur Gavard comes back, tell him that
    I want to speak to him immediately."

    "I expect he's in the killing-room," said Marjolin. "We'll go and see,
    if you like."

    Lisa made no reply. She felt oppressed by the close atmosphere which
    warmed her face. She was quite flushed, and her bodice, generally so
    still and lifeless, began to heave. Moreover, the sound of Marjolin's
    hurrying steps behind her filled her with an uneasy feeling. At last
    she stepped aside, and let him go on in front. The lanes of this
    underground village were still fast asleep. Lisa noticed that her
    companion was taking the longest way. When they came out in front of
    the railway track he told her that he had wished to show it to her;
    and they stood for a moment or two looking through the chinks in the
    hoarding of heavy beams. Then Marjolin proposed to take her on to the
    line; but she refused, saying that it was not worth while, as she
    could see things well enough where she was.

    As they returned to the poultry cellars they found old Madame Palette
    in front of her storeroom, removing the cords of a large square
    hamper, in which a furious fluttering of wings and scraping of feet
    could be heard. As she unfastened the last knot the lid suddenly flew
    open, as though shot up by a spring, and some big geese thrust out
    their heads and necks. Then, in wild alarm, they sprang from their
    prison and rushed away, craning their necks, and filling the dark
    cellars with a frightful noise of hissing and clattering of beaks.
    Lisa could not help laughing, in spite of the lamentations of the old
    woman, who swore like a carter as she caught hold of two of the
    absconding birds and dragged them back by the neck. Marjolin,
    meantime, set off in pursuit of a third. They could hear him running
    along the narrow alleys, hunting for the runaway, and delighting in
    the chase. Then, far off in the distance, they heard the sounds of a
    struggle, and presently Marjolin came back again, bringing the goose
    with him. Mother Palette, a sallow-faced old woman, took it in her
    arms and clasped it for a moment to her bosom, in the classic attitude
    of Leda.

    "Well, well, I'm sure I don't know what I should have done if you
    hadn't been here," said she. "The other day I had a regular fight with
    one of the brutes; but I had my knife with me, and I cut its throat."

    Marjolin was quite out of breath. When they reached the stone blocks
    where the poultry were killed, and where the gas burnt more brightly,
    Lisa could see that he was perspiring, and had bold, glistening eyes.
    She thought he looked very handsome like that, with his broad
    shoulders, big flushed face, and fair curly hair, and she looked at
    him so complacently, with that air of admiration which women feel they
    may safely express for quite young lads, that he relapsed into timid
    bashfulness again.

    "Well, Monsieur Gavard isn't here, you see," she said. "You've only
    made me waste my time."

    Marjolin, however, began rapidly explaining the killing of the poultry
    to her. Five huge stone slabs stretched out in the direction of the
    Rue Rambuteau under the yellow light of the gas jets. A woman was
    killing fowls at one end; and this led him to tell Lisa that the birds
    were plucked almost before they were dead, the operation thus being
    much easier. Then he wanted her to feel the feathers which were lying
    in heaps on the stone slabs; and told her that they were sorted and
    sold for as much as nine sous the pound, according to their quality.
    To satisfy him, she was also obliged to plunge her hand into the big
    hampers full of down. Then he turned the water-taps, of which there
    was one by every pillar. There was no end to the particulars he gave.
    The blood, he said, streamed along the stone blocks, and collected
    into pools on the paved floor, which attendants sluiced with water
    every two hours, removing the more recent stains with coarse brushes.

    When Lisa stooped over the drain which carries away the swillings,
    Marjolin found a fresh text for talk. On rainy days, said he, the
    water sometimes rose through this orifice and flooded the place. It
    had once risen a foot high; and they had been obliged to transport all
    the poultry to the other end of the cellar, which is on a higher
    level. He laughed as he recalled the wild flutter of the terrified
    creatures. However, he had now finished, and it seemed as though there
    remained nothing else for him to show, when all at once he bethought
    himself of the ventilator. Thereupon he took Lisa off to the far end
    of the cellar, and told her to look up; and inside one of the turrets
    at the corner angles of the pavilion she observed a sort of escape-
    pipe, by which the foul atmosphere of the storerooms ascended into
    space.

    Here, in this corner, reeking with abominable odours, Marjolin's
    nostrils quivered, and his breath came and went violently. His long
    stroll with Lisa in these cellars, full of warm animal perfumes, had
    gradually intoxicated him.

    She had again turned towards him. "Well," said she, "it was very kind
    of you to show me all this, and when you come to the shop I will give
    you something."

    Whilst speaking she took hold of his soft chin, as she often did,
    without recognising that he was no longer a child; and perhaps she
    allowed her hand to linger there a little longer than was her wont. At
    all events, Marjolin, usually so bashful, was thrilled by the caress,
    and all at once he impetuously sprang forward, clasped Lisa by the
    shoulders, and pressed his lips to her soft cheeks. She raised no cry,
    but turned very pale at this sudden attack, which showed her how
    imprudent she had been. And then, freeing herself from the embrace,
    she raised her arm, as she had seen men do in slaughter houses,
    clenched her comely fist, and knocked Marjolin down with a single
    blow, planted straight between his eyes; and as he fell his head came
    into collision with one of the stone slabs, and was split open. Just
    at that moment the hoarse and prolonged crowing of a cock sounded
    through the gloom.

    Handsome Lisa, however, remained perfectly cool. Her lips were tightly
    compressed, and her bosom had recovered its wonted immobility. Up
    above she could hear the heavy rumbling of the markets, and through
    the vent-holes alongside the Rue Rambuteau the noise of the street
    traffic made its way into the oppressive silence of the cellar. Lisa
    reflected that her own strong arm had saved her; and then, fearing
    lest some one should come and find her there, she hastened off,
    without giving a glance at Marjolin. As she climbed the steps, after
    passing through the grated entrance of the cellars, the daylight
    brought her great relief.

    She returned to the shop, quite calm, and only looking a little pale.

    "You've been a long time," Quenu said to her.

    "I can't find Gavard. I have looked for him everywhere," she quietly
    replied. "We shall have to eat our leg of mutton without him."

    Then she filled the lard pot, which she noticed was empty; and cut
    some pork chops for her friend Madame Taboureau, who had sent her
    little servant for them. The blows which she dealt with her cleaver
    reminded her of Marjolin. She felt that she had nothing to reproach
    herself with. She had acted like an honest woman. She was not going to
    disturb her peace of mind; she was too happy to do anything to
    compromise herself. However, she glanced at Quenu, whose neck was
    coarse and ruddy, and whose shaven chin looked as rough as knotted
    wood; whereas Marjolin's chin and neck resembled rosy satin. But then
    she must not think of him any more, for he was no longer a child. She
    regretted it, and could not help thinking that children grew up much
    too quickly.

    A slight flush came back to her cheeks, and Quenu considered that she
    looked wonderfully blooming. He came and sat down beside her at the
    counter for a moment or two. "You ought to go out oftener," said he;
    "it does you good. We'll go to the theatre together one of these
    nights, if you like; to the Gaite, eh? Madame Taboureau has been to
    see the piece they are playing there, and she declares it's splendid."

    Lisa smiled, and said they would see about it, and then once more she
    took herself off. Quenu thought that it was too good of her to take so
    much trouble in running about after that brute Gavard. In point of
    fact, however, she had simply gone upstairs to Florent's bedroom, the
    key of which was hanging from a nail in the kitchen. She hoped to find
    out something or other by an inspection of this room, since the
    poultry dealer had failed her. She went slowly round it, examining the
    bed, the mantelpiece, and every corner. The window with the little
    balcony was open, and the budding pomegranate was steeped in the
    golden beams of the setting sun. The room looked to her as though
    Augustine had never left it--had slept there only the night before.
    There seemed to be nothing masculine about the place. She was quite
    surprised, for she had expected to find some suspicious-looking
    chests, and coffers with strong locks. She went to feel Augustine's
    summer gown, which was still hanging against the wall. Then she sat
    down at the table, and began to read an unfinished page of manuscript,
    in which the word "revolution" occurred twice. This alarmed her, and
    she opened the drawer, which she saw was full of papers. But her sense
    of honour awoke within her in presence of the secret which the rickety
    deal table so badly guarded. She remained bending over the papers,
    trying to understand them without touching them, in a state of great
    emotion, when the shrill song of the chaffinch, on whose cage streamed
    a ray of sunshine, made her start. She closed the drawer. It was a
    base thing that she had contemplated, she thought.

    Then, as she lingered by the window, reflecting that she ought to go
    and ask counsel of Abbe Roustan, who was a very sensible man, she saw
    a crowd of people round a stretcher in the market square below. The
    night was falling, still she distinctly recognised Cadine weeping in
    the midst of the crowd; while Florent and Claude, whose boots were
    white with dust, stood together talking earnestly at the edge of the
    footway. She hurried downstairs again, surprised to see them back so
    soon, and scarcely had she reached her counter when Mademoiselle Saget
    entered the shop.

    "They have found that scamp of a Marjolin in the cellar, with his head
    split open," exclaimed the old maid. "Won't you come to see him,
    Madame Quenu?"

    Lisa crossed the road to look at him. The young fellow was lying on
    his back on the stretcher, looking very pale. His eyes were closed,
    and a stiff wisp of his fair hair was clotted with blood. The
    bystanders, however, declared that there was no serious harm done,
    and, besides, the scamp had only himself to blame, for he was always
    playing all sorts of wild pranks in the cellars. It was generally
    supposed that he had been trying to jump over one of the stone blocks
    --one of his favourite amusements--and had fallen with his head
    against the slab.

    "I dare say that hussy there gave him a shove," remarked Mademoiselle
    Saget, pointing to Cadine, who was weeping. "They are always larking
    together."

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    Meantime the fresh air had restored Marjolin to consciousness, and he
    opened his eyes in wide astonishment. He looked round at everybody,
    and then, observing Lisa bending over him, he gently smiled at her
    with an expression of mingled humility and affection. He seemed to
    have forgotten all that had happened. Lisa, feeling relieved, said
    that he ought to be taken to the hospital at once, and promised to go
    and see him there, and take him some oranges and biscuits. However,
    Marjolin's head had fallen back, and when the stretcher was carried
    away Cadine followed it, with her flat basket slung round her neck,
    and her hot tears rolling down upon the bunches of violets in their
    mossy bed. She certainly had no thoughts for the flowers that she was
    thus scalding with her bitter grief.

    As Lisa went back to her shop, she heard Claude say, as he shook hands
    with Florent and parted from him: "Ah! the confounded young scamp!
    He's quite spoiled my day for me! Still, we had a very enjoyable time,
    didn't we?"

    Claude and Florent had returned both worried and happy, bringing with
    them the pleasant freshness of the country air. Madame Francois had
    disposed of all her vegetables that morning before daylight; and they
    had all three gone to the Golden Compasses, in the Rue Montorgueil, to
    get the cart. Here, in the middle of Paris, they found a foretaste of
    the country. Behind the Restaurant Philippe, with its frontage of gilt
    woodwork rising to the first floor, there was a yard like that of a
    farm, dirty, teeming with life, reeking with the odour of manure and
    straw. Bands of fowls were pecking at the soft ground. Sheds and
    staircases and galleries of greeny wood clung to the old houses
    around, and at the far end, in a shanty of big beams, was Balthazar,
    harnessed to the cart, and eating the oats in his nosebag. He went
    down the Rue Montorgueil at a slow trot, seemingly well pleased to
    return to Nanterre so soon. However, he was not going home without a
    load. Madame Francois had a contract with the company which undertook
    the scavenging of the markets, and twice a week she carried off with
    her a load of leaves, forked up from the mass of refuse which littered
    the square. It made excellent manure. In a few minutes the cart was
    filled to overflowing. Claude and Florent stretched themselves out on
    the deep bed of greenery; Madame Francois grasped her reins, and
    Balthazar went off at his slow, steady pace, his head somewhat bent by
    reason of there being so many passengers to pull along.

    This excursion had been talked of for a long time past. Madame
    Francois laughed cheerily. She was partial to the two men, and
    promised them an /omelette au lard/ as had never been eaten, said she,
    in "that villainous Paris." Florent and Claude revelled in the thought
    of this day of lounging idleness which as yet had scarcely begun to
    dawn. Nanterre seemed to be some distant paradise into which they
    would presently enter.

    "Are you quite comfortable?" Madame Francois asked as the cart turned
    into the Rue du Pont Neuf.

    Claude declared that their couch was as soft as a bridal bed. Lying on
    their backs, with their hands crossed under their heads, both men were
    looking up at the pale sky from which the stars were vanishing. All
    along the Rue de Rivoli they kept unbroken silence, waiting till they
    should have got clear of the houses, and listening to the worthy woman
    as she chattered to Balthazar: "Take your time, old man," she said to
    him in kindly tones. "We're in no hurry; we shall be sure to get there
    at last."

    On reaching the Champs Elysees, when the artist saw nothing but tree-
    tops on either side of him, and the great green mass of the Tuileries
    gardens in the distance, he woke up, as it were, and began to talk.
    When the cart had passed the end of the Rue du Roule he had caught a
    glimpse of the side entrance of Saint Eustache under the giant roofing
    of one of the market covered-ways. He was constantly referring to this
    view of the church, and tried to give it a symbolical meaning.

    "It's an odd mixture," he said, "that bit of church framed round by an
    avenue of cast iron. The one will kill the other; the iron will slay
    the stone, and the time is not very far off. Do you believe in chance,
    Florent? For my part, I don't think that it was any mere chance of
    position that set a rose-window of Saint Eustache right in the middle
    of the central markets. No; there's a whole manifesto in it. It is
    modern art, realism, naturalism--whatever you like to call it--that
    has grown up and dominates ancient art. Don't you agree with me?"

    Then, as Florent still kept silence, Claude continued: "Besides, that
    church is a piece of bastard architecture, made up of the dying gasp
    of the middle ages, and the first stammering of the Renaissance. Have
    you noticed what sort of churches are built nowadays? They resemble
    all kinds of things--libraries, observatories, pigeon-cotes, barracks;
    and surely no one can imagine that the Deity dwells in such places.
    The pious old builders are all dead and gone; and it would be better
    to cease erecting those hideous carcasses of stone, in which we have
    no belief to enshrine. Since the beginning of the century there has
    only been one large original pile of buildings erected in Paris--a
    pile in accordance with modern developments--and that's the central
    markets. You hear me, Florent? Ah! they are a fine bit of building,
    though they but faintly indicate what we shall see in the twentieth
    century! And so, you see, Saint Eustache is done for! It stands there
    with its rose-windows, deserted by worshippers, while the markets
    spread out by its side and teem with noisy life. Yes! that's how I
    understand it all, my friend."

    "Ah! Monsieur Claude," said Madame Francois, laughing, "the woman who
    cut your tongue-string certainly earned her money. Look at Balthazar
    laying his ears back to listen to you. Come, come, get along,
    Balthazar!"

    The cart was slowly making its way up the incline. At this early hour
    of the morning the avenue, with its double lines of iron chairs on
    either pathway, and its lawns, dotted with flowerbeds and clumps of
    shrubbery, stretching away under the blue shadows of the trees, was
    quite deserted; however, at the Rond-Point a lady and gentleman on
    horseback passed the cart at a gentle trot. Florent, who had made
    himself a pillow with a bundle of cabbage-leaves, was still gazing at
    the sky, in which a far-stretching rosy glow was appearing. Every now
    and then he would close his eyes, the better to enjoy the fresh breeze
    of the morning as it fanned his face. He was so happy to escape from
    the markets, and travel on through the pure air, that he remained
    speechless, and did not even listen to what was being said around him.

    "And then, too, what fine jokers are those fellows who imprison art in
    a toy-box!" resumed Claude, after a pause. "They are always repeating
    the same idiotic words: 'You can't create art out of science,' says
    one; 'Mechanical appliances kill poetry,' says another; and a pack of
    fools wail over the fate of the flowers, as though anybody wished the
    flowers any harm! I'm sick of all such twaddle; I should like to
    answer all that snivelling with some work of open defiance. I should
    take a pleasure in shocking those good people. Shall I tell you what
    was the finest thing I ever produced since I first began to work, and
    the one which I recall with the greatest pleasure? It's quite a story.
    When I was at my Aunt Lisa's on Christmas Eve last year that idiot of
    an Auguste, the assistant, was setting out the shop-window. Well, he
    quite irritated me by the weak, spiritless way in which he arranged
    the display; and at last I requested him to take himself off, saying
    that I would group the things myself in a proper manner. You see, I
    had plenty of bright colours to work with--the red of the tongues, the
    yellow of the hams, the blue of the paper shavings, the rosy pink of
    the things that had been cut into, the green of the sprigs of heath,
    and the black of the black-puddings--ah! a magnificent black, which I
    have never managed to produce on my palette. And naturally, the
    /crepine/, the small sausages, the chitterlings, and the crumbed
    trotters provided me with delicate greys and browns. I produced a
    perfect work of art. I took the dishes, the plates, the pans, and the
    jars, and arranged the different colours; and I devised a wonderful
    picture of still life, with subtle scales of tints leading up to
    brilliant flashes of colour. The red tongues seemed to thrust
    themselves out like greedy flames, and the black-puddings, surrounded
    by pale sausages, suggested a dark night fraught with terrible
    indigestion. I had produced, you see, a picture symbolical of the
    gluttony of Christmas Eve, when people meet and sup--the midnight
    feasting, the ravenous gorging of stomachs void and faint after all
    the singing of hymns.
  • At the top of everything a huge turkey
    exhibited its white breast, marbled blackly by the truffles showing
    through its skin. It was something barbaric and superb, suggesting a
    paunch amidst a halo of glory; but there was such a cutting, sarcastic
    touch about it all that people crowded to the window, alarmed by the
    fierce flare of the shop-front. When my aunt Lisa came back from the
    kitchen she was quite frightened, and thought I'd set the fat in the
    shop on fire; and she considered the appearance of the turkey so
    indelicate that she turned me out of the place while Auguste
    re-arranged the window after his own idiotic fashion. Such brutes will
    never understand the language of a red splotch by the side of a grey
    one. Ah, well! that was my masterpiece. I have never done anything
    better."

  • An allusion to the "midnight mass" usually celebrated in Roman
        Catholic churches on Christmas Eve.--Translator.

    He relapsed into silence, smiling and dwelling with gratification on
    this reminiscence. The cart had now reached the Arc de Triomphe, and
    strong currents of air swept from the avenues across the expanse of
    open ground. Florent sat up, and inhaled with zest the first odours of
    grass wafted from the fortifications. He turned his back on Paris,
    anxious to behold the country in the distance. At the corner of the
    Rue de Longchamp, Madame Francois pointed out to him the spot where
    she had picked him up. This rendered him thoughtful, and he gazed at
    her as she sat there, so healthy-looking and serene, with her arms
    slightly extended so as to grasp the reins. She looked even handsomer
    than Lisa, with her neckerchief tied over her head, her robust glow of
    health, and her brusque, kindly air. When she gave a slight cluck with
    her tongue, Balthazar pricked up his ears and rattled down the road at
    a quicker pace.

    On arriving at Nanterre, the cart turned to the left into a narrow
    lane, skirted some blank walls, and finally came to a standstill at
    the end of a sort of blind alley. It was the end of the world, Madame
    Francois used to say. The load of vegetable leaves now had to be
    discharged. Claude and Florent would not hear of the journeyman
    gardener, who was planting lettuces, leaving his work, but armed
    themselves with pitchforks and proceeded to toss the leaves into the
    manure pit. This occupation afforded them much amusement. Claude had
    quite a liking for manure, since it symbolises the world and its life.
    The strippings and parings of the vegetables, the scourings of the
    markets, the refuse that fell from that colossal table, remained full
    of life, and returned to the spot where the vegetables had previously
    sprouted, to warm and nourish fresh generations of cabbages, turnips,
    and carrots. They rose again in fertile crops, and once more went to
    spread themselves out upon the market square. Paris rotted everything,
    and returned everything to the soil, which never wearied of repairing
    the ravages of death.

    "Ah!" exclaimed Claude, as he plied his fork for the last time,
    "here's a cabbage-stalk that I'm sure I recognise. It has grown up at
    least half a score of times in that corner yonder by the apricot
    tree."

    This remark made Florent laugh. But he soon became grave again, and
    strolled slowly through the kitchen garden, while Claude made a sketch
    of the stable, and Madame Francois got breakfast ready. The kitchen
    garden was a long strip of ground, divided in the middle by a narrow
    path; it rose slightly, and at the top end, on raising the head, you
    could perceive the low barracks of Mont Valerien. Green hedges
    separated it from other plots of land, and these lofty walls of
    hawthorn fringed the horizon with a curtain of greenery in such wise
    that of all the surrounding country Mont Valerien alone seemed to rise
    inquisitively on tip-toe in order to peer into Madame Francois's
    close. Great peacefulness came from the countryside which could not
    be seen. Along the kitchen garden, between the four hedges, the May
    sun shone with a languid heat, a silence disturbed only by the buzzing
    of insects, a somnolence suggestive of painless parturition. Every now
    and then a faint cracking sound, a soft sigh, made one fancy that one
    could hear the vegetables sprout into being. The patches of spinach
    and sorrel, the borders of radishes, carrots, and turnips, the beds of
    potatoes and cabbages, spread out in even regularity, displaying their
    dark leaf-mould between their tufts of greenery. Farther away, the
    trenched lettuces, onions, leeks, and celery, planted by line in long
    straight rows, looked like soldiers on parade; while the peas and
    beans were beginning to twine their slender tendrils round a forest of
    sticks, which, when June came, they would transform into a thick and
    verdant wood. There was not a weed to be seen. The garden resembled
    two parallel strips of carpet of a geometrical pattern of green on a
    reddish ground, which were carefully swept every morning. Borders of
    thyme grew like greyish fringe along each side of the pathway.

    Florent paced backwards and forwards amidst the perfume of the thyme,
    which the sun was warming. He felt profoundly happy in the
    peacefulness and cleanliness of the garden. For nearly a year past he
    had only seen vegetables bruised and crushed by the jolting of the
    market-carts; vegetables torn up on the previous evening, and still
    bleeding. He rejoiced to find them at home, in peace in the dark
    mould, and sound in every part. The cabbages had a bulky, prosperous
    appearance; the carrots looked bright and gay; and the lettuces
    lounged in line with an air of careless indolence. And as he looked at
    them all, the markets which he had left behind him that morning seemed
    to him like a vast mortuary, an abode of death, where only corpses
    could be found, a charnel-house reeking with foul smells and
    putrefaction. He slackened his steps, and rested in that kitchen
    garden, as after a long perambulation amidst deafening noises and
    repulsive odours. The uproar and the sickening humidity of the fish
    market had departed from him; and he felt as though he were being born
    anew in the pure fresh air. Claude was right, he thought. The markets
    were a sphere of death. The soil was the life, the eternal cradle, the
    health of the world.

    "The omelet's ready!" suddenly cried Madame Francois.

    When they were all three seated round the table in the kitchen, with
    the door thrown open to the sunshine, they ate their breakfast with
    such light-hearted gaiety that Madame Francois looked at Florent in
    amazement, repeating between each mouthful: "You're quite altered.
    You're ten years younger. It is that villainous Paris which makes you
    seem so gloomy. You've got a little sunshine in your eyes now. Ah!
    those big towns do one's health no good, you ought to come and live
    here."

    Claude laughed, and retorted that Paris was a glorious place. He stuck
    up for it and all that belonged to it, even to its gutters; though at
    the same time retaining a keen affection for the country.

    In the afternoon Madame Francois and Florent found themselves alone at
    the end of the garden, in a corner planted with a few fruit trees.
    Seated on the ground, they talked somewhat seriously together. The
    good woman advised Florent with an affectionate and quite maternal
    kindness. She asked him endless questions about his life, and his
    intentions for the future, and begged him to remember that he might
    always count upon her, if ever he thought that she could in the
    slightest degree contribute to his happiness. Florent was deeply
    touched. No woman had ever spoken to him in that way before. Madame
    Francois seemed to him like some healthy, robust plant that had grown
    up with the vegetables in the leaf-mould of the garden; while the
    Lisas, the Normans, and other pretty women of the markets appeared to
    him like flesh of doubtful freshness decked out for exhibition. He
    here enjoyed several hours of perfect well-being, delivered from all
    that reek of food which sickened him in the markets, and reviving to
    new life amidst the fertile atmosphere of the country, like that
    cabbage stalk which Claude declared he had seen sprout up more than
    half a score of times.

    The two men took leave of Madame Francois at about five o'clock. They
    had decided to walk back to Paris; and the market gardener accompanied
    them into the lane. As she bade good-bye to Florent, she kept his hand
    in her own for a moment, and said gently: "If ever anything happens to
    trouble you, remember to come to me."

    For a quarter of an hour Florent walked on without speaking, already
    getting gloomy again, and reflecting that he was leaving health behind
    him. The road to Courbevoie was white with dust. However, both men
    were fond of long walks and the ringing of stout boots on the hard
    ground. Little clouds of dust rose up behind their heels at every
    step, while the rays of the sinking sun darted obliquely over the
    avenue, lengthening their shadows in such wise that their heads
    reached the other side of the road, and journeyed along the opposite
    footway.

    Claude, swinging his arms, and taking long, regular strides,
    complacently watched these two shadows, whilst enjoying the rhythmical
    cadence of his steps, which he accentuated by a motion of his
    shoulders. Presently, however, as though just awaking from a dream, he
    exclaimed: "Do you know the 'Battle of the Fat and the Thin'?"

    Florent, surprised by the question, replied in the negative; and
    thereupon Claude waxed enthusiastic, talking of that series of prints
    in very eulogical fashion. He mentioned certain incidents: the Fat, so
    swollen that they almost burst, preparing their evening debauch, while
    the Thin, bent double by fasting, looked in from the street with the
    appearance of envious laths; and then, again, the Fat, with hanging
    cheeks, driving off one of the Thin, who had been audacious enough to
    introduce himself into their midst in lowly humility, and who looked
    like a ninepin amongst a population of balls.

    In these designs Claude detected the entire drama of human life, and
    he ended by classifying men into Fat and Thin, two hostile groups, one
    of which devours the other, and grows fat and sleek and enjoys itself.

    "Cain," said he, "was certainly one of the Fat, and Abel one of the
    Thin. Ever since that first murder, there have been rampant appetites
    which have drained the life-blood of small eaters. It's a continual
    preying of the stronger upon the weaker; each swallowing his
    neighbour, and then getting swallowed in his turn. Beware of the Fat,
    my friend."

    He relapsed into silence for a moment, still watching their two
    shadows, which the setting sun elongated more than ever. Then he
    murmured: "You see, we belong to the Thin--you and I. Those who are no
    more corpulent than we are don't take up much room in the sunlight,
    eh?"

    Florent glanced at the two shadows, and smiled. But Claude waxed
    angry, and exclaimed: "You make a mistake if you think it is a
    laughing matter. For my own part, I greatly suffer from being one of
    the Thin. If I were one of the Fat, I could paint at my ease; I should
    have a fine studio, and sell my pictures for their weight in gold.
    But, instead of that, I'm one of the Thin; and I have to grind my life
    out in producing things which simply make the Fat ones shrug their
    shoulders. I shall die of it all in the end, I'm sure of it, with my
    skin clinging to my bones, and so flattened that they will be able to
    bury me between two leaves of a book. And you, too, you are one of the
    Thin, a wonderful one; the very king of Thin, in fact! Do you remember
    your quarrel with the fish-wives? It was magnificent; all those
    colossal bosoms flying at your scraggy breast! Oh! they were simply
    acting from natural instinct; they were pursuing one of the Thin just
    as cats pursue a mouse. The Fat, you know, have an instinctive hatred
    of the Thin, to such an extent that they must needs drive the latter
    from their sight, either by means of their teeth or their feet. And
    that is why, if I were in your place, I should take my precautions.
    The Quenus belong to the Fat, and so do the Mehudins; indeed, you have
    none but Fat ones around you. I should feel uneasy under such
    circumstances."

    "And what about Gavard, and Mademoiselle Saget, and your friend
    Marjolin?" asked Florent, still smiling.

    "Oh, if you like, I will classify all our acquaintances for you,"
    replied Claude. "I've had their heads in a portfolio in my studio for
    a long time past, with memoranda of the order to which they belong.
    Gavard is one of the Fat, but of the kind which pretends to belong to
    the Thin. The variety is by no means uncommon. Mademoiselle Saget and
    Madame Lecoeur belong to the Thin, but to a variety which is much to
    be feared--the Thin ones whom envy drives to despair, and who are
    capable of anything in their craving to fatten themselves. My friend
    Marjolin, little Cadine, and La Sarriette are three Fat ones, still
    innocent, however, and having nothing but the guileless hunger of
    youth. I may remark that the Fat, so long as they've not grown old,
    are charming creatures. Monsieur Lebigre is one of the Fat--don't you
    think so? As for your political friends, Charvet, Clemence, Logre, and
    Lacaille, they mostly belong to the Thin. I only except that big
    animal Alexandre, and that prodigy Robine, who has caused me a vast
    amount of annoyance."

    The artist continued to talk in this strain from the Pont de Neuilly
    to the Arc de Triomphe. He returned to some of those whom he had
    already mentioned, and completed their portraits with a few
    characteristic touches. Logre, he said, was one of the Thin whose
    belly had been placed between his shoulders. Beautiful Lisa was all
    stomach, and the beautiful Norman all bosom. Mademoiselle Saget, in
    her earlier life, must have certainly lost some opportunity to fatten
    herself, for she detested the Fat, while, at the same time, she
    despised the Thin. As for Gavard, he was compromising his position as
    one of the Fat, and would end by becoming as flat as a bug.

    "And what about Madame Francois?" Florent asked.

    Claude seemed much embarrassed by this question. He cast about for an
    answer, and at last stammered:

    "Madame Francois, Madame Francois--well, no, I really don't know; I
    never thought about classifying her. But she's a dear good soul, and
    that's quite sufficient. She's neither one of the Fat nor one of the
    Thin!"

    They both laughed. They were now in front of the Arc de Triomphe. The
    sun, over by the hills of Suresnes, was so low on the horizon that
    their colossal shadows streaked the whiteness of the great structure
    even above the huge groups of statuary, like strokes made with a piece
    of charcoal. This increased Claude's merriment, he waved his arms and
    bent his body; and then, as he started on his way again, he said; "Did
    you notice--just as the sun set our two heads shot up to the sky!"

    But Florent no longer smiled. Paris was grasping him again, that Paris
    which now frightened him so much, after having cost him so many tears
    at Cayenne. When he reached the markets night was falling, and there
    was a suffocating smell. He bent his head as he once more returned to
    the nightmare of endless food, whilst preserving the sweet yet sad
    recollection of that day of bright health odorous with the perfume of
    thyme.
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    Chapter V


    At about four o'clock on the afternoon of the following day Lisa
    betook herself to Saint Eustache. For the short walk across the square
    she had arrayed herself very seriously in a black silk gown and thick
    woollen shawl. The handsome Norman, who, from her stall in the fish
    market, watched her till she vanished into the church porch, was quite
    amazed.

    "Hallo! So the fat thing's gone in for priests now, has she?" she
    exclaimed, with a sneer. "Well, a little holy water may do her good!"

    She was mistaken in her surmises, however, for Lisa was not a devotee.
    She did not observe the ordinances of the Church, but said that she
    did her best to lead an honest life, and that this was all that was
    necessary. At the same time, however, she disliked to hear religion
    spoken ill of, and often silenced Gavard, who delighted in scandalous
    stories of priests and their doings. Talk of that sort seemed to her
    altogether improper. Everyone, in her opinion, should be allowed to
    believe as they pleased, and every scruple should be respected.
    Besides, the majority of the clergy were most estimable men. She knew
    Abbe Roustan, of Saint Eustache--a distinguished priest, a man of
    shrewd sense, and one, she thought, whose friendship might be safely
    relied upon. And she would wind up by explaining that religion was
    absolutely necessary for the people; she looked upon it as a sort of
    police force that helped to maintain order, and without which no
    government would be possible. When Gavard went too far on this subject
    and asserted that the priests ought to be turned into the streets and
    have their shops shut up, Lisa, shrugged her shoulders and replied: "A
    great deal of good that would do! Why, before a month was over the
    people would be murdering one another in the streets, and you would be
    compelled to invent another God. That was just what happened in '93.
    You know very well that I'm not given to mixing with the priests, but
    for all that I say that they are necessary, as we couldn't do without
    them."

    And so when Lisa happened to enter a church she always manifested the
    utmost decorum. She had bought a handsome missal, which she never
    opened, for use when she was invited to a funeral or a wedding. She
    knelt and rose at the proper times, and made a point of conducting
    herself with all propriety. She assumed, indeed, what she considered a
    sort of official demeanour, such as all well-to-do folks,
    tradespeople, and house-owners ought to observe with regard to
    religion.

    As she entered Saint Eustache that afternoon she let the double doors,
    covered with green baize, faded and worn by the frequent touch of
    pious hands, close gently behind her. Then she dipped her fingers in
    the holy water and crossed herself in the correct fashion. And
    afterwards, with hushed footsteps, she made her way to the chapel of
    Saint Agnes, where two kneeling women with their faces buried in their
    hands were waiting, whilst the blue skirts of a third protruded from
    the confessional. Lisa seemed rather put out by the sight of these
    women, and, addressing a verger who happened to pass along, wearing a
    black skullcap and dragging his feet over the slabs, she inquired:
    "Is this Monsieur l'Abbe Roustan's day for hearing confessions?"

    The verger replied that his reverence had only two more penitents
    waiting, and that they would not detain him long, so that if Lisa
    would take a chair her turn would speedily come. She thanked him,
    without telling him that she had not come to confess; and, making up
    her mind to wait, she began to pace the church, going as far as the
    chief entrance, whence she gazed at the lofty, severe, bare nave
    stretching between the brightly coloured aisles. Raising her head a
    little, she examined the high altar, which she considered too plain,
    having no taste for the cold grandeur of stonework, but preferring the
    gilding and gaudy colouring of the side chapels. Those on the side of
    the Rue du Jour looked greyish in the light which filtered through
    their dusty windows, but on the side of the markets the sunset was
    lighting up the stained glass with lovely tints, limpid greens and
    yellows in particular, which reminded Lisa of the bottle of liqueurs
    in front of Monsieur Lebigre's mirror. She came back by this side,
    which seemed to be warmed by the glow of light, and took a passing
    interest in the reliquaries, altar ornaments, and paintings steeped in
    prismatic reflections. The church was empty, quivering with the
    silence that fell from its vaulted roofing. Here and there a woman's
    dress showed like a dark splotch amidst the vague yellow of the
    chairs; and a low buzzing came from the closed confessionals. As Lisa
    again passed the chapel of Saint Agnes she saw the blue dress still
    kneeling at Abbe Roustan's feet.

    "Why, if I'd wanted to confess I could have said everything in ten
    seconds," she thought, proud of her irreproachable integrity.

    Then she went on to the end of the church. Behind the high altar, in
    the gloom of a double row of pillars, is the chapel of the Blessed
    Virgin, damp and dark and silent. The dim stained windows only show
    the flowing crimson and violet robes of saints, which blaze like
    flames of mystic love in the solemn, silent adoration of the darkness.
    It is a weird, mysterious spot, like some crepuscular nook of paradise
    solely illumined by the gleaming stars of two tapers. The four brass
    lamps hanging from the roof remain unlighted, and are but faintly
    seen; on espying them you think of the golden censers which the angels
    swing before the throne of Mary. And kneeling on the chairs between
    the pillars there are always women surrendering themselves
    languorously to the dim spot's voluptuous charm.

    Lisa stood and gazed tranquilly around her. She did not feel the least
    emotion, but considered that it was a mistake not to light the lamps.
    Their brightness would have given the place a more cheerful look. The
    gloom even struck her as savouring of impropriety. Her face was warmed
    by the flames of some candles burning in a candelabrum by her side,
    and an old woman armed with a big knife was scraping off the wax which
    had trickled down and congealed into pale tears. And amidst the
    quivering silence, the mute ecstasy of adoration prevailing in the
    chapel, Lisa would distinctly hear the rumbling of the vehicles
    turning out of the Rue Montmartre, behind the scarlet and purple
    saints on the windows, whilst in the distance the markets roared
    without a moment's pause.

    Just as Lisa was leaving the chapel, she saw the younger of the
    Mehudins, Claire, the dealer in fresh water fish, come in. The girl
    lighted a taper at the candelabrum, and then went to kneel behind a
    pillar, her knees pressed upon the hard stones, and her face so pale
    beneath her loose fair hair that she seemed a corpse. And believing
    herself to be securely screened from observation, she gave way to
    violent emotion, and wept hot tears with a passionate outpouring of
    prayer which bent her like a rushing wind. Lisa looked on in
    amazement, for the Mehudins were not known to be particularly pious;
    indeed, Claire was accustomed to speak of religion and priests in such
    terms as to horrify one.

    "What's the meaning of this, I wonder?" pondered Lisa, as she again
    made her way to the chapel of Saint Agnes. "The hussy must have been
    poisoning some one or other."

    Abbe Roustan was at last coming out of his confessional. He was a
    handsome man, of some forty years of age, with a smiling, kindly air.
    When he recognised Madame Quenu he grasped her hand, called her "dear
    lady," and conducted her to the vestry, where, taking off his
    surplice, he told her that he would be entirely at her service in a
    moment. They returned, the priest in his cassock, bareheaded, and Lisa
    strutting along in her shawl, and paced up and down in front of the
    side-chapels adjacent to the Rue du Jour. They conversed together in
    low tones. The sunlight was departing from the stained windows, the
    church was growing dark, and the retreating footsteps of the last
    worshippers sounded but faintly over the flagstones.

    Lisa explained her doubts and scruples to Abbe Roustan. There had
    never been any question of religion between them; she never confessed,
    but merely consulted him in cases of difficulty, because he was shrewd
    and discreet, and she preferred him, as she sometimes said, to shady
    business men redolent of the galleys. The abbe, on his side,
    manifested inexhaustible complaisance. He looked up points of law for
    her in the Code, pointed out profitable investments, resolved her
    moral difficulties with great tact, recommended tradespeople to her,
    invariably having an answer ready however diverse and complicated her
    requirements might be. And he supplied all this help in a natural
    matter-of-fact way, without ever introducing the Deity into his talk,
    or seeking to obtain any advantage either for himself or the cause of
    religion. A word of thanks and a smile sufficed him. He seemed glad to
    have an opportunity of obliging the handsome Madame Quenu, of whom his
    housekeeper often spoke to him in terms of praise, as of a woman who
    was highly respected in the neighbourhood.

    Their consultation that afternoon was of a peculiarly delicate nature.
    Lisa was anxious to know what steps she might legitimately take, as a
    woman of honour, with respect to her brother-in-law. Had she a right
    to keep a watch upon him, and to do what she could to prevent him from
    compromising her husband, her daughter, and herself? And then how far
    might she go in circumstances of pressing danger? She did not bluntly
    put these questions to the abbe, but asked them with such skilful
    circumlocutions that he was able to discuss the matter without
    entering into personalities. He brought forward arguments on both
    sides of the question, but the conclusion he came to was that a person
    of integrity was entitled, indeed bound, to prevent evil, and was
    justified in using whatever means might be necessary to ensure the
    triumph of that which was right and proper.

    "That is my opinion, dear lady," he said in conclusion. "The question
    of means is always a very grave one. It is a snare in which souls of
    average virtue often become entangled. But I know your scrupulous
    conscience. Deliberate carefully over each step you think of taking,
    and if it contains nothing repugnant to you, go on boldly. Pure
    natures have the marvelous gift of purifying all that they touch."

    Then, changing his tone of voice, he continued: "Pray give my kind
    regards to Monsieur Quenu. I'll come in to kiss my dear little Pauline
    some time when I'm passing. And now good-bye, dear lady; remember that
    I'm always at your service."

    Thereupon he returned to the vestry. Lisa, on her way out, was curious
    to see if Claire was still praying, but the girl had gone back to her
    eels and carp; and in front of the Lady-chapel, which was already
    shrouded in darkness, there was now but a litter of chairs overturned
    by the ardent vehemence of the woman who had knelt there.

    When the handsome Lisa again crossed the square, La Normande, who had
    been watching for her exit from the church, recognised her in the
    twilight by the rotundity of her skirts.

    "Good gracious!" she exclaimed, "she's been more than an hour in
    there! When the priests set about cleansing her of her sins, the
    choir-boys have to form in line to pass the buckets of filth and empty
    them in the street!"

    The next morning Lisa went straight up to Florent's bedroom and
    settled herself there with perfect equanimity. She felt certain that
    she would not be disturbed, and, moreover, she had made up her mind to
    tell a falsehood and say that she had come to see if the linen was
    clean, should Florent by any chance return. Whilst in the shop,
    however, she had observed him busily engaged in the fish market.
    Seating herself in front of the little table, she pulled out the
    drawer, placed it upon her knees, and began to examine its contents,
    taking the greatest care to restore them to their original positions.

    First of all she came upon the opening chapters of the work on
    Cayenne; then upon the drafts of Florent's various plans and projects,
    his schemes for converting the Octroi duties into taxes upon sales,
    for reforming the administrative system of the markets, and all the
    others. These pages of small writing, which she set herself to read,
    bored her extremely, and she was about to restore the drawer to its
    place, feeling convinced that Florent concealed the proofs of his
    wicked designs elsewhere, and already contemplating a searching
    visitation of his mattress, when she discovered a photograph of La
    Normande in an envelope. The impression was rather dark. La Normande
    was standing up with her right arm resting on a broken column. Decked
    out with all her jewels, and attired in a new silk dress, the fish-
    girl was smiling impudently, and Lisa, at the sight, forgot all about
    her brother-in-law, her fears, and the purpose for which she had come
    into the room. She became quite absorbed in her examination of the
    portrait, as often happens when one woman scrutinises the photograph
    of another at her ease, without fear of being seen. Never before had
    she so favourable an opportunity to study her rival. She scrutinised
    her hair, her nose, her mouth; held the photograph at a distance, and
    then brought it closer again. And, finally, with compressed lips, she
    read on the back of it, in a big, ugly scrawl: "Louise, to her friend,
    Florent." This quite scandalised her; to her mind it was a confession,
    and she felt a strong impulse to take possession of the photograph,
    and keep it as a weapon against her enemy. However, she slowly
    replaced it in the envelope on coming to the conclusion that this
    course would be wrong, and reflecting that she would always know where
    to find it should she want it again.

    Then, as she again began turning over the loose sheets of paper, it
    occurred to her to look at the back end of the drawer, where Florent
    had relegated Augustine's needles and thread; and there, between the
    missal and the Dream-book, she discovered what she sought, some
    extremely compromising memoranda, simply screened from observation by
    a wrapper of grey paper.

    That idea of an insurrection, of the overthrow of the Empire by means
    of an armed rising, which Logre had one evening propounded at Monsieur
    Lebigre's, had slowly ripened in Florent's feverish brain. He soon
    grew to see a duty, a mission in it. Therein undoubtedly lay the task
    to which his escape from Cayenne and his return to Paris predestined
    him. Believing in a call to avenge his leanness upon the city which
    wallowed in food while the upholders of right and equity were racked
    by hunger in exile, he took upon himself the duties of a justiciary,
    and dreamt of rising up, even in the midst of those markets, to sweep
    away the reign of gluttony and drunkenness. In a sensitive nature like
    his, this idea quickly took root. Everything about him assumed
    exaggerated proportions, the wildest fancies possessed him. He
    imagined that the markets had been conscious of his arrival, and had
    seized hold of him that they might enervate him and poison him with
    their stenches. Then, too, Lisa wanted to cast a spell over him, and
    for two or three days at a time he would avoid her, as though she were
    some dissolving agency which would destroy all his power of will
    should he approach too closely. However, these paroxysms of puerile
    fear, these wild surgings of his rebellious brain, always ended in
    thrills of the gentlest tenderness, with yearnings to love and be
    loved, which he concealed with a boyish shame.

    It was more especially in the evening that his mind became blurred by
    all his wild imaginings. Depressed by his day's work, but shunning
    sleep from a covert fear--the fear of the annihilation it brought with
    it--he would remain later than ever at Monsieur Lebigre's, or at the
    Mehudins'; and on his return home he still refrained from going to
    bed, and sat up writing and preparing for the great insurrection. By
    slow degrees he devised a complete system of organisation. He divided
    Paris into twenty sections, one for each arrondissement. Each section
    would have a chief, a sort of general, under whose orders there were
    to be twenty lieutenants commanding twenty companies of affiliated
    associates. Every week, among the chiefs, there would be a
    consultation, which was to be held in a different place each time;
    and, the better to ensure secrecy and discretion, the associates would
    only come in contact with their respective lieutenants, these alone
    communicating with the chiefs of the sections. It also occurred to
    Florent that it would be as well that the companies should believe
    themselves charged with imaginary missions, as a means of putting the
    police upon a wrong scent.

    As for the employment of the insurrectionary forces, that would be all
    simplicity. It would, of course, be necessary to wait till the
    companies were quite complete, and then advantage would be taken of
    the first public commotion. They would doubtless only have a certain
    number of guns used for sporting purposes in their possession, so they
    would commence by seizing the police stations and guard-houses,
    disarming the soldiers of the line; resorting to violence as little as
    possible, and inviting the men to make common cause with the people.
    Afterwards they would march upon the Corps Legislatif, and thence to
    the Hotel de Ville. This plan, to which Florent returned night after
    night, as though it were some dramatic scenario which relieved his
    over-excited nervous system, was as yet simply jotted down on scraps
    of paper, full of erasures, which showed how the writer had felt his
    way, and revealed each successive phase of his scientific yet puerile
    conception. When Lisa had glanced through the notes, without
    understanding some of them, she remained there trembling with fear;
    afraid to touch them further lest they should explode in her hands
    like live shells.

    A last memorandum frightened her more than any of the others. It was a
    half sheet of paper on which Florent had sketched the distinguishing
    insignia which the chiefs and the lieutenants were to wear. By the
    side of these were rough drawings of the standards which the different
    companies were to carry; and notes in pencil even described what
    colours the banners should assume. The chiefs were to wear red
    scarves, and the lieutenants red armlets.

    To Lisa this seemed like an immediate realisation of the rising; she
    saw all the men with their red badges marching past the pork shop,
    firing bullets into her mirrors and marble, and carrying off sausages
    and chitterlings from the window. The infamous projects of her
    brother-in-law were surely directed against herself--against her own
    happiness. She closed the drawer and looked round the room, reflecting
    that it was she herself who had provided this man with a home--that he
    slept between her sheets and used her furniture. And she was
    especially exasperated at his keeping his abominable infernal machine
    in that little deal table which she herself had used at Uncle
    Gradelle's before her marriage--a perfectly innocent, rickety little
    table.

    For a while she stood thinking what she should do. In the first place,
    it was useless to say anything to Quenu. For a moment it occurred to
    her to provoke an explanation with Florent, but she dismissed that
    idea, fearing lest he would only go and perpetrate his crime
    elsewhere, and maliciously make a point of compromising them. Then
    gradually growing somewhat calmer, she came to the conclusion that her
    best plan would be to keep a careful watch over her brother-in-law. It
    would be time enough to take further steps at the first sign of
    danger. She already had quite sufficient evidence to send him back to
    the galleys.

    On returning to the shop again, she found Augustine in a state of
    great excitement. Little Pauline had disappeared more than half an
    hour before, and to Lisa's anxious questions the young woman could
    only reply: "I don't know where she can have got to, madame. She was
    on the pavement there with a little boy. I was watching them, and then
    I had to cut some ham for a gentleman, and I never saw them again."

    "I'll wager it was Muche!" cried Lisa. "Ah, the young scoundrel!"

    It was, indeed, Muche who had enticed Pauline away. The little girl,
    who was wearing a new blue-striped frock that day for the first time,
    had been anxious to exhibit it, and had accordingly taken her stand
    outside the shop, manifesting great propriety of bearing, and
    compressing her lips with the grave expression of a little woman of
    six who is afraid of soiling her clothes. Her short and stiffly-
    starched petticoats stood out like the skirts of a ballet girl,
    allowing a full view of her tightly stretched white stockings and
    little sky-blue boots. Her pinafore, which hung low about her neck,
    was finished off at the shoulders with an edging of embroidery, below
    which appeared her pretty little arms, bare and rosy. She had small
    turquoise rings in her ears, a cross at her neck, a blue velvet ribbon
    in her well-brushed hair; and she displayed all her mother's plumpness
    and softness--the gracefulness, indeed, of a new doll.

    Muche had caught sight of her from the market, where he was amusing
    himself by dropping little dead fishes into the gutter, following them
    along the kerb as the water carried them away, and declaring that they
    were swimming. However, the sight of Pauline standing in front of the
    shop and looking so smart and pretty made him cross over to her,
    capless as he was, with his blouse ragged, his trousers slipping down,
    and his whole appearance suggestive of a seven-year-old street-arab.
    His mother had certainly forbidden him to play any more with "that fat
    booby of a girl who was stuffed by her parents till she almost burst";
    so he stood hesitating for a moment, but at last came up to Pauline,
    and wanted to feel her pretty striped frock. The little girl, who had
    at first felt flattered, then put on a prim air and stepped back,
    exclaiming in a tone of displeasure: "Leave me alone. Mother says I'm
    not to have anything to do with you."

    This brought a laugh to the lips of Muche, who was a wily,
    enterprising young scamp.

    "What a little flat you are!" he retorted. "What does it matter what
    your mother says? Let's go and play at shoving each other, eh?"

    He doubtless nourished some wicked idea of dirtying the neat little
    girl; but she, on seeing him prepare to give her a push in the back,
    retreated as though about to return inside the shop. Muche thereupon
    adopted a flattering tone like a born cajoler.

    "You silly! I didn't mean it," said he. "How nice you look like that!
    Is that little cross your mother's?"

    Pauline perked herself up, and replied that it was her own, whereupon
    Muche gently led her to the corner of the Rue Pirouette, touching her
    skirts the while and expressing his astonishment at their wonderful
    stiffness. All this pleased the little girl immensely. She had been
    very much vexed at not receiving any notice while she was exhibiting
    herself outside the shop. However, in spite of all Muche's
    blandishments, she still refused to leave the footway.

    "You stupid fatty!" thereupon exclaimed the youngster, relapsing into
    coarseness. "I'll squat you down in the gutter if you don't look out,
    Miss Fine-airs!"

    The girl was dreadfully alarmed. Muche had caught hold of her by the
    hand; but, recognising his mistake in policy, he again put on a
    wheedling air, and began to fumble in his pocket.

    "I've got a sou," said he.

    The sight of the coin had a soothing effect upon Pauline. The boy held
    up the sou with the tips of his fingers, and the temptation to follow
    it proved so great that the girl at last stepped down into the
    roadway. Muche's diplomacy was eminently successful.

    "What do you like best?" he asked.

    Pauline gave no immediate answer. She could not make up her mind;
    there were so many things that she liked. Muche, however, ran over a
    whole list of dainties--liquorice, molasses, gum-balls, and powdered
    sugar. The powdered sugar made the girl ponder. One dipped one's
    fingers into it and sucked them; it was very nice. For a while she
    gravely considered the matter. Then, at last making up her mind, she
    said:

    "No, I like the mixed screws the best."
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    Variety is the spice of life

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    Muche thereupon took hold of her arm, and she unresistingly allowed
    him to lead her away. They crossed the Rue Rambuteau, followed the
    broad footway skirting the markets, and went as far as a grocer's shop
    in the Rue de la Cossonnerie which was celebrated for its mixed
    screws. These mixed screws are small screws of paper in which grocers
    put up all sorts of damaged odds and ends, broken sugar-plums,
    fragments of crystallised chestnuts--all the doubtful residuum of
    their jars of sweets. Muche showed himself very gallant, allowed
    Pauline to choose the screw--a blue one--paid his sou, and did not
    attempt to dispossess her of the sweets. Outside, on the footway, she
    emptied the miscellaneous collection of scraps into both pockets of
    her pinafore; and they were such little pockets that they were quite
    filled. Then in delight she began to munch the fragments one by one,
    wetting her fingers to catch the fine sugary dust, with such effect
    that she melted the scraps of sweets, and the pockets of her pinafore
    soon showed two brownish stains. Muche laughed slily to himself. He
    had his arm about the girl's waist, and rumpled her frock at his ease
    whilst leading her round the corner of the Rue Pierre Lescot, in the
    direction of the Place des Innocents.

    "You'll come and play now, won't you?" he asked. "That's nice what
    you've got in your pockets, ain't it? You see that I didn't want to do
    you any harm, you big silly!"

    Thereupon he plunged his own fingers into her pockets, and they
    entered the square together. To this spot, no doubt, he had all along
    intended to lure his victim. He did the honours of the square as
    though it were his own private property, and indeed it was a favourite
    haunt of his, where he often larked about for whole afternoons.
    Pauline had never before strayed so far from home, and would have wept
    like an abducted damsel had it not been that her pockets were full of
    sweets. The fountain in the middle of the flowered lawn was sending
    sheets of water down its tiers of basins, whilst, between the
    pilasters above, Jean Goujon's nymphs, looking very white beside the
    dingy grey stonework, inclined their urns and displayed their nude
    graces in the grimy air of the Saint Denis quarter. The two children
    walked round the fountain, watching the water fall into the basins,
    and taking an interest in the grass, with thoughts, no doubt, of
    crossing the central lawn, or gliding into the clumps of holly and
    rhododendrons that bordered the railings of the square. Little Muche,
    however, who had now effectually rumpled the back of the pretty frock,
    said with his sly smile:

    "Let's play at throwing sand at each other, eh?"

    Pauline had no will of her own left; and they began to throw the sand
    at each other, keeping their eyes closed meanwhile. The sand made its
    way in at the neck of the girl's low bodice, and trickled down into
    her stockings and boots. Muche was delighted to see the white pinafore
    become quite yellow. But he doubtless considered that it was still far
    too clean.

    "Let's go and plant trees, shall we?" he exclaimed suddenly. "I know
    how to make such pretty gardens."

    "Really, gardens!" murmured Pauline full of admiration.

    Then, as the keeper of the square happened to be absent, Muche told
    her to make some holes in one of the borders; and dropping on her
    knees in the middle of the soft mould, and leaning forward till she
    lay at full length on her stomach, she dug her pretty little arms into
    the ground. He, meantime, began to hunt for scraps of wood, and broke
    off branches. These were the garden-trees which he planted in the
    holes that Pauline made. He invariably complained, however, that the
    holes were not deep enough, and rated the girl as though she were an
    idle workman and he an indignant master. When she at last got up, she
    was black from head to foot. Her hair was full of mould, her face was
    smeared with it, she looked such a sight with her arms as black as a
    coalheaver's that Muche clapped his hands with glee, and exclaimed:
    "Now we must water the trees. They won't grow, you know, if we don't
    water them."

    That was the finishing stroke. They went outside the square, scooped
    the gutter-water up in the palms of their hands, and then ran back to
    pour it over the bits of wood. On the way, Pauline, who was so fat
    that she couldn't run properly, let the water trickle between her
    fingers on to her frock, so that by the time of her sixth journey she
    looked as if she had been rolled in the gutter. Muche chuckled with
    delight on beholding her dreadful condition. He made her sit down
    beside him under a rhododendron near the garden they had made, and
    told her that the trees were already beginning to grow. He had taken
    hold of her hand and called her his little wife.

    "You're not sorry now that you came, are you," he asked, "instead of
    mooning about on the pavement, where there was nothing to do? I know
    all sorts of fun we can have in the streets; you must come with me
    again. You will, won't you? But you mustn't say anything to your
    mother, mind. If you say a word to her, I'll pull your hair the next
    time I come past your shop."

    Pauline consented to everything; and then, as a last attention, Muche
    filled both pockets of her pinafore with mould. However, all the
    sweets were finished, and the girl began to get uneasy, and ceased
    playing. Muche thereupon started pinching her, and she burst into
    tears, sobbing that she wanted to go away. But at this the lad only
    grinned, and played the bully, threatening that he would not take her
    home at all. Then she grew terribly alarmed, and sobbed and gasped
    like a maiden in the power of a libertine. Muche would certainly have
    ended by punching her in order to stop her row, had not a shrill
    voice, the voice of Mademoiselle Saget, exclaimed, close by: "Why, I
    declare it's Pauline! Leave her alone, you wicked young scoundrel!"

    Then the old maid took the girl by the hand, with endless expressions
    of amazement at the pitiful condition of her clothes. Muche showed no
    alarm, but followed them, chuckling to himself, and declaring that it
    was Pauline who had wanted to come with him, and had tumbled down.

    Mademoiselle Saget was a regular frequenter of the Square des
    Innocents. Every afternoon she would spend a good hour there to keep
    herself well posted in the gossip of the common people. On either side
    there is a long crescent of benches placed end to end; and on these
    the poor folks who stifle in the hovels of the neighbouring narrow
    streets assemble in crowds. There are withered, chilly-looking old
    women in tumbled caps, and young ones in loose jackets and carelessly
    fastened skirts, with bare heads and tired, faded faces, eloquent of
    the wretchedness of their lives. There are some men also: tidy old
    buffers, porters in greasy jackets, and equivocal-looking individuals
    in black silk hats, while the foot-path is overrun by a swarm of
    youngsters dragging toy carts without wheels about, filling pails with
    sand, and screaming and fighting; a dreadful crew, with ragged clothes
    and dirty noses, teeming in the sunshine like vermin.

    Mademoiselle Saget was so slight and thin that she always managed to
    insinuate herself into a place on one of the benches. She listened to
    what was being said, and started a conversation with her neighbour,
    some sallow-faced workingman's wife, who sat mending linen, from time
    to time producing handkerchiefs and stockings riddled with holes from
    a little basket patched up with string. Moreover, Mademoiselle Saget
    had plenty of acquaintances here. Amidst the excruciating squalling of
    the children, and the ceaseless rumble of the traffic in the Rue Saint
    Denis, she took part in no end of gossip, everlasting tales about the
    tradesmen of the neighbourhood, the grocers, the butchers, and the
    bakers, enough, indeed, to fill the columns of a local paper, and the
    whole envenomed by refusals of credit and covert envy, such as is
    always harboured by the poor. From these wretched creatures she also
    obtained the most disgusting revelations, the gossip of low lodging-
    houses and doorkeepers' black-holes, all the filthy scandal of the
    neighbourhood, which tickled her inquisitive appetite like hot spice.

    As she sat with her face turned towards the markets, she had
    immediately in front of her the square and its three blocks of houses,
    into the windows of which her eyes tried to pry. She seemed to
    gradually rise and traverse the successive floors right up to the
    garret skylights. She stared at the curtains; based an entire drama on
    the appearance of a head between two shutters; and, by simply gazing
    at the facades, ended by knowing the history of all the dwellers in
    these houses. The Baratte Restaurant, with its wine shop, its gilt
    wrought-iron /marquise/, forming a sort of terrace whence peeped the
    foliage of a few plants in flower-pots, and its four low storeys, all
    painted and decorated, had an especial interest for her. She gazed at
    its yellow columns standing out against a background of tender blue,
    at the whole of its imitation temple-front daubed on the facade of a
    decrepit, tumble-down house, crowned at the summit by a parapet of
    painted zinc. Behind the red-striped window-blinds she espied visions
    of nice little lunches, delicate suppers, and uproarious, unlimited
    orgies. And she did not hesitate to invent lies about the place. It
    was there, she declared, that Florent came to gorge with those two
    hussies, the Mehudins, on whom he lavished his money.

    However, Pauline cried yet louder than before when the old maid took
    hold of her hand. Mademoiselle Saget at first led her towards the gate
    of the square; but before she got there she seemed to change her mind;
    for she sat down at the end of a bench and tried to pacify the child.

    "Come, now, give over crying, or the policeman will lock you up," she
    said to Pauline. "I'll take you home safely. You know me, don't you?
    I'm a good friend. Come, come, let me see how prettily you can smile."

    The child, however, was choking with sobs and wanted to go away.
    Mademoiselle Saget thereupon quietly allowed her to continue weeping,
    reserving further remarks till she should have finished. The poor
    little creature was shivering all over; her petticoats and stockings
    were wet through, and as she wiped her tears away with her dirty hands
    she plastered the whole of her face with earth to the very tips of her
    ears. When at last she became a little calmer the old maid resumed in
    a caressing tone: "Your mamma isn't unkind, is she? She's very fond of
    you, isn't she?"

    "Oh, yes, indeed," replied Pauline, still sobbing.

    "And your papa, he's good to you, too, isn't he? He doesn't flog you,
    or quarrel with your mother, does he? What do they talk about when
    they go to bed?"

    "Oh, I don't know. I'm asleep then."

    "Do they talk about your cousin Florent?"

    "I don't know."

    Mademoiselle Saget thereupon assumed a severe expression, and got up
    as if about to go away.

    "I'm afraid you are a little story-teller," she said. "Don't you know
    that it's very wicked to tell stories? I shall go away and leave you,
    if you tell me lies, and then Muche will come back and pinch you."

    Pauline began to cry again at the threat of being abandoned. "Be
    quiet, be quiet, you wicked little imp!" cried the old maid shaking
    her. "There, there, now, I won't go away. I'll buy you a stick of
    barley-sugar; yes, a stick of barley-sugar! So you don't love your
    cousin Florent, eh?"

    "No, mamma says he isn't good."

    "Ah, then, so you see your mother does say something."

    "One night when I was in bed with Mouton--I sleep with Mouton
    sometimes, you know--I heard her say to father, 'Your brother has only
    escaped from the galleys to take us all back with him there.'"

    Mademoiselle Saget gave vent to a faint cry, and sprang to her feet,
    quivering all over. A ray of light had just broken upon her. Then
    without a word she caught hold of Pauline's hand and made her run till
    they reached the pork shop, her lips meanwhile compressed by an inward
    smile, and her eyes glistening with keen delight. At the corner of the
    Rue Pirouette, Muche, who had so far followed them, amused at seeing
    the girl running along in her muddy stockings, prudently disappeared.

    Lisa was now in a state of terrible alarm; and when she saw her
    daughter so bedraggled and limp, her consternation was such that she
    turned the child round and round, without even thinking of beating
    her.

    "She has been with little Muche," said the old maid, in her malicious
    voice. "I took her away at once, and I've brought her home. I found
    them together in the square. I don't know what they've been up to; but
    that young vagabond is capable of anything."

    Lisa could not find a word to say; and she did not know where to take
    hold of her daughter, so great was her disgust at the sight of the
    child's muddy boots, soiled stockings, torn skirts, and filthy face
    and hands. The blue velvet ribbon, the earrings, and the necklet were
    all concealed beneath a crust of mud. But what put the finishing touch
    to Lisa's exasperation was the discovery of the two pockets filled
    with mould. She stooped and emptied them, regardless of the pink and
    white flooring of the shop. And as she dragged Pauline away, she could
    only gasp: "Come along, you filthy thing!"

    Quite enlivened by this scene, Mademoiselle Saget now hurriedly made
    her way across the Rue Rambuteau. Her little feet scarcely touched the
    ground; her joy seemed to carry her along like a breeze which fanned
    her with a caressing touch. She had at last found out what she had so
    much wanted to know! For nearly a year she had been consumed by
    curiosity, and now at a single stroke she had gained complete power
    over Florent! This was unhoped-for contentment, positive salvation,
    for she felt that Florent would have brought her to the tomb had she
    failed much longer in satisfying her curiosity about him. At present
    she was complete mistress of the whole neighbourhood of the markets.
    There was no longer any gap in her information. She could have
    narrated the secret history of every street, shop by shop. And thus,
    as she entered the fruit market, she fairly gasped with delight, in a
    perfect transport of pleasure.

    "Hallo, Mademoiselle Saget," cried La Sarriette from her stall, "what
    are you smiling to yourself like that about? Have you won the grand
    prize in the lottery?"

    "No, no. Ah, my dear, if you only knew!"

    Standing there amidst her fruit, La Sarriette, in her picturesque
    disarray, looked charming. Frizzy hair fell over her brow like vine
    branches. Her bare arms and neck, indeed all the rosy flesh she
    showed, bloomed with the freshness of peach and cherry. She had
    playfully hung some cherries on her ears, black cherries which dangled
    against her cheeks when she stooped, shaking with merry laughter. She
    was eating currants, and her merriment arose from the way in which she
    was smearing her face with them. Her lips were bright red, glistening
    with the juice of the fruit, as though they had been painted and
    perfumed with some seraglio face-paint. A perfume of plum exhaled from
    her gown, while from the kerchief carelessly fastened across her
    breast came an odour of strawberries.

    Fruits of all kinds were piled around her in her narrow stall. On the
    shelves at the back were rows of melons, so-called "cantaloups"
    swarming with wart-like knots, "maraichers" whose skin was covered
    with grey lace-like netting, and "culs-de-singe" displaying smooth
    bare bumps. In front was an array of choice fruits, carefully arranged
    in baskets, and showing like smooth round cheeks seeking to hide
    themselves, or glimpses of sweet childish faces, half veiled by
    leaves. Especially was this the case with the peaches, the blushing
    peaches of Montreuil, with skin as delicate and clear as that of
    northern maidens, and the yellow, sun-burnt peaches from the south,
    brown like the damsels of Provence. The apricots, on their beds of
    moss, gleamed with the hue of amber or with that sunset glow which so
    warmly colours the necks of brunettes at the nape, just under the
    little wavy curls which fall below the chignon. The cherries, ranged
    one by one, resembled the short lips of smiling Chinese girls; the
    Montmorencies suggested the dumpy mouths of buxom women; the English
    ones were longer and graver-looking; the common black ones seemed as
    though they had been bruised and crushed by kisses; while the white-
    hearts, with their patches of rose and white, appeared to smile with
    mingled merriment and vexation. Then piles of apples and pears, built
    up with architectural symmetry, often in pyramids, displayed the ruddy
    glow of budding breasts and the gleaming sheen of shoulders, quite a
    show of nudity, lurking modestly behind a screen of fern-leaves. There
    were all sorts of varieties--little red ones so tiny that they seemed
    to be yet in the cradle, shapeless "rambours" for baking, "calvilles"
    in light yellow gowns, sanguineous-looking "Canadas," blotched
    "chataignier" apples, fair freckled rennets and dusky russets. Then
    came the pears--the "blanquettes," the "British queens," the
    "Beurres," the "messirejeans," and the "duchesses"--some dumpy, some
    long and tapering, some with slender necks, and others with thick-set
    shoulders, their green and yellow bellies picked out at times with a
    splotch of carmine. By the side of these the transparent plums
    resembled tender, chlorotic virgins; the greengages and the Orleans
    plums paled as with modest innocence, while the mirabelles lay like
    golden beads of a rosary forgotten in a box amongst sticks of vanilla.
    And the strawberries exhaled a sweet perfume--a perfume of youth--
    especially those little ones which are gathered in the woods, and
    which are far more aromatic than the large ones grown in gardens, for
    these breathe an insipid odour suggestive of the watering-pot.
    Raspberries added their fragrance to the pure scent. The currants--
    red, white, and black--smiled with a knowing air; whilst the heavy
    clusters of grapes, laden with intoxication, lay languorously at the
    edges of their wicker baskets, over the sides of which dangled some of
    the berries, scorched by the hot caresses of the voluptuous sun.

    It was there that La Sarriette lived in an orchard, as it were, in an
    atmosphere of sweet, intoxicating scents. The cheaper fruits--the
    cherries, plums, and strawberries--were piled up in front of her in
    paper-lined baskets, and the juice coming from their bruised ripeness
    stained the stall-front, and steamed, with a strong perfume, in the
    heat. She would feel quite giddy on those blazing July afternoons when
    the melons enveloped her with a powerful, vaporous odour of musk; and
    then with her loosened kerchief, fresh as she was with the springtide
    of life, she brought sudden temptation to all who saw her. It was
    she--it was her arms and necks which gave that semblance of amorous
    vitality to her fruit. On the stall next to her an old woman, a
    hideous old drunkard, displayed nothing but wrinkled apples, pears as
    flabby as herself, and cadaverous apricots of a witch-like sallowness.
    La Sarriette's stall, however, spoke of love and passion. The cherries
    looked like the red kisses of her bright lips; the silky peaches were
    not more delicate than her neck; to the plums she seemed to have lent
    the skin from her brow and chin; while some of her own crimson blood
    coursed through the veins of the currants. All the scents of the
    avenue of flowers behind her stall were but insipid beside the aroma
    of vitality which exhaled from her open baskets and falling kerchief.

    That day she was quite intoxicated by the scent of a large arrival of
    mirabelle plums, which filled the market. She could plainly see that
    Mademoiselle Saget had learnt some great piece of news, and she wished
    to make her talk. But the old maid stamped impatiently whilst she
    repeated: "No, no; I've no time. I'm in a great hurry to see Madame
    Lecoeur. I've just learnt something and no mistake. You can come with
    me, if you like."

    As a matter of fact, she had simply gone through the fruit market for
    the purpose of enticing La Sarriette to go with her. The girl could
    not refuse temptation. Monsieur Jules, clean-shaven and as fresh as a
    cherub, was seated there, swaying to and fro on his chair.

    "Just look after the stall for a minute, will you?" La Sarriette said
    to him. "I'll be back directly."

    Jules, however, got up and called after her, in a thick voice: "Not I;
    no fear! I'm off! I'm not going to wait an hour for you, as I did the
    other day. And, besides, those cursed plums of yours quite make my
    head ache."

    Then he calmly strolled off, with his hands in his pockets, and the
    stall was left to look after itself. Mademoiselle Saget went so fast
    that La Sarriette had to run. In the butter pavilion a neighbour of
    Madame Lecoeur's told them that she was below in the cellar; and so,
    whilst La Sarriette went down to find her, the old maid installed
    herself amidst the cheeses.

    The cellar under the butter market is a very gloomy spot. The rows of
    storerooms are protected by a very fine wire meshing, as a safeguard
    against fire; and the gas jets, which are very few and far between,
    glimmer like yellow splotches destitute of radiance in the heavy,
    malordorous atmosphere beneath the low vault. Madame Lecoeur, however,
    was at work on her butter at one of the tables placed parallel with
    the Rue Berger, and here a pale light filtered through the vent-holes.
    The tables, which are continually sluiced with a flood of water from
    the taps, are as white as though they were quite new. With her back
    turned to the pump in the rear, Madame Lecoeur was kneading her butter
    in a kind of oak box. She took some of different sorts which lay
    beside her, and mixed the varieties together, correcting one by
    another, just as is done in the blending of wines. Bent almost double,
    and showing sharp, bony shoulders, and arms bared to the elbows, as
    scraggy and knotted as pea-rods, she dug her fists into the greasy
    paste in front of her, which was assuming a whitish and chalky
    appearance. It was trying work, and she heaved a sigh at each fresh
    effort.

    "Mademoiselle Saget wants to speak to you, aunt," said La Sarriette.

    Madame Lecoeur stopped her work, and pulled her cap over her hair with
    her greasy fingers, seemingly quite careless of staining it. "I've
    nearly finished. Ask her to wait a moment," she said.

    "She's got something very particular to tell you," continued La
    Sarriette.

    "I won't be more than a minute, my dear."

    Then she again plunged her arms into the butter, which buried them up
    to the elbows. Previously softened in warm water, it covered Madame
    Lecoeur's parchment-like skin as with an oily film, and threw the big
    purple veins that streaked her flesh into strong relief. La Sarriette
    was quite disgusted by the sight of those hideous arms working so
    frantically amidst the melting mass. However, she could recall the
    time when her own pretty little hands had manipulated the butter for
    whole afternoons at a time. It had even been a sort of almond-paste to
    her, a cosmetic which had kept her skin white and her nails delicately
    pink; and even now her slender fingers retained the suppleness it had
    endowed them with.

    "I don't think that butter of yours will be very good, aunt," she
    continued, after a pause. "Some of the sorts seem much too strong."

    "I'm quite aware of that," replied Madame Lecoeur, between a couple of
    groans. "But what can I do? I must use everything up. There are some
    folks who insist upon having butter cheap, and so cheap butter must be
    made for them. Oh! it's always quite good enough for those who buy
    it."

    La Sarriette reflected that she would hardly care to eat butter which
    had been worked by her aunt's arms. Then she glanced at a little jar
    full of a sort of reddish dye. "Your colouring is too pale," she said.

    This colouring-matter--"raucourt," as the Parisians call it is used to
    give the butter a fine yellow tint. The butter women imagine that its
    composition is known only to themselves, and keep it very secret.
    However, it is merely made from anotta;
  • though a composition of
    carrots and marigold is at times substituted for it.

  • Anotta, which is obtained from the pulp surrounding the seeds of
        the /Bixa Orellana/, is used for a good many purposes besides the
        colouring of butter and cheese. It frequently enters into the
        composition of chocolate, and is employed to dye nankeen. Police
        court proceedings have also shown that it is well known to the
        London milkmen, who are in the habit of adding water to their
        merchandise.--Translator.

    "Come, do be quick!" La Sarriette now exclaimed, for she was getting
    impatient, and was, moreover, no longer accustomed to the malodorous
    atmosphere of the cellar. "Mademoiselle Saget will be going. I fancy
    she's got something very important to tell you abut my uncle Gavard."

    On hearing this, Madame Lecoeur abruptly ceased working. She at once
    abandoned both butter and dye, and did not even wait to wipe her arms.
    With a slight tap of her hand she settled her cap on her head again,
    and made her way up the steps, at her niece's heels, anxiously
    repeating: "Do you really think that she'll have gone away?"

    She was reassured, however, on catching sight of Mademoiselle Saget
    amidst the cheeses. The old maid had taken good care not to go away
    before Madame Lecoeur's arrival. The three women seated themselves at
    the far end of the stall, crowding closely together, and their faces
    almost touching one another. Mademoiselle Saget remained silent for
    two long minutes, and then, seeing that the others were burning with
    curiosity, she began, in her shrill voice: "You know that Florent!
    Well, I can tell you now where he comes from."

    For another moment she kept them in suspense; and then, in a deep,
    melodramatic voice, she said: "He comes from the galleys!"

    The cheeses were reeking around the three women. On the two shelves at
    the far end of the stall were huge masses of butter: Brittany butters
    overflowing from baskets; Normandy butters, wrapped in canvas, and
    resembling models of stomachs over which some sculptor had thrown damp
    cloths to keep them from drying; while other great blocks had been cut
    into, fashioned into perpendicular rocky masses full of crevasses and
    valleys, and resembling fallen mountain crests gilded by the pale sun
    of an autumn evening.

    Beneath the stall show-table, formed of a slab of red marble veined
    with grey, baskets of eggs gleamed with a chalky whiteness; while on
    layers of straw in boxes were Bondons, placed end to end, and
    Gournays, arranged like medals, forming darker patches tinted with
    green. But it was upon the table that the cheeses appeared in greatest
    profusion. Here, by the side of the pound-rolls of butter lying on
    white-beet leaves, spread a gigantic Cantal cheese, cloven here and
    there as by an axe; then came a golden-hued Cheshire, and next a
    Gruyere, resembling a wheel fallen from some barbarian chariot; whilst
    farther on were some Dutch cheeses, suggesting decapitated heads
    suffused with dry blood, and having all that hardness of skulls which
    in France has gained them the name of "death's heads." Amidst the
    heavy exhalations of these, a Parmesan set a spicy aroma. Then there
    came three Brie cheeses displayed on round platters, and looking like
    melancholy extinct moons. Two of them, very dry, were at the full; the
    third, in its second quarter, was melting away in a white cream, which
    had spread into a pool and flowed over the little wooden barriers with
    which an attempt had been made to arrest its course. Next came some
    Port Saluts, similar to antique discs, with exergues bearing their
    makers' names in print. A Romantour, in its tin-foil wrapper,
    suggested a bar of nougat or some sweet cheese astray amidst all these
    pungent, fermenting curds. The Roqueforts under their glass covers
    also had a princely air, their fat faces marbled with blue and yellow,
    as though they were suffering from some unpleasant malady such as
    attacks the wealthy gluttons who eat too many truffles. And on a dish
    by the side of these, the hard grey goats' milk cheeses, about the
    size of a child's fist, resembled the pebbles which the billy-goats
    send rolling down the stony paths as they clamber along ahead of their
    flocks. Next came the strong smelling cheeses: the Mont d'Ors, of a
    bright yellow hue, and exhaling a comparatively mild odour; the
    Troyes, very thick, and bruised at the edges, and of a far more
    pungent smell, recalling the dampness of a cellar; the Camemberts,
    suggestive of high game; the square Neufchatels, Limbourgs, Marolles,
    and Pont l'Eveques, each adding its own particular sharp scent to the
    malodorous bouquet, till it became perfectly pestilential; the
    Livarots, ruddy in hue, and as irritating to the throat as sulphur
    fumes; and, lastly, stronger than all the others, the Olivets, wrapped
    in walnut leaves, like the carrion which peasants cover with branches
    as it lies rotting in the hedgerow under the blazing sun.
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    The heat of the afternoon had softened the cheeses; the patches of
    mould on their crusts were melting, and glistening with tints of ruddy
    bronze and verdigris. Beneath their cover of leaves, the skins of the
    Olivets seemed to be heaving as with the slow, deep respiration of a
    sleeping man. A Livarot was swarming with life; and in a fragile box
    behind the scales a Gerome flavoured with aniseed diffused such a
    pestilential smell that all around it the very flies had fallen
    lifeless on the gray-veined slap of ruddy marble.

    This Gerome was almost immediately under Mademoiselle Saget's nose; so
    she drew back, and leaned her head against the big sheets of white and
    yellow paper which were hanging in a corner.

    "Yes," she repeated, with an expression of disgust, "he comes from the
    galleys! Ah, those Quenu-Gradelles have no reason to put on so many
    airs!"

    Madame Lecoeur and La Sarriette, however, had burst into exclamations
    of astonishment: "It wasn't possible, surely! What had he done to be
    sent to the galleys? Could anyone, now, have ever suspected that
    Madame Quenu, whose virtue was the pride of the whole neighbourhood,
    would choose a convict for a lover?"

    "Ah, but you don't understand at all!" cried the old maid impatiently.
    "Just listen, now, while I explain things. I was quite certain that I
    had seen that great lanky fellow somewhere before."

    Then she proceeded to tell them Florent's story. She had recalled to
    mind a vague report which had circulated of a nephew of old Gradelle
    being transported to Cayenne for murdering six gendarmes at a
    barricade. She had even seen this nephew on one occasion in the Rue
    Pirouette. The pretended cousin was undoubtedly the same man. Then she
    began to bemoan her waning powers. Her memory was quite going, she
    said; she would soon be unable to remember anything. And she bewailed
    her perishing memory as bitterly as any learned man might bewail the
    loss of his notes representing the work of a life-time, on seeing them
    swept away by a gust of wind.

    "Six gendarmes!" murmured La Sarriette, admiringly; "he must have a
    very heavy fist!"

    "And he's made away with plenty of others, as well," added
    Mademoiselle Saget. "I shouldn't advise you to meet him at night!"

    "What a villain!" stammered out Madame Lecoeur, quite terrified.

    The slanting beams of the sinking sun were now enfilading the
    pavilion, and the odour of the cheeses became stronger than ever. That
    of the Marolles seemed to predominate, borne hither and thither in
    powerful whiffs. Then, however, the wind appeared to change, and
    suddenly the emanations of the Limbourgs were wafted towards the three
    women, pungent and bitter, like the last gasps of a dying man.

    "But in that case," resumed Madame Lecoeur, "he must be fat Lisa's
    brother-in-law. And we thought that he was her lover!"

    The women exchanged glances. This aspect of the case took them by
    surprise. They were loth to give up their first theory. However, La
    Sarriette, turning to Mademoiselle Saget, remarked: "That must have
    been all wrong. Besides, you yourself say that he's always running
    after the two Mehudin girls."

    "Certainly he is," exclaimed Mademoiselle Saget sharply, fancying that
    her word was doubted. "He dangles about them every evening. But, after
    all, it's no concern of ours, is it? We are virtuous women, and what
    he does makes no difference to us, the horrid scoundrel!"

    "No, certainly not," agreed the other two. "He's a consummate
    villain."

    The affair was becoming tragical. Of course beautiful Lisa was now out
    of the question, but for this they found ample consolation in
    prophesying that Florent would bring about some frightful catastrophe.
    It was quite clear, they said, that he had got some base design in his
    head. When people like him escaped from gaol it was only to burn
    everything down; and if he had come to the markets it must assuredly
    be for some abominable purpose. Then they began to indulge in the
    wildest suppositions. The two dealers declared that they would put
    additional padlocks to the doors of their storerooms; and La Sarriette
    called to mind that a basket of peaches had been stolen from her
    during the previous week. Mademoiselle Saget, however, quite
    frightened the two others by informing them that that was not the way
    in which the Reds behaved; they despised such trifles as baskets of
    peaches; their plan was to band themselves together in companies of
    two or three hundred, kill everybody they came across, and then
    plunder and pillage at their ease. That was "politics," she said, with
    the superior air of one who knew what she was talking about. Madame
    Lecoeur felt quite ill. She already saw Florent and his accomplices
    hiding in the cellars, and rushing out during the night to set the
    markets in flames and sack Paris.

    "Ah! by the way," suddenly exclaimed the old maid, "now I think of it,
    there's all that money of old Gradelle's! Dear me, dear me, those
    Quenus can't be at all at their ease!"

    She now looked quite gay again. The conversation took a fresh turn,
    and the others fell foul of the Quenus when Mademoiselle Saget had
    told them the history of the treasure discovered in the salting-tub,
    with every particular of which she was acquainted. She was even able
    to inform them of the exact amount of the money found--eighty-five
    thousand francs--though neither Lisa nor Quenu was aware of having
    revealed this to a living soul. However, it was clear that the Quenus
    had not given the great lanky fellow his share. He was too shabbily
    dressed for that. Perhaps he had never even heard of the discovery of
    the treasure. Plainly enough, they were all thieves in his family.
    Then the three women bent their heads together and spoke in lower
    tones. They were unanimously of opinion that it might perhaps be
    dangerous to attack the beautiful Lisa, but it was decidedly necessary
    that they should settle the Red Republican's hash, so that he might no
    longer prey upon the purse of poor Monsieur Gavard.

    At the mention of Gavard there came a pause. The gossips looked at
    each other with a circumspect air. And then, as they drew breath, they
    inhaled the odour of the Camemberts, whose gamy scent had overpowered
    the less penetrating emanations of the Marolles and the Limbourgs, and
    spread around with remarkable power. Every now and then, however, a
    slight whiff, a flutelike note, came from the Parmesan, while the
    Bries contributed a soft, musty scent, the gentle, insipid sound, as
    it were, of damp tambourines. Next followed an overpowering refrain
    from the Livarots, and afterwards the Gerome, flavoured with aniseed,
    kept up the symphony with a high prolonged note, like that of a
    vocalist during a pause in the accompaniment.

    "I have seen Madame Leonce," Mademoiselle Saget at last continued,
    with a significant expression.

    At this the two others became extremely attentive. Madame Leonce was
    the doorkeeper of the house where Gavard lived in the Rue de la
    Cossonnerie. It was an old house standing back, with its ground floor
    occupied by an importer of oranges and lemons, who had had the
    frontage coloured blue as high as the first floor. Madame Leonce acted
    as Gavard's housekeeper, kept the keys of his cupboards and closets,
    and brought him up tisane when he happened to catch cold. She was a
    severe-looking woman, between fifty and sixty years of age, and spoke
    slowly, but at endless length. Mademoiselle Saget, who went to drink
    coffee with her every Wednesday evening, had cultivated her friendship
    more closely than ever since the poultry dealer had gone to lodge in
    the house. They would talk about the worthy man for hours at a time.
    They both professed the greatest affection for him, and a keen desire
    to ensure his comfort and happiness.

    "Yes, I have seen Madame Leonce," repeated the old maid. "We had a cup
    of coffee together last night. She was greatly worried. It seems that
    Monsieur Gavard never comes home now before one o'clock in the
    morning. Last Sunday she took him up some broth, as she thought he
    looked quite ill."

    "Oh, she knows very well what she's about," exclaimed Madame Lecoeur,
    whom these attentions to Gavard somewhat alarmed.

    Mademoiselle Saget felt bound to defend her friend. "Oh, really, you
    are quite mistaken," said she. "Madame Leonce is much above her
    position; she is quite a lady. If she wanted to enrich herself at
    Monsieur Gavard's expense, she might easily have done so long ago. It
    seems that he leaves everything lying about in the most careless
    fashion. It's about that, indeed, that I want to speak to you. But
    you'll not repeat anything I say, will you? I am telling it you in
    strict confidence."

    Both the others swore that they would never breathe a word of what
    they might hear; and they craned out their necks with eager curiosity,
    whilst the old maid solemnly resumed: "Well, then, Monsieur Gavard has
    been behaving very strangely of late. He has been buying firearms--a
    great big pistol--one of those which revolve, you know. Madame Leonce
    says that things are awful, for this pistol is always lying about on
    the table or the mantelpiece; and she daren't dust anywhere near it.
    But that isn't all. His money--"

    "His money!" echoed Madame Lecoeur, with blazing cheeks.

    "Well, he's disposed of all his stocks and shares. He's sold
    everything, and keeps a great heap of gold in a cupboard."

    "A heap of gold!" exclaimed La Sarriette in ecstasy.

    "Yes, a great heap of gold. It covers a whole shelf, and is quite
    dazzling. Madame Leonce told me that one morning Gavard opened the
    cupboard in her presence, and that the money quite blinded her, it
    shone so."

    There was another pause. The eyes of the three women were blinking as
    though the dazzling pile of gold was before them. Presently La
    Sarriette began to laugh.

    "What a jolly time I would have with Jules if my uncle would give that
    money to me!" said she.

    Madame Lecoeur, however, seemed quite overwhelmed by this revelation,
    crushed beneath the weight of the gold which she could not banish from
    her sight. Covetous envy thrilled her. But at last, raising her skinny
    arms and shrivelled hands, her finger-nails still stuffed with butter,
    she stammered in a voice full of bitter distress: "Oh, I mustn't think
    of it! It's too dreadful!"

    "Well, it would all be yours, you know, if anything were to happen to
    Monsieur Gavard," retorted Mademoiselle Saget. "If I were in your
    place, I would look after my interests. That revolver means nothing
    good, you may depend upon it. Monsieur Gavard has got into the hands
    of evil counsellors; and I'm afraid it will all end badly."

    Then the conversation again turned upon Florent. The three women
    assailed him more violently than ever. And afterwards, with perfect
    composure, they began to discuss what would be the result of all these
    dark goings-on so far as he and Gavard were concerned; certainly it
    would be no pleasant one if there was any gossiping. And thereupon
    they swore that they themselves would never repeat a word of what they
    knew; not, however, because that scoundrel Florent merited any
    consideration, but because it was necessary, at all costs, to save
    that worthy Monsieur Gavard from being compromised. Then they rose
    from their seats, and Mademoiselle Saget was burning as if to go away
    when the butter dealer asked her: "All the same, in case of accident,
    do you think that Madame Leonce can be trusted? I dare say she has the
    key of the cupboard."

    "Well, that's more than I can tell you," replied the old maid. "I
    believe she's a very honest woman; but, after all, there's no telling.
    There are circumstances, you know, which tempt the best of people.
    Anyhow, I've warned you both; and you must do what you think proper."

    As the three women stood there, taking leave of each other, the odour
    of the cheeses seemed to become more pestilential than ever. It was a
    cacophony of smells, ranging from the heavily oppressive odour of the
    Dutch cheeses and the Gruyeres to the alkaline pungency of the
    Olivets. From the Cantal, the Cheshire, and the goats' milk cheeses
    there seemed to come a deep breath like the sound of a bassoon, amidst
    which the sharp, sudden whiffs of the Neufchatels, the Troyes, and the
    Mont d'Ors contributed short, detached notes. And then the different
    odours appeared to mingle one with another, the reek of the Limbourgs,
    the Port Saluts, the Geromes, the Marolles, the Livarots, and the Pont
    l'Eveques uniting in one general, overpowering stench sufficient to
    provoke asphyxia. And yet it almost seemed as though it were not the
    cheeses but the vile words of Madame Lecoeur and Mademoiselle Saget
    that diffused this awful odour.

    "I'm very much obliged to you, indeed I am," said the butter dealer.
    "If ever I get rich, you shall not find yourself forgotten."

    The old maid still lingered in the stall. Taking up a Bondon, she
    turned it round, and put it down on the slab again. Then she asked its
    price.

    "To me!" she added, with a smile.

    "Oh, nothing to you," replied Madame Lecoeur. "I'll make you a present
    of it." And again she exclaimed: "Ah, if I were only rich!"

    Mademoiselle Saget thereupon told her that some day or other she would
    be rich. The Bondon had already disappeared within the old maid's bag.
    And now the butter dealer returned to the cellar, while Mademoiselle
    Saget escorted La Sarriette back to her stall. On reaching it they
    talked for a moment or two about Monsieur Jules. The fruits around
    them diffused a fresh scent of summer.

    "It smells much nicer here than at your aunt's," said the old maid. "I
    felt quite ill a little time ago. I can't think how she manages to
    exist there. But here it's very sweet and pleasant. It makes you look
    quite rosy, my dear."

    La Sarriette began to laugh, for she was fond of compliments. Then she
    served a lady with a pound of mirabelle plums, telling her that they
    were as sweet as sugar.

    "I should like to buy some of those mirabelles too," murmured
    Mademoiselle Saget, when the lady had gone away; "only I want so few.
    A lone woman, you know."

    "Take a handful of them," exclaimed the pretty brunette. "That won't
    ruin me. Send Jules back to me if you see him, will you? You'll most
    likely find him smoking his cigar on the first bench to the right as
    you turn out of the covered way."

    Mademoiselle Saget distended her fingers as widely as possible in
    order to take a handful of mirabelles, which joined the Bondon in the
    bag. Then she pretended to leave the market, but in reality made a
    detour by one of the covered ways, thinking, as she walked slowly
    along, that the mirabelles and Bondon would not make a very
    substantial dinner. When she was unable, during her afternoon
    perambulations, to wheedle stallkeepers into filling her bag for her,
    she was reduced to dining off the merest scraps. So she now slyly made
    her way back to the butter pavilions, where, on the side of the Rue
    Berger, at the back of the offices of the oyster salesmen, there were
    some stalls at which cooked meat was sold. Every morning little closed
    box-like carts, lined with zinc and furnished with ventilators, drew
    up in front of the larger Parisian kitchens and carried away the
    leavings of the restaurants, the embassies, and State Ministries.
    These leavings were conveyed to the market cellars and there sorted.
    By nine o'clock plates of food were displayed for sale at prices
    ranging from three to five sous, their contents comprising slices of
    meat, scraps of game, heads and tails of fishes, bits of galantine,
    stray vegetables, and, by way of dessert, cakes scarcely cut into, and
    other confectionery. Poor starving wretches, scantily-paid clerks, and
    women shivering with fever were to be seen crowding around, and the
    street lads occasionally amused themselves by hooting the pale-faced
    individuals, known to be misers, who only made their purchases after
    slyly glancing about them to see that they were not observed.

  • Mademoiselle Saget wriggled her way to a stall, the keeper of which
    boasted that the scraps she sold came exclusively from the Tuileries.
    One day, indeed, she had induced the old maid to buy a slice of leg of
    mutton by informing that it had come from the plate of the Emperor
    himself; and this slice of mutton, eaten with no little pride, had
    been a soothing consolation to Mademoiselle Saget's vanity. The
    wariness of her approach to the stall was, moreover, solely caused by
    her desire to keep well with the neighbouring shop people, whose
    premises she was eternally haunting without ever buying anything. Her
    usual tactics were to quarrel with them as soon as she had managed to
    learn their histories, when she would bestow her patronage upon a
    fresh set, desert it in due course, and then gradually make friends
    again with those with whom she had quarrelled. In this way she made
    the complete circuit of the market neighbourhood, ferreting about in
    every shop and stall. Anyone would have imagined that she consumed an
    enormous amount of provisions, whereas, in point of fact, she lived
    solely upon presents and the few scraps which she was compelled to buy
    when people were not in the giving vein.

  • The dealers in these scraps are called /bijoutiers/, or jewellers,
        whilst the scraps themselves are known as /harlequins/, the idea
        being that they are of all colours and shapes when mingled
        together, thus suggesting harlequin's variegated attire.--
        Translator.

    On that particular evening there was only a tall old man standing in
    front of the stall. He was sniffing at a plate containing a mixture of
    meat and fish. Mademoiselle Saget, in her turn, began to sniff at a
    plate of cold fried fish. The price of it was three sous, but, by dint
    of bargaining, she got it for two. The cold fish then vanished into
    the bag. Other customers now arrived, and with a uniform impulse
    lowered their noses over the plates. The smell of the stall was very
    disgusting, suggestive alike of greasy dishes and a dirty sink.


  • Particulars of the strange and repulsive trade in harlequins,
        which even nowadays is not extinct, will be found in Privat
        d'Anglemont's well-known book /Paris Anecdote/, written at the
        very period with which M. Zola deals in the present work. My
        father, Henry Vizetelly, also gave some account of it in his
        /Glances Back through Seventy Years/, in a chapter describing the
        odd ways in which certain Parisians contrive to get a living.--
        Translator.

    "Come and see me to-morrow," the stallkeeper called out to the old
    maid, "and I'll put something nice on one side for you. There's going
    to be a grand dinner at the Tuileries to-night."

    Mademoiselle Saget was just promising to come, when, happening to turn
    round, she discovered Gavard looking at her and listening to what she
    was saying. She turned very red, and, contracting her skinny
    shoulders, hurried away, affecting not to recognise him. Gavard,
    however, followed her for a few yards, shrugging his shoulders and
    muttering to himself that he was no longer surprised at the old
    shrew's malice, now he knew that "she poisoned herself with the filth
    carted away from the Tuileries."

    On the very next morning vague rumours began to circulate in the
    markets. Madame Lecoeur and La Sarriette were in their own fashion
    keeping the oaths of silence they had taken. For her own part,
    Mademoiselle Saget warily held her tongue, leaving the two others to
    circulate the story of Florent's antecedents. At first only a few
    meagre details were hawked about in low tones; then various versions
    of the facts got into circulation, incidents were exaggerated, and
    gradually quite a legend was constructed, in which Florent played the
    part of a perfect bogey man. He had killed ten gendarmes at the
    barricade in the Rue Greneta, said some; he had returned to France on
    a pirate ship whose crew scoured the seas to murder everyone they came
    across, said others; whilst a third set declared that ever since his
    arrival he had been observed prowling about at nighttime with
    suspicious-looking characters, of whom he was undoubtedly the leader.
    Soon the imaginative market women indulged in the highest flights of
    fancy, revelled in the most melodramatic ideas. There was talk of a
    band of smugglers plying their nefarious calling in the very heart of
    Paris, and of a vast central association formed for systematically
    robbing the stalls in the markets. Much pity was expressed for the
    Quenu-Gradelles, mingled with malicious allusions to their uncle's
    fortune. That fortune was an endless subject of discussion. The
    general opinion was that Florent had returned to claim his share of
    the treasure; however, as no good reason was forthcoming to explain
    why the division had not taken place already, it was asserted that
    Florent was waiting for some opportunity which might enable him to
    pocket the whole amount. The Quenu-Gradelles would certainly be found
    murdered some morning, it was said; and a rumour spread that dreadful
    quarrels already took place every night between the two brothers and
    beautiful Lisa.

    When these stories reached the ears of the beautiful Norman, she
    shrugged her shoulders and burst out laughing.

    "Get away with you!" she cried, "you don't know him. Why, the dear
    fellow's as gentle as a lamb."

    She had recently refused the hand of Monsieur Lebigre, who had at last
    ventured upon a formal proposal. For two months past he had given the
    Mehudins a bottle of some liqueur every Sunday. It was Rose who
    brought it, and she was always charged with a compliment for La
    Normande, some pretty speech which she faithfully repeated, without
    appearing in the slightest degree embarrassed by the peculiar
    commission. When Monsieur Lebigre was rejected, he did not pine, but
    to show that he took no offence and was still hopeful, he sent Rose on
    the following Sunday with two bottles of champagne and a large bunch
    of flowers. She gave them into the handsome fish-girl's own hands,
    repeating, as she did so, the wine dealer's prose madrigal:

    "Monsieur Lebigre begs you to drink this to his health, which has been
    greatly shaken by you know what. He hopes that you will one day be
    willing to cure him, by being for him as pretty and as sweet as these
    flowers."

    La Normande was much amused by the servant's delighted air. She kissed
    her as she spoke to her of her master, and asked her if he wore
    braces, and snored at nights. Then she made her take the champagne and
    flowers back with her. "Tell Monsieur Lebigre," said she, "that he's
    not to send you here again. It quite vexes me to see you coming here
    so meekly, with your bottles under your arms."

    "Oh, he wishes me to come," replied Rose, as she went away. "It is
    wrong of you to distress him. He is a very handsome man."

    La Normande, however, was quite conquered by Florent's affectionate
    nature. She continued to follow Muche's lessons of an evening in the
    lamplight, indulging the while in a dream of marrying this man who was
    so kind to children. She would still keep her fish stall, while he
    would doubtless rise to a position of importance in the administrative
    staff of the markets. This dream of hers, however, was scarcely
    furthered by the tutor's respectful bearing towards her. He bowed to
    her, and kept himself at a disntace, when she have liked to laugh with
    him, and love him as she knew how to love. But it was just this covert
    resistance on Florent's part which continually brought her back to the
    dream of marrying him. She realised that he lived in a loftier sphere
    than her own; and by becoming his wife she imagined that her vanity
    would reap no little satisfaction.

    She was greatly surprised when she learned the history of the man she
    loved. He had never mentioned a word of those things to her; and she
    scolded him about it. His extraordinary adventures only increased her
    tenderness for him, and for evenings together she made him relate all
    that had befallen him. She trembled with fear lest the police should
    discover him; but he reassured her, saying that the matter was now too
    old for the police to trouble their heads about it. One evening he
    told her of the woman on the Boulevard Montmartre, the woman in the
    pink bonnet, whose blood had dyed his hands. He still frequently
    thought of that poor creature. His anguish-stricken mind had often
    dwelt upon her during the clear nights he had passed in Cayenne; and
    he had returned to France with a wild dream of meeting her again on
    some footway in the bright sunshine, even though he could still feel
    her corpse-like weight across his legs. And yet, he thought, she might
    perhaps have recovered. At times he received quite a shock while he
    was walking through the streets, on fancying that he recognised her;
    and he followed pink bonnets and shawl-draped shoulders with a wildly
    beating heart. When he closed his eyes he could see her walking, and
    advancing towards him; but she let her shawl slip down, showing the
    two red stains on her chemisette; and then he saw that her face was
    pale as wax, and that her eyes were blank, and her lips distorted by
    pain. For a long time he suffered from not knowing her name, from
    being forced to look upon her as a mere shadow, whose recollection
    filled him with sorrow. Whenever any idea of woman crossed his mind it
    was always she that rose up before him, as the one pure, tender wife.
    He often found himself fancying that she might be looking for him on
    that boulevard where she had fallen dead, and that if she had met him
    a few seconds sooner she would have given him a life of joy. And he
    wished for no other wife; none other existed for him. When he spoke of
    her, his voice trembled to such a degree that La Normande, her wits
    quickened by her love, guessed his secret, and felt jealous.

    "Oh, it's really much better that you shouldn't see her again," she
    said maliciously. "She can't look particularly nice by this time."

    Florent turned pale with horror at the vision which these words
    evoked. His love was rotting in her grave. He could not forgive La
    Normande's savage cruelty, which henceforth made him see the grinning
    jaws and hollow eyes of a skeleton within that lovely pink bonnet.
    Whenever the fish-girl tried to joke with him on the subject he turned
    quite angry, and silenced her with almost coarse language.

    That, however, which especially surprised the beautiful Norman in
    these revelations was the discovery that she had been quite mistaken
    in supposing that she was enticing a lover away from handsome Lisa.
    This so diminished her feeling of triumph, that for a week or so her
    love for Florent abated. She consoled herself, however, with the story
    of the inheritance, no longer calling Lisa a strait-laced prude, but a
    thief who kept back her brother-in-law's money, and assumed
    sanctimonious airs to deceive people. Every evening, while Muche took
    his writing lesson, the conversation turned upon old Gradelle's
    treasure.

    "Did anyone ever hear of such an idea?" the fish-girl would exclaim,
    with a laugh. "Did the old man want to salt his money, since he put it
    in a salting-tub? Eighty-five thousand francs! That's a nice sum of
    money! And, besides, the Quenus, no doubt, lied about it--there was
    perhaps two or three times as much. Ah, if I were in your place, I
    shouldn't lose any time about claiming my share; indeed I shouldn't."

    "I've no need of anything," was Florent's invariable answer. "I
    shouldn't know what to do with the money if I had it."

    "Oh, you're no man!" cried La Normande, losing all control over
    herself. "It's pitiful! Can't you see that the Quenus are laughing at
    you? That great fat thing passes all her husband's old clothes over to
    you. I'm not saying this to hurt your feelings, but everybody makes
    remarks about it. Why, the whole neighbourhood has seen the greasy
    pair of trousers, which you're now wearing, on your brother's legs for
    three years and more! If I were in your place I'd throw their dirty
    rags in their faces, and insist upon my rights. Your share comes to
    forty-two thousand five hundred francs, doesn't it? Well, I shouldn't
    go out of the place till I'd got forty-two thousand five hundred
    francs."

    It was useless for Florent to explain to her that his sister-in-law
    had offered to pay him his share, that she was taking care of it for
    him, and that it was he himself who had refused to receive it. He
    entered into the most minute particulars, seeking to convince her of
    the Quenus' honesty, but she sarcastically replied: "Oh, yes, I dare
    say! I know all about their honesty. That fat thing folds it up every
    morning and puts it away in her wardrobe for fear it should get
    soiled. Really, I quite pity you, my poor friend. It's easy to gull
    you, for you can't see any further than a child of five. One of these
    days she'll simply put your money in her pocket, and you'll never look
    on it again. Shall I go, now, and claim your share for you, just to
    see what she says? There'd be some fine fun, I can tell you! I'd
    either have the money, or I'd break everything in the house--I swear I
    would!"

    "No, no, it's no business of yours," Florent replied, quite alarmed.
    "I'll see about it; I may possibly be wanting some money soon."

    At this La Normande assumed an air of doubt, shrugged her shoulders,
    and told him that he was really too chicken-hearted. Her one great aim
    now was to embroil him with the Quenu-Gradelles, and she employed
    every means she could think of to effect her purpose, both anger and
    banter, as well as affectionate tenderness. She also cherished another
    design. When she had succeeded in marrying Florent, she would go and
    administer a sound cuffing to beautiful Lisa, if the latter did not
    yield up the money. As she lay awake in her bed at night she pictured
    every detail of the scene. She saw herself sitting down in the middle
    of the pork shop in the busiest part of the day, and making a terrible
    fuss. She brooded over this idea to such an extent, it obtained such a
    hold upon her, that she would have been willing to marry Florent
    simply in order to be able to go and demand old Gradelle's forty-two
    thousand five hundred francs.

    Old Madame Mehudin, exasperated by La Normande's dismissal of Monsieur
    Lebigre, proclaimed everywhere that her daughter was mad, and that the
    "long spindle-shanks" must have administered some insidious drug to
    her. When she learned the Cayenne story, her anger was terrible. She
    called Florent a convict and murderer, and said it was no wonder that
    his villainy had kept him lank and flat. Her versions of Florent's
    biography were the most horrible of all that were circulated in the
    neighbourhood. At home she kept a moderately quiet tongue in her head,
    and restricted herself to muttered indignation, and a show of locking
    up the drawer where the silver was kept whenever Florent arrived. One
    day, however, after a quarrel with her elder daughter, she exclaimed:

    "Things can't go on much longer like this! It is that vile man who is
    setting you against me. Take care that you don't try me too far, or
    I'll go and denounce him to the police. I will, as true as I stand
    here!"

    "You'll denounce him!" echoed La Normande, trembling violently, and
    clenching her fists. "You'd better not! Ah, if you weren't my
    mother----"

    At this, Claire, who was a spectator of the quarrel, began to laugh,
    with a nervous laughter that seemed to rasp her throat. For some time
    past she had been gloomier and more erratic than ever, invariably
    showing red eyes and a pale face.

    "Well, what would you do?" she asked. "Would you give her a cuffing?
    Perhaps you'd like to give me, your sister, one as well? I dare say it
    will end in that. But I'll clear the house of him. I'll go to the
    police to save mother the trouble."

    Then, as La Normande almost choked with the angry threats that rose to
    her throat, the younger girl added: "I'll spare you the exertion of
    beating me. I'll throw myself into the river as I come back over the
    bridge."

    Big tears were streaming from her eyes; and she rushed off to her
    bedroom, banging the doors violently behind her. Old Madame Mehudin
    said nothing more about denouncing Florent. Muche, however, told La
    Normande that he met his grandma talking with Monsieur Lebigre in
    every corner of the neighbourhood.

    The rivalry between the beautiful Norman and the beautiful Lisa now
    assumed a less aggressive but more disturbing character. In the
    afternoon, when the red-striped canvas awning was drawn down in front
    of the pork shop, the fish-girl would remark that the big fat thing
    felt afraid, and was concealing herself. She was also much exasperated
    by the occasional lowering of the window-blind, on which was pictured
    a hunting-breakfast in a forest glade, with ladies and gentlemen in
    evening dress partaking of a red pasty, as big as themselves, on the
    yellow grass.

    Beautiful Lisa, however, was by no means afraid. As soon as the sun
    began to sink she drew up the blind; and, as she sat knitting behind
    her counter, she serenely scanned the market square, where numerous
    urchins were poking about in the soil under the gratings which
    protected the roots of the plane-trees, while porters smoked their
    pipes on the benches along the footway, at either end of which was an
    advertisement column covered with theatrical posters, alternately
    green, yellow, red, and blue, like some harlequin's costume. And while
    pretending to watch the passing vehicles, Lisa would really be
    scrutinising the beautiful Norman. She might occasionally be seen
    bending forward, as though her eyes were following the Bastille and
    Place Wagram omnibus to the Pointe Saint Eustache, where it always
    stopped for a time. But this was only a manoeuvre to enable her to get
    a better view of the fish-girl, who, as a set-off against the blind,
    retorted by covering her head and fish with large sheets of brown
    paper, on the pretext of warding off the rays of the setting sun. The
    advantage at present was on Lisa's side, for as the time for striking
    the decisive blow approached she manifested the calmest serenity of
    bearing, whereas her rival, in spite of all her efforts to attain the
    same air of distinction, always lapsed into some piece of gross
    vulgarity, which she afterwards regretted. La Normande's ambition was
    to look "like a lady." Nothing irritated her more than to hear people
    extolling the good manners of her rival. This weak point of hers had
    not escaped old Madame Mehudin's observation, and she now directed all
    her attacks upon it.

    "I saw Madame Quenu standing at her door this evening," she would say
    sometimes. "It is quite amazing how well she wears. And she's so
    refined-looking, too; quite the lady, indeed. It's the counter that
    does it, I'm sure. A fine counter gives a woman such a respectable
    look."

    In this remark there was a veiled allusion to Monsieur Lebigre's
    proposal. The beautiful Norman would make no reply; but for a moment
    or two she would seem deep in thought. In her mind's eye she saw
    herself behind the counter of the wine shop at the other corner of the
    street, forming a pendent, as it were, to beautiful Lisa. It was this
    that first shook her love for Florent.

    To tell the truth, it was now becoming a very difficult thing to
    defend Florent. The whole neighbourhood was in arms against him; it
    seemed as though everyone had an immediate interest in exterminating
    him. Some of the market people swore that he had sold himself to the
    police; while others asserted that he had been seen in the butter-
    cellar, attempting to make holes in the wire grating, with the
    intention of tossing lighted matches through them. There was a vast
    increase of slander, a perfect flood of abuse, the source of which
    could not be exactly determined. The fish pavilion was the last one to
    join in the revolt against the inspector. The fish-wives liked Florent
    on account of his gentleness, and for some time they defended him;
    but, influenced by the stallkeepers of the butter and fruit pavilions,
    they at last gave way. Then hostilities began afresh between these
    huge, swelling women and the lean and lank inspector. He was lost in
    the whirl of the voluminous petticoats and buxom bodices which surged
    furiously around his scraggy shoulders. However, he understood
    nothing, but pursued his course towards the realisation of his one
    haunting idea.

    At every hour of the day, and in every corner of the market,
    Mademoiselle Saget's black bonnet was now to be seen in the midst of
    this outburst of indignation. Her little pale face seemed to multiply.
    She had sworn a terrible vengeance against the company which assembled
    in Monsieur Lebigre's little cabinet. She accused them of having
    circulated the story that she lived on waste scraps of meat. The truth
    was that old Gavard had told the others one evening that the "old
    nanny-goat" who came to play the spy upon them gorged herself with the
    filth which the Bonapartist clique tossed away. Clemence felt quite
    ill on hearing this, and Robine hurriedly gulped down a draught of
    beer, as though to wash his throat. In Gavard's opinion, the scraps of
    meat left on the Emperor's plate were so much political ordure, the
    putrid remnants of all the filth of the reign. Thenceforth the party
    at Monsieur Lebigre's looked on Mademoiselle Saget as a creature whom
    no one could touch except with tongs. She was regarded as some unclean
    animal that battened upon corruption. Clemence and Gavard circulated
    the story so freely in the markets that the old maid found herself
    seriously injured in her intercourse with the shopkeepers, who
    unceremoniously bade her go off to the scrap-stalls when she came to
    haggle and gossip at their establishments without the least intention
    of buying anything. This cut her off from her sources of information;
    and sometimes she was altogether ignorant of what was happening. She
    shed tears of rage, and in one such moment of anger she bluntly said
    to La Sarriette and Madame Lecoeur: "You needn't give me any more
    hints: I'll settle your Gavard's hash for him now--that I will!"

    The two women were rather startled, but refrained from all
    protestation. The next day, however, Mademoiselle Saget had calmed
    down, and again expressed much tender-hearted pity for that poor
    Monsieur Gavard who was so badly advised, and was certainly hastening
    to his ruin.

    Gavard was undoubtedly compromising himself. Ever since the conspiracy
    had begun to ripen he had carried the revolver, which caused Madame
    Leonce so much alarm, in his pocket wherever he went. It was a big,
    formidable-looking weapon, which he had bought of the principal
    gunmaker in Paris. He exhibited it to all the women in the poultry
    market, like a schoolboy who has got some prohibited novel hidden in
    his desk. First he would allow the barrel to peer out of his pocket,
    and call attention to it with a wink. Then he affected a mysterious
    reticence, indulged in vague hints and insinuations--played, in short,
    the part of a man who revelled in feigning fear. The possession of
    this revolver gave him immense importance, placed him definitely
    amongst the dangerous characters of Paris. Sometimes, when he was safe
    inside his stall, he would consent to take it out of his pocket, and
    exhibit it to two or three of the women. He made them stand before him
    so as to conceal him with their petticoats, and then he brandished the
    weapon, cocked the lock, caused the breech to revolve, and took aim at
    one of the geese or turkeys that were hanging in the stall. He was
    immensely delighted at the alarm manifested by the women; but
    eventually reassured them by stating that the revolver was not loaded.
    However, he carried a supply of cartridges about with him, in a case
    which he opened with the most elaborate precautions. When he had
    allowed his friends to feel the weight of the cartridges, he would
    again place both weapon and ammunition in his pockets. And afterwards,
    crossing his arms over his breast, he would chatter away jubilantly
    for hours.

    "A man's a man when he's got a weapon like that," he would say with a
    swaggering air. "I don't care a fig now for the gendarmes. A friend
    and I went to try it last Sunday on the plain of Saint Denis. Of
    course, you know, a man doesn't tell everyone that he's got a
    plaything of that sort. But, ah! my dears, we fired at a tree, and hit
    it every time. Ah, you'll see, you'll see. You'll hear of Anatole one
    of these days, I can tell you."

    He had bestowed the name of Anatole upon the revolver; and he carried
    things so far that in a week's time both weapon and cartridges were
    known to all the women in the pavilion. His friendship for Florent
    seemed to them suspicious; he was too sleek and rich to be visited
    with the hatred that was manifested towards the inspector; still, he
    lost the esteem of the shrewder heads amongst his acquaintances, and
    succeeded in terrifying the timid ones. This delighted him immensely.

    "It is very imprudent for a man to carry firearms about with him,"
    said Mademoiselle Saget. "Monsieur Gavard's revolver will end by
    playing him a nasty trick."

    Gavard now showed the most jubilant bearing at Monsieur Lebigre's.
    Florent, since ceasing to take his meals with the Quenus, had come
    almost to live in the little "cabinet." He breakfasted, dined, and
    constantly shut himself up there. In fact he had converted the place
    almost into a sort of private room of his own, where he left his old
    coats and books and papers lying about. Monsieur Lebigre had offered
    no objection to these proceedings; indeed, he had even removed one of
    the tables to make room for a cushioned bench, on which Florent could
    have slept had he felt so inclined. When the inspector manifested any
    scruples about taking advantage of Monsieur Lebigre's kindness, the
    latter told him to do as he pleased, saying that the whole house was
    at his service. Logre also manifested great friendship for him, and
    even constituted himself his lieutenant. He was constantly discussing
    affairs with him, rendering an account of the steps he was supposed to
    take, and furnishing the names of newly affiliated associates. Logre,
    indeed, had now assumed the duties of organiser; on him rested the
    task of bringing the various plotters together, forming the different
    sections, and weaving each mesh of the gigantic net into which Paris
    was to fall at a given signal. Florent meantime remained the leader,
    the soul of the conspiracy.

    However, much as the hunchback seemed to toil, he attained no
    appreciable result. Although he had loudly asserted that in each
    district of Paris he knew two or three groups of men as determined and
    trustworthy as those who met at Monsieur Lebigre's, he had never yet
    given any precise information about them, but had merely mentioned a
    name here and there, and recounted stories of endless alleged secret
    expeditions, and the wonderful enthusiasm that the people manifested
    for the cause. He made a great point of the hand-grasps he had
    received. So-and-so, whom he thou'd and thee'd, had squeezed his
    fingers and declared he would join them. At the Gros Caillou a big,
    burly fellow, who would make a magnificent sectional leader, had
    almost dislocated his arm in his enthusiasm; while in the Rue
    Popincourt a whole group of working men had embraced him. He declared
    that at a day's notice a hundred thousand active supporters could be
    gathered together. Each time that he made his appearance in the little
    room, wearing an exhausted air, and dropping with apparent fatigue on
    the bench, he launched into fresh variations of his usual reports,
    while Florent duly took notes of what he said, and relied on him to
    realise his many promises. And soon in Florent's pockets the plot
    assumed life. The notes were looked upon as realities, as indisputable
    facts, upon which the entire plan of the rising was constructed. All
    that now remained to be done was to wait for a favourable opportunity,
    and Logre asserted with passionate gesticulations that the whole thing
    would go on wheels.

    Florent was at last perfectly happy. His feet no longer seemed to
    tread the ground; he was borne aloft by his burning desire to pass
    sentence on all the wickedness he had seen committed. He had all the
    credulity of a little child, all the confidence of a hero. If Logre
    had told him that the Genius of Liberty perched on the Colonne de
    Juillet
  • would have come down and set itself at their head, he would
    hardly have expressed any surprise. In the evenings, at Monsieur
    Lebigre's, he showed great enthusiasm and spoke effusively of the
    approaching battle, as though it were a festival to which all good and
    honest folks would be invited. But although Gavard in his delight
    began to play with his revolver, Charvet got more snappish than ever,
    and sniggered and shrugged his shoulders. His rival's assumption of
    the leadership angered him extremely; indeed, quite disgusted him with
    politics. One evening when, arriving early, he happened to find
    himself alone with Logre and Lebigre, he frankly unbosomed himself.

  • The column erected on the Place de la Bastille in memory of the
        Revolution of July 1830, by which Charles X was dethroned.--
        Translator.

    "Why," said he, "that fellow Florent hasn't an idea about politics,
    and would have done far better to seek a berth as writing master in a
    ladies' school! It would be nothing short of a misfortune if he were
    to succeed, for, with his visionary social sentimentalities, he would
    crush us down beneath his confounded working men! It's all that, you
    know, which ruins the party. We don't need any more tearful
    sentimentalists, humanitarian poets, people who kiss and slobber over
    each other for the merest scratch. But he won't succeed! He'll just
    get locked up, and that will be the end of it."

    Logre and the wine dealer made no remark, but allowed Charvet to talk
    on without interruption.

    "And he'd have been locked up long ago," he continued, "if he were
    anything as dangerous as he fancies he is. The airs he puts on just
    because he's been to Cayenne are quite sickening. But I'm sure that
    the police knew of his return the very first day he set foot in Paris,
    and if they haven't interfered with him it's simply because they hold
    him in contempt."

    At this Logre gave a slight start.

    "They've been dogging me for the last fifteen years," resumed the
    Hebertist, with a touch of pride, "but you don't hear me proclaiming
    it from the house-tops. However, he won't catch me taking part in his
    riot. I'm not going to let myself be nabbed like a mere fool. I dare
    say he's already got half a dozen spies at his heels, who will take
    him by the scruff of the neck whenever the authorities give the word."

    "Oh, dear, no! What an idea!" exclaimed Monsieur Lebigre, who usually
    observed complete silence. He was rather pale, and looked at Logre,
    who was gently rubbing his hump against the partition.

    "That's mere imagination," murmured the hunchback.

    "Very well; call it imagination, if you like," replied the tutor; "but
    I know how these things are arranged. At all events, I don't mean to
    let the 'coppers' nab me this time. You others, of course, will please
    yourselves, but if you take my advice--and you especially, Monsieur
    Lebigre--you'll take care not to let your establishment be
    compromised, or the authorities will close it."

    At this Logre could not restrain a smile. On several subsequent
    occasions Charvet plied him and Lebigre with similar arguments, as
    though he wished to detach them from Florent's project by frightening
    them; and he was much surprised at the calmness and confidence which
    they both continued to manifest. For his own part, he still came
    pretty regularly in the evening with Clemence. The tall brunette was
    no longer a clerk at the fish auctions--Monsieur Manoury had
    discharged her.

    "Those salesmen are all scoundrels!" Logre growled, when he heard of
    her dismissal.

    Thereupon Clemence, who, lolling back against the partition, was
    rolling a cigarette between her long, slim fingers, replied in a sharp
    voice: "Oh, it's fair fighting! We don't hold the same political
    views, you know. That fellow Manoury, who's making no end of money,
    would lick the Emperor's boots. For my part, if I were an auctioneer,
    I wouldn't keep him in my service for an hour."

    The truth was that she had been indulging in some clumsy pleasantry,
    amusing herself one day by inscribing in the sale-book, alongside of
    the dabs and skate and mackerel sold by auction, the names of some of
    the best-known ladies and gentlemen of the Court. This bestowal of
    piscine names upon high dignitaries, these entries of the sale of
    duchesses and baronesses at thirty sous apiece, had caused Monsieur
    Manoury much alarm. Gavard was still laughing over it.

    "Well, never mind!" said he, patting Clemence's arm; "you are every
    inch a man, you are!"

    Clemence had discovered a new method of mixing her grog. She began by
    filling her glass with hot water; and after adding some sugar she
    poured the rum drop by drop upon the slice of lemon floating on the
    surface, in such wise that it did not mix with the water. Then she
    lighted it and with a grave expression watched it blaze, slowly
    smoking her cigarette while the flame of the alcohol cast a greenish
    tinge over her face. "Grog," however, was an expensive luxury in which
    she could not afford to indulge after she had lost her place. Charvet
    told her, with a strained laugh, that she was no longer a millionaire.
    She supported herself by giving French lessons, at a very early hour
    in the morning, to a young lady residing in the Rue de Miromesnil, who
    was perfecting her education in secrecy, unknown even to her maid. And
    so now Clemence merely ordered a glass of beer in the evenings, but
    this she drank, it must be admitted, with the most philosophical
    composure.

    The evenings in the little sanctum were now far less noisy than they
    had been. Charvet would suddenly lapse into silence, pale with
    suppressed rage, when the others deserted him to listen to his rival.
    The thought that he had been the king of the place, had ruled the
    whole party with despotic power before Florent's appearance there,
    gnawed at his heart, and he felt all the regretful pangs of a
    dethroned monarch. If he still came to the meetings, it was only
    because he could not resist the attraction of the little room where he
    had spent so many happy hours in tyrannising over Gavard and Robine.
    In those days even Logre's hump had been his property, as well as
    Alexandre's fleshy arms and Lacaille's gloomy face. He had done what
    he liked with them, stuffed his opinions down their throats,
    belaboured their shoulders with his sceptre. But now he endured much
    bitterness of spirit; and ended by quite ceasing to speak, simply
    shrugging his shoulders and whistling disdainfully, without
    condescending to combat the absurdities vented in his presence. What
    exasperated him more than anything else was the gradual way in which
    he had been ousted from his position of predominance without being
    conscious of it. He could not see that Florent was in any way his
    superior, and after hearing the latter speak for hours, in his gentle
    and somewhat sad voice, he often remarked: "Why, the fellow's a
    parson! He only wants a cassock!"

    The others, however, to all appearance eagerly absorbed whatever the
    inspector said. When Charvet saw Florent's clothes hanging from every
    peg, he pretended not to know where he could put his hat so that it
    would not be soiled. He swept away the papers that lay about the
    little room, declaring that there was no longer any comfort for anyone
    in the place since that "gentleman" had taken possession of it. He
    even complained to the landlord, and asked if the room belonged to a
    single customer or to the whole company. This invasion of his realm
    was indeed the last straw. Men were brutes, and he conceived an
    unspeakable scorn for humanity when he saw Logre and Monsieur Lebigre
    fixing their eyes on Florent with rapt attention. Gavard with his
    revolver irritated him, and Robine, who sat silent behind his glass of
    beer, seemed to him to be the only sensible person in the company, and
    one who doubtless judged people by their real value, and was not led
    away by mere words. As for Alexandre and Lacaille, they confirmed him
    in his belief that "the people" were mere fools, and would require at
    least ten years of revolutionary dictatorship to learn how to conduct
    themselves.
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    Logre, however, declared that the sections would soon be completely
    organised; and Florent began to assign the different parts that each
    would have to play. One evening, after a final discussion in which he
    again got worsted, Charvet rose up, took his hat, and exclaimed:
    "Well, I'll wish you all good night. You can get your skulls cracked
    if it amuses you; but I would have you understand that I won't take
    any part in the business. I have never abetted anybody's ambition."

    Clemence, who had also risen and was putting on her shawl, coldly
    added: "The plan's absurd."

    Then, as Robine sat watching their departure with a gentle glance,
    Charvet asked him if he were not coming with them; but Robine, having
    still some beer left in his glass, contented himself with shaking
    hands. Charvet and Clemence never returned again; and Lacaille one day
    informed the company that they now frequented a beer-house in the Rue
    Serpente. He had seen them through the window, gesticulating with
    great energy, in the midst of an attentive group of very young men.

    Florent was never able to enlist Claude amongst his supporters. He had
    once entertained the idea of gaining him over to his own political
    views, of making a disciple of him, an assistant in his revolutionary
    task; and in order to initiate him he had taken him one evening to
    Monsieur Lebigre's. Claude, however, spent the whole time in making a
    sketch of Robine, in his hat and chestnut cloak, and with his beard
    resting on the knob of his walking-stick.

    "Really, you know," he said to Florent, as they came away, "all that
    you have been saying inside there doesn't interest me in the least. It
    may be very clever, but, for my own part, I see nothing in it. Still,
    you've got a splendid fellow there, that blessed Robine. He's as deep
    as a well. I'll come with you again some other time, but it won't be
    for politics. I shall make sketches of Logre and Gavard, so as to put
    them with Robine in a picture which I was thinking about while you
    were discussing the question of--what do you call it? eh? Oh, the
    question of the two Chambers. Just fancy, now, a picture of Gavard and
    Logre and Robine talking politics, entrenched behind their glasses of
    beer! It would be the success of the Salon, my dear fellow, an
    overwhelming success, a genuine modern picture!"

    Florent was grieved by the artist's political scepticism; so he took
    him up to his bedroom, and kept him on the narrow balcony in front of
    the bluish mass of the markets, till two o'clock in the morning,
    lecturing him, and telling him that he was no man to show himself so
    indifferent to the happiness of his country.

    "Well, you're perhaps right," replied Claude, shaking his head; "I'm
    an egotist. I can't even say that I paint for the good of my country;
    for, in the first place, my sketches frighten everybody, and then,
    when I'm busy painting, I think about nothing but the pleasure I take
    in it. When I'm painting, it is as though I were tickling myself; it
    makes me laugh all over my body. Well, I can't help it, you know; it's
    my nature to be like that; and you can't expect me to go and drown
    myself in consequence. Besides, France can get on very well without
    me, as my aunt Lisa says. And--may I be quite frank with you?--if I
    like you it's because you seem to me to follow politics just as I
    follow painting. You titillate yourself, my good friend."

    Then, as Florent protested, he continued:

    "Yes, yes; you are an artist in your own way; you dream of politics,
    and I'll wager you spend hours here at night gazing at the stars and
    imagining they are the voting-papers of infinity. And then you
    titillate yourself with your ideas of truth and justice; and this is
    so evidently the case that those ideas of yours cause just as much
    alarm to commonplace middle-class folks as my sketches do. Between
    ourselves, now, do you imagine that if you were Robine I should take
    any pleasure in your friendship? Ah, no, my friend, you are a great
    poet!"

    Then he began to joke on the subject, saying that politics caused him
    no trouble, and that he had got accustomed to hear people discussing
    them in beer shops and studios. This led him to speak of a cafe in the
    Rue Vauvilliers; the cafe on the ground-floor of the house where La
    Sarriette lodged. This smoky place, with its torn, velvet-cushioned
    seats, and marble table-tops discoloured by the drippings from coffee-
    cups, was the chief resort of the young people of the markets.
    Monsieur Jules reigned there over a company of porters, apprentices,
    and gentlemen in white blouses and velvet caps. Two curling "Newgate
    knockers" were glued against his temples; and to keep his neck white
    he had it scraped with a razor every Saturday at a hair-dresser's in
    the Rue des Deux Ecus. At the cafe he gave the tone to his associates,
    especially when he played billiards with studied airs and graces,
    showing off his figure to the best advantage. After the game the
    company would begin to chat. They were a very reactionary set, taking
    a delight in the doings of "society." For his part, Monsieur Jules
    read the lighter boulevardian newspapers, and knew the performers at
    the smaller theatres, talked familiarly of the celebrities of the day,
    and could always tell whether the piece first performed the previous
    evening had been a success or a failure. He had a weakness, however,
    for politics. His ideal man was Morny, as he curtly called him. He
    read the reports of the discussions of the Corps Legislatif, and
    laughed with glee over the slightest words that fell from Morny's
    lips. Ah, Morny was the man to sit upon your rascally republicans! And
    he would assert that only the scum detested the Emperor, for his
    Majesty desired that all respectable people should have a good time of
    it.

    "I've been to the cafe occasionally," Claude said to Florent. "The
    young men there are vastly amusing, with their clay pipes and their
    talk about the Court balls! To hear them chatter you might almost
    fancy they were invited to the Tuileries. La Sarriette's young man was
    making great fun of Gavard the other evening. He called him uncle.
    When La Sarriette came downstairs to look for him she was obliged to
    pay his bill. It cost her six francs, for he had lost at billiards,
    and the drinks they had played for were owing. And now, good night, my
    friend, and pleasant dreams. If ever you become a Minister, I'll give
    you some hints on the beautifying of Paris."

    Florent was obliged to relinquish the hope of making a docile disciple
    of Claude. This was a source of grief to him, for, blinded though he
    was by his fanatical ardour, he at last grew conscious of the ever-
    increasing hostility which surrounded him. Even at the Mehudins' he
    now met with a colder reception: the old woman would laugh slyly;
    Muche no longer obeyed him, and the beautiful Norman cast glances of
    hasty impatience at him, unable as she was to overcome his coldness.
    At the Quenus', too, he had lost Auguste's friendship. The assistant
    no longer came to see him in his room on the way to bed, being greatly
    alarmed by the reports which he heard concerning this man with whom he
    had previously shut himself up till midnight. Augustine had made her
    lover swear that he would never again be guilty of such imprudence;
    however, it was Lisa who turned the young man into Florent's
    determined enemy by begging him and Augustine to defer their marriage
    till her cousin should vacate the little bedroom at the top of the
    house, as she did not want to give that poky dressing-room on the
    first floor to the new shop girl whom she would have to engage. From
    that time forward Auguste was anxious that the "convict" should be
    arrested. He had found such a pork shop as he had long dreamed of, not
    at Plaisance certainly, but at Montrouge, a little farther away. And
    now trade had much improved, and Augustine, with her silly, overgrown
    girl's laugh, said that she was quite ready. So every night, whenever
    some slight noise awoke him, August was thrilled with delight as he
    imagined that the police were at last arresting Florent.

    Nothing was said at the Quenu-Gradelles' about all the rumours which
    circulated. There was a tacit understanding amongst the staff of the
    pork shop to keep silent respecting them in the presence of Quenu. The
    latter, somewhat saddened by the falling-out between his brother and
    his wife, sought consolation in stringing his sausages and salting his
    pork. Sometimes he would come and stand on his door-step, with his red
    face glowing brightly above his white apron, which his increasing
    corpulence stretched quite taut, and never did he suspect all the
    gossip which his appearance set on foot in the markets. Some of the
    women pitied him, and thought that he was losing flesh, though he was,
    indeed, stouter than ever; while others, on the contrary, reproached
    him for not having grown thin with shame at having such a brother as
    Florent. He, however, like one of those betrayed husbands who are
    always the last to know what has befallen them, continued in happy
    ignorance, displaying a light-heartedness which was quite affecting.
    He would stop some neighbour's wife on the footway to ask her if she
    found his brawn or truffled boar's head to her liking, and she would
    at once assume a sympathetic expression, and speak in a condoling way,
    as though all the pork on his premises had got jaundice.

    "What do they all mean by looking at me with such a funereal air?" he
    asked Lisa one day. "Do you think I'm looking ill?"

    Lisa, well aware that he was terribly afraid of illness, and groaned
    and made a dreadful disturbance if he suffered the slightest ailment,
    reassured him on this point, telling him that he was as blooming as a
    rose. The fine pork shop, however, was becoming gloomy; the mirrors
    seemed to pale, the marbles grew frigidly white, and the cooked meats
    on the counter stagnated in yellow fat or lakes of cloudy jelly. One
    day, even, Claude came into the shop to tell his aunt that the display
    in the window looked quite "in the dumps." This was really the truth.
    The Strasburg tongues on their beds of blue paper-shavings had a
    melancholy whiteness of hue, like the tongues of invalids; and the
    whilom chubby hams seemed to be wasting away beneath their mournful
    green top-knots. Inside the shop, too, when customers asked for a
    black-pudding or ten sous' worth of bacon, or half a pound of lard,
    they spoke in subdued, sorrowful voices, as though they were in the
    bed-chamber of a dying man. There were always two or three lachrymose
    women in front of the chilled heating-pan. Beautiful Lisa meantime
    discharged the duties of chief mourner with silent dignity. Her white
    apron fell more primly than ever over her black dress. Her hands,
    scrupulously clean and closely girded at the wrists by long white
    sleevelets, her face with its becoming air of sadness, plainly told
    all the neighbourhood, all the inquisitive gossips who streamed into
    the shop from morning to night, that they, the Quenu-Gradelles, were
    suffering from unmerited misfortune, but that she knew the cause of
    it, and would triumph over it at last. And sometimes she stooped to
    look at the two gold-fish, who also seemed ill at ease as they swam
    languidly around the aquarium in the window, and her glance seemed to
    promise them better days in the future.

    Beautiful Lisa now only allowed herself one indulgence. She fearlessly
    patted Marjolin's satiny chin. The young man had just come out of the
    hospital. His skull had healed, and he looked as fat and merry as
    ever; but even the little intelligence he had possessed had left him,
    he was now quite an idiot. The gash in his skull must have reached his
    brain, for he had become a mere animal. The mind of a child of five
    dwelt in his sturdy frame. He laughed and stammered, he could no
    longer pronounce his words properly, and he was as submissively
    obedient as a sheep. Cadine took entire possession of him again;
    surprised, at first, at the alteration in him, and then quite
    delighted at having this big fellow to do exactly as she liked with.
    He was her doll, her toy, her slave in all respects but one: she could
    not prevent him from going off to Madame Quenu's every now and then.
    She thumped him, but he did not seem to feel her blows; as soon as she
    had slung her basket round her neck, and set off to sell her violets
    in the Rue du Pont Neuf and the Rue de Turbigo, he went to prowl about
    in front of the pork shop.

    "Come in!" Lisa cried to him.

    She generally gave him some gherkins, of which he was extremely fond;
    and he ate them, laughing in a childish way, whilst he stood in front
    of the counter. The sight of the handsome mistress of the shop filled
    him with rapture; he often clapped his hands with joy and began to
    jump about and vent little cries of pleasure, like a child delighted
    at something shown to it. On the first few occasions when he came to
    see her after leaving the hospital Lisa had feared that he might
    remember what had happened.

    "Does your head still hurt you?" she asked him.

    But he swayed about and burst into a merry laugh as he answered no;
    and then Lisa gently inquired: "You had a fall, hadn't you?"

    "Yes, a fall, fall, fall," he sang, in a happy voice, tapping his
    skull the while.

    Then, as though he were in a sort of ecstasy, he continued in
    lingering notes, as he gazed at Lisa, "Beautiful, beautiful,
    beautiful!" This quite touched Madame Quenu. She had prevailed upon
    Gavard to keep him in his service. It was on the occasions when he so
    humbly vented his admiration that she caressed his chin, and told him
    that he was a good lad. He smiled with childish satisfaction, at times
    closing his eyes like some domestic pet fondled by its mistress; and
    Lisa thought to herself that she was making him some compensation for
    the blow with which she had felled him in the cellar of the poultry
    market.

    However, the Quenus' establishment still remained under a cloud.
    Florent sometimes ventured to show himself, and shook hands with his
    brother, while Lisa observed a frigid silence. He even dined with them
    sometimes on Sundays, at long intervals, and Quenu then made great
    efforts at gaiety, but could not succeed in imparting any cheerfulness
    to the meal. He ate badly, and ended by feeling altogether put out.
    One evening, after one of these icy family gatherings, he said to his
    wife with tears in his eyes:

    "What can be the matter with me? Is it true that I'm not ill? Don't
    you really see anything wrong in my appearance? I feel just as though
    I'd got a heavy weight somewhere inside me. And I'm so sad and
    depressed, too, without in the least knowing why. What can it be, do
    you think?"

    "Oh, a little attack of indigestion, I dare say," replied Lisa.

    "No, no; it's been going on too long for that; I feel quite crushed
    down. Yet the business is going on all right; I've no great worries,
    and I am leading just the same steady life as ever. But you, too, my
    dear, don't look well; you seem melancholy. If there isn't a change
    for the better soon, I shall send for the doctor."

    Lisa looked at him with a grave expression.

    "There's no need of a doctor," she said, "things will soon be all
    right again. There's something unhealthy in the atmosphere just now.
    All the neighbourhood is unwell." Then, as if yielding to an impulse
    of anxious affection, she added: "Don't worry yourself, my dear. I
    can't have you falling ill; that would be the crowning blow."

    As a rule she sent him back to the kitchen, knowing that the noise of
    the choppers, the tuneful simmering of the fat, and the bubbling of
    the pans had a cheering effect upon him. In this way, too, she kept
    him at a distance from the indiscreet chatter of Mademoiselle Saget,
    who now spent whole mornings in the shop. The old maid seemed bent on
    arousing Lisa's alarm, and thus driving her to some extreme step. She
    began by trying to obtain her confidence.

    "What a lot of mischievous folks there are about!" she exclaimed;
    "folks who would be much better employed in minding their own
    business. If you only knew, my dear Madame Quenu--but no, really, I
    should never dare to repeat such things to you."

    And, as Madame Quenu replied that she was quite indifferent to gossip,
    and that it had no effect upon her, the old maid whispered into her
    ear across the counter: "Well, people say, you know, that Monsieur
    Florent isn't your cousin at all."

    Then she gradually allowed Lisa to see that she knew the whole story;
    by way of proving that she had her quite at her mercy. When Lisa
    confessed the truth, equally as a matter of diplomacy, in order that
    she might have the assistance of some one who would keep her well
    posted in all the gossip of the neighbourhood, the old maid swore that
    for her own part she would be as mute as a fish, and deny the truth of
    the reports about Florent, even if she were to be led to the stake for
    it. And afterwards this drama brought her intense enjoyment; every
    morning she came to the shop with some fresh piece of disturbing news.

    "You must be careful," she whispered one day; "I have just heard two
    women in the tripe market talking about you know what. I can't
    interrupt people and tell them they are lying, you know. It would look
    so strange. But the story's got about, and it's spreading farther
    every day. It can't be stopped now, I fear; the truth will have to
    come out."

    A few days later she returned to the assault in all earnest. She made
    her appearance looking quite scared, and waited impatiently till there
    was no one in the shop, when she burst out in her sibilant voice:

    "Do you know what people are saying now? Well, they say that all those
    men who meet at Monsieur Lebigre's have got guns, and are going to
    break out again as they did in '48. It's quite distressing to see such
    a worthy man as Monsieur Gavard--rich, too, and so respectable--
    leaguing himself with such scoundrels! I was very anxious to let you
    know, on account of your brother-in-law."

    "Oh, it's mere nonsense, I'm sure; it can't be serious," rejoined
    Lisa, just to incite the old maid to tell her more.

    "Not serious, indeed! Why, when one passes along the Rue Pirouette in
    the evening one can hear them screaming out in the most dreadful way.
    Oh! they make no mystery of it all. You know yourself how they tried
    to corrupt your husband. And the cartridges which I have seen them
    making from my own window, are they mere nonsense? Well, well, I'm
    only telling you this for your own good."

    "Oh! I'm sure of that, and I'm very much obliged to you," replied
    Lisa; "but people do invent such stories, you know."

    "Ah, but this is no invention, unfortunately. The whole neighbourhood
    is talking of it. It is said, too, that if the police discover the
    matter there will be a great many people compromised--Monsieur Gavard,
    for instance."

    Madame Quenu shrugged her shoulders as though to say that Monsieur
    Gavard was an old fool, and that it would do him good to be locked up.

    "Well, I merely mention Monsieur Gavard as I might mention any of the
    others, your brother-in-law, for instance," resumed the old maid with
    a wily glance. "Your brother-in-law is the leader, it seems. That's
    very annoying for you, and I'm very sorry indeed; for if the police
    were to make a descent here they might march Monsieur Quenu off as
    well. Two brothers, you know, they're like two fingers of the same
    hand."

    Beautiful Lisa protested against this, but she turned very pale, for
    Mademoiselle Saget's last thrust had touched a vulnerable point. From
    that day forward the old maid was ever bringing her stories of
    innocent people who had been thrown into prison for extending
    hospitality to criminal scoundrels. In the evening, when La Saget went
    to get her black-currant syrup at the wine dealer's, she prepared her
    budget for the next morning. Rose was but little given to gossiping,
    and the old main reckoned chiefly on her own eyes and ears. She had
    been struck by Monsieur Lebigre's extremely kind and obliging manner
    towards Florent, his eagerness to keep him at his establishment, all
    the polite civilities, for which the little money which the other
    spent in the house could never recoup him. And this conduct of
    Monsieur Lebigre's surprised her the more as she was aware of the
    position in which the two men stood in respect to the beautiful
    Norman.

    "It looks as though Lebigre were fattening him up for sale," she
    reflected. "Whom can he want to sell him to, I wonder?"

    One evening when she was in the bar she saw Logre fling himself on the
    bench in the sanctum, and heard him speak of his perambulations
    through the faubourgs, with the remark that he was dead beat. She cast
    a hasty glance at his feet, and saw that there was not a speck of dust
    on his boots. Then she smiled quietly, and went off with her black-
    currant syrup, her lips closely compressed.

    She used to complete her budget of information on getting back to her
    window. It was very high up, commanding a view of all the neighbouring
    houses, and proved a source of endless enjoyment to her. She was
    constantly installed at it, as though it were an observatory from
    which she kept watch upon everything that went on in the
    neighbourhood. She was quite familiar with all the rooms opposite her,
    both on the right and the left, even to the smallest details of their
    furniture. She could have described, without the least omission, the
    habits of their tenants, have related if the latter's homes were happy
    or the contrary, have told when and how they washed themselves, what
    they had for dinner, and who it was that came to see them. Then she
    obtained a side view of the markets, and not a woman could walk along
    the Rue Rambuteau without being seen by her; and she could have
    correctly stated whence the woman had come and whither she was going,
    what she had got in her basket, and, in short, every detail about her,
    her husband, her clothes, her children, and her means. "That's Madame
    Loret, over there; she's giving her son a fine education; that's
    Madame Hutin, a poor little woman who's dreadfully neglected by her
    husband; that's Mademoiselle Cecile, the butcher's daughter, a girl
    that no one will marry because she's scrofulous." In this way she
    could have continued jerking out biographical scraps for days
    together, deriving extraordinary amusement from the most trivial,
    uninteresting incidents. However, as soon as eight o'clock struck, she
    only had eyes for the frosted "cabinet" window on which appeared the
    black shadows of the coterie of politicians. She discovered the
    secession of Charvet and Clemence by missing their bony silhouettes
    from the milky transparency. Not an incident occurred in that room but
    she sooner or later learnt it by some sudden motion of those silent
    arms and heads. She acquired great skill in interpretation, and could
    divine the meaning of protruding noses, spreading fingers, gaping
    mouths, and shrugging shoulders; and in this way she followed the
    progress of the conspiracy step by step, in such wise that she could
    have told day by day how matters stood. One evening the terrible
    outcome of it all was revealed to her. She saw the shadow of Gavard's
    revolver, a huge silhouette with pointed muzzle showing very blackly
    against the glimmering window. It kept appearing and disappearing so
    rapidly that it seemed as though the room was full of revolvers. Those
    were the firearms of which Mademoiselle Saget had spoken to Madame
    Quenu. On another evening she was much puzzled by the sight of endless
    lengths of some material or other, and came to the conclusion that the
    men must be manufacturing cartridges. The next morning, however, she
    made her appearance in the wine shop by eleven o'clock, on the pretext
    of asking Rose if she could let her have a candle, and, glancing
    furtively into the little sanctum, she espied a heap of red material
    lying on the table. This greatly alarmed her, and her next budget of
    news was one of decisive gravity.

    "I don't want to alarm you, Madame Quenu," she said, "but matters are
    really looking very serious. Upon my word, I'm quite alarmed. You must
    on no account repeat what I am going to confide to you. They would
    murder me if they knew I had told you."

    Then, when Lisa had sworn to say nothing that might compromise her,
    she told her about the red material.

    "I can't think what it can be. There was a great heap of it. It looked
    just like rags soaked in blood. Logre, the hunchback, you know, put
    one of the pieces over his shoulder. He looked like a headsman. You
    may be sure this is some fresh trickery or other."

    Lisa made no reply, but seemed deep in thought whilst with lowered
    eyes, she handled a fork and mechanically arranged some piece of salt
    pork on a dish.

    "If I were you," resumed Mademoiselle Saget softly, "I shouldn't be
    easy in mind; I should want to know the meaning of it all. Why
    shouldn't you go upstairs and examine your brother-in-law's bedroom?"

    At this Lisa gave a slight start, let the fork drop, and glanced
    uneasily at the old maid, believing that she had discovered her
    intentions. But the other continued: "You would certainly be justified
    in doing so. There's no knowing into what danger your brother-in-law
    may lead you, if you don't put a check on him. They were talking about
    you yesterday at Madame Taboureau's. Ah! you have a most devoted
    friend in her. Madame Taboureau said that you were much too easy-
    going, and that if she were you she would have put an end to all this
    long ago."

    "Madame Taboureau said that?" murmured Lisa thoughtfully.

    "Yes, indeed she did; and Madame Taboureau is a woman whose advice is
    worth listening to. Try to find out the meaning of all those red
    bands; and if you do, you'll tell me, won't you?"

    Lisa, however, was no longer listening to her. She was gazing
    abstractedly at the edible snails and Gervais cheeses between the
    festoons of sausages in the window. She seemed absorbed in a mental
    conflict, which brought two little furrows to her brow. The old maid,
    however, poked her nose over the dishes on the counter.

    "Ah, some slices of saveloy!" she muttered, as though she were
    speaking to herself. "They'll get very dry cut up like that. And that
    black-pudding's broken, I see--a fork's been stuck into it, I expect.
    It might be taken away--it's soiling the dish."

    Lisa, still absent-minded, gave her the black-pudding and slices of
    saveloy. "You may take them," she said, "if you would care for them."

    The black bag swallowed them up. Mademoiselle Saget was so accustomed
    to receiving presents that she had actually ceased to return thanks
    for them. Every morning she carried away all the scraps of the pork
    shop. And now she went off with the intention of obtaining her dessert
    from La Sarriette and Madame Lecoeur, by gossiping to them about
    Gavard.

    When Lisa was alone again she installed herself on the bench, behind
    the counter, as though she thought she would be able to come to a
    sounder decision if she were comfortably seated. For the last week she
    had been very anxious. Florent had asked Quenu for five hundred francs
    one evening, in the easy, matter-of-course way of a man who had money
    lying to his credit at the pork shop. Quenu referred him to his wife.
    This was distasteful to Florent, who felt somewhat uneasy on applying
    to beautiful Lisa. But she immediately went up to her bedroom, brought
    the money down and gave it to him, without saying a word, or making
    the least inquiry as to what he intended to do with it. She merely
    remarked that she had made a note of the payment on the paper
    containing the particulars of Florent's share of the inheritance.
    Three days later he took a thousand francs.

    "It was scarcely worth while trying to make himself out so
    disinterested," Lisa said to Quenu that night, as they went to bed. "I
    did quite right, you see, in keeping the account. By the way, I
    haven't noted down the thousand francs I gave him to-day."

    She sat down at the secretaire, and glanced over the page of figures.
    Then she added: "I did well to leave a blank space. I'll put down what
    I pay him on the margin. You'll see, now, he'll fritter it all away by
    degrees. That's what I've been expecting for a long time past."

    Quenu said nothing, but went to bed feeling very much put out. Every
    time that his wife opened the secretaire the drawer gave out a
    mournful creak which pierced his heart. He even thought of
    remonstrating with his brother, and trying to prevent him from ruining
    himself with the Mehudins; but when the time came, he did not dare to
    do it. Two days later Florent asked for another fifteen hundred
    francs. Logre had said one evening that things would ripen much faster
    if they could only get some money. The next day he was enchanted to
    find these words of his, uttered quite at random, result in the
    receipt of a little pile of gold, which he promptly pocketed,
    sniggering as he did so, and his hunch fairly shaking with delight.
    From that time forward money was constantly being needed: one section
    wished to hire a room where they could meet, while another was
    compelled to provide for various needy patriots. Then there were arms
    and ammunition to be purchased, men to be enlisted, and private police
    expenses. Florent would have paid for anything. He had bethought
    himself of Uncle Gradelle's treasure, and recalled La Normande's
    advice. So he made repeated calls upon Lisa's secretaire, being merely
    kept in check by the vague fear with which his sister-in-law's grave
    face inspired him. Never, thought he, could he have spent his money in
    a holier cause. Logre now manifested the greatest enthusiasm, and wore
    the most wonderful rose-coloured neckerchiefs and the shiniest of
    varnished boots, the sight of which made Lacaille glower blackly.

    "That makes three thousand francs in seven days," Lisa remarked to
    Quenu. "What do you think of that? A pretty state of affairs, isn't
    it? If he goes on at this rate his fifty thousand francs will last him
    barely four months. And yet it took old Gradelle forty years to put
    his fortune together!"

    "It's all your own fault!" cried Quenu. "There was no occasion for you
    to say anything to him about the money."

    Lisa gave her husband a severe glance. "It is his own," she said; "and
    he is entitled to take it all. It's not the giving him the money that
    vexes me, but the knowledge that he must make a bad use of it. I tell
    you again, as I have been telling you for a long time past, all this
    must come to an end."

    "Do whatever you like; I won't prevent you," at last exclaimed the
    pork butcher, who was tortured by his cupidity.

    He still loved his brother; but the thought of fifty thousand francs
    squandered in four months was agony to him. As for his wife, after all
    Mademoiselle Saget's chattering she guessed what became of the money.
    The old maid having ventured to refer to the inheritance, Lisa had
    taken advantage of the opportunity to let the neighbourhood know that
    Florent was drawing his share, and spending it after his own fashion.

    It was on the following day that the story of the strips of red
    material impelled Lisa to take definite actin. For a few moments she
    remained struggling with herself whilst gazing at the depressed
    appearance of the shop. The sides of pork hung all around in a sullen
    fashion, and Mouton, seated beside a bowl of fat, displayed the
    ruffled coat and dim eyes of a cat who no longer digests his meals in
    peace. Thereupon Lisa called to Augustine and told her to attend to
    the counter, and she herself went up to Florent's room.

    When she entered it, she received quite a shock. The bed, hitherto so
    spotless, was quite ensanguined by a bundle of long red scarves
    dangling down to the floor. On the mantelpiece, between the gilt
    cardboard boxes and the old pomatum-pots, were several red armlets and
    clusters of red cockades, looking like pools of blood. And hanging
    from every nail and peg against the faded grey wallpaper were pieces
    of bunting, square flags--yellow, blue, green, and black--in which
    Lisa recognised the distinguishing banners of the twenty sections. The
    childish simplicity of the room seemed quite scared by all this
    revolutionary decoration. The aspect of guileless stupidity which the
    shop girl had left behind her, the white innocence of the curtains and
    furniture, now glared as with the reflection of a fire; while the
    photograph of Auguste and Augustine looked white with terror. Lisa
    walked round the room, examining the flags, the armlets, and the
    scarves, without touching any of them, as though she feared that the
    dreadful things might burn her. She was reflecting that she had not
    been mistaken, that it was indeed on these and similar things that
    Florent's money had been spent. And to her this seemed an utter
    abomination, an incredibility which set her whole being surging with
    indignation. To think that her money, that money which had been so
    honestly earned, was being squandered to organise and defray the
    expenses of an insurrection!

    She stood there, gazing at the expanded blossoms of the pomegranate on
    the balcony--blossoms which seemed to her like an additional supply of
    crimson cockades--and listening to the sharp notes of the chaffinch,
    which resembled the echo of a distant fusillade. And then it struck
    her that the insurrection might break out the next day, or perhaps
    that very evening. She fancied she could see the banners streaming in
    the air and the scarves advancing in line, while a sudden roll of
    drums broke on her ear. Then she hastily went downstairs again,
    without even glancing at the papers which were lying on the table. She
    stopped on the first floor, went into her own room, and dressed
    herself.

    In this critical emergency Lisa arranged her hair with scrupulous care
    and perfect calmness. She was quite resolute; not a quiver of
    hesitation disturbed her; but a sterner expression than usual had come
    into her eyes. As she fastened her black silk dress, straining the
    waistband with all the strength of her fingers, she recalled Abbe
    Roustan's words; and she questioned herself, and her conscience
    answered that she was going to fulfil a duty. By the time she drew her
    broidered shawl round her broad shoulders, she felt that she was about
    to perform a deed of high morality. She put on a pair of dark mauve
    gloves, secured a thick veil to her bonnet; and before leaving the
    room she double-locked the secretaire, with a hopeful expression on
    her face which seemed to say that that much worried piece of furniture
    would at last be able to sleep in peace again.

    Quenu was exhibiting his white paunch at the shop door when his wife
    came down. He was surprised to see her going out in full dress at ten
    o'clock in the morning. "Hallo! Where are you off to?" he asked.

    She pretended that she was going out with Madame Taboureau, and added
    that she would call at the Gaite Theatre to buy some tickets. Quenu
    hurried after her to tell her to secure some front seats, so that they
    might be able to see well. Then, as he returned to the shop, Lisa made
    her way to the cab-stand opposite St. Eustache, got into a cab, pulled
    down the blinds, and told the driver to go to the Gaite Theatre. She
    felt afraid of being followed. When she had booked two seats, however,
    she directed the cabman to drive her to the Palais de Justice. There,
    in front of the gate, she discharged him, and then quietly made her
    way through the halls and corridors to the Prefecture of Police.

    She soon lost herself in a noisy crowd of police officers and
    gentlemen in long frock-coats, but at last gave a man half a franc to
    guide her to the Prefect's rooms. She found, however, that the Prefect
    only received such persons as came with letters of audience; and she
    was shown into a small apartment, furnished after the style of a
    boarding-house parlour. A fat, bald-headed official, dressed in black
    from head to foot, received her there with sullen coldness. What was
    her business? he inquired. Thereupon she raised her veil, gave her
    name, and told her story, clearly and distinctly, without a pause. The
    bald man listened with a weary air.

    "You are this man's sister-in-law, are you not?" he inquired, when she
    had finished.

    "Yes," Lisa candidly replied. "We are honest, straight-forward people,
    and I am anxious that my husband should not be compromised."

    The official shrugged his shoulders, as though to say that the whole
    affair was a great nuisance.

    "Do you know," he said impatiently, "that I have been pestered with
    this business for more than a year past? Denunciation after
    denunciation has been sent to me, and I am being continually goaded
    and pressed to take action. You will understand that if I haven't done
    so as yet, it is because I prefer to wait. We have good reasons for
    our conduct in the matter. Stay, now, here are the papers relating to
    it. I'll let you see them."

    He laid before her an immense collection of papers in a blue wrapper.
    Lisa turned them over. They were like detached chapters of the story
    she had just been relating. The commissaires of police at Havre,
    Rouen, and Vernon notified Florent's arrival within their respective
    jurisdictions. Then came a report which announced that he had taken up
    his residence with the Quenu-Gradelles. Next followed his appointment
    at the markets, an account of his mode of life, the spending of his
    evenings at Monsieur Lebigre's; not a detail was deficient. Lisa,
    quite astounded as she was, noticed that the reports were in
    duplicate, so that they must have emanated from two different sources.
    And at last she came upon a pile of letters, anonymous letters of
    every shape, and in every description of handwriting. They brought her
    amazement to a climax. In one letter she recognised the villainous
    hand of Mademoiselle Saget, denouncing the people who met in the
    little sanctum at Lebigre's. On a large piece of greasy paper she
    identified the heavy pot-hooks of Madame Lecoeur; and there was also a
    sheet of cream-laid note-paper, ornamented with a yellow pansy, and
    covered with the scrawls of La Sarriette and Monsieur Jules. These two
    letters warned the Government to beware of Gavard. Farther on Lisa
    recognised the coarse style of old Madame Mehudin, who in four pages
    of almost indecipherable scribble repeated all the wild stories about
    Florent that circulated in the markets. However, what startled her
    more than anything else was the discovery of a bill-head of her own
    establishment, with the inscription /Quenu-Gradelle, Pork Butcher/, on
    its face, whilst on the back of it Auguste had penned a denunciation
    of the man whom he looked upon as an obstacle to his marriage.

    The official had acted upon a secret idea in placing these papers
    before her. "You don't recognise any of these handwritings, do you?"
    he asked.

    "No," she stammered, rising from her seat, quite oppressed by what she
    had just learned; and she hastily pulled down her veil again to
    conceal the blush of confusion which was rising to her cheeks. Her
    silk dress rustled, and her dark gloves disappeared beneath her heavy
    shawl.

    "You see, madame," said the bald man with a faint smile, "your
    information comes a little late. But I promise you that your visit
    shall not be forgotten. And tell your husband not to stir. It is
    possible that something may happen soon that----"

    He did not complete his sentence, but, half rising from his armchair,
    made a slight bow to Lisa. It was a dismissal, and she took her leave.
    In the ante-room she caught sight of Logre and Monsieur Lebigre, who
    hastily turned their faces away; but she was more disturbed than they
    were. She went her way through the halls and along the corridors,
    feeling as if she were in the clutches of this system of police which,
    it now seemed to her, saw and knew everything. At last she came out
    upon the Place Dauphine. When she reached the Quai de l'Horloge she
    slackened her steps, and felt refreshed by the cool breeze blowing
    from the Seine.

    She now had a keen perception of the utter uselessness of what she had
    done. Her husband was in no danger whatever; and this thought, whilst
    relieving her, left her a somewhat remorseful feeling. She was
    exasperated with Auguste and the women who had put her in such a
    ridiculous position. She walked on yet more slowly, watching the Seine
    as it flowed past. Barges, black with coal-dust, were floating down
    the greenish water; and all along the bank anglers were casting their
    lines. After all, it was not she who had betrayed Florent. This
    reflection suddenly occurred to her and astonished her. Would she have
    been guilty of a wicked action, then, if she had been his betrayer?
    She was quite perplexed; surprised at the possibility of her
    conscience having deceived her. Those anonymous letters seemed
    extremely base. She herself had gone openly to the authorities, given
    her name, and saved innocent people from being compromised. Then at
    the sudden thought of old Gradelle's fortune she again examined
    herself, and felt ready to throw the money into the river if such a
    course should be necessary to remove the blight which had fallen on
    the pork shop. No, she was not avaricious, she was sure she wasn't; it
    was no thought of money that had prompted her in what she had just
    done. As she crossed the Pont au Change she grew quite calm again,
    recovering all her superb equanimity. On the whole, it was much
    better, she felt, that others should have anticipated her at the
    Prefecture. She would not have to deceive Quenu, and she would sleep
    with an easier conscience.

    "Have you booked the seats?" Quenu asked her when she returned home.

    He wanted to see the tickets, and made Lisa explain to him the exact
    position the seats occupied in the dress-circle. Lisa had imagined
    that the police would make a descent upon the house immediately after
    receiving her information, and her proposal to go to the theatre had
    only been a wily scheme for getting Quenu out of the way while the
    officers were arresting Florent. She had contemplated taking him for
    an outing in the afternoon--one of those little jaunts which they
    occasionally allowed themselves. They would then drive in an open cab
    to the Bois de Boulogne, dine at a restaurant, and amuse themselves
    for an hour or two at some cafe concern. But there was no need to go
    out now, she thought; so she spent the rest of the day behind her
    counter, with a rosy glow on her face, and seeming brighter and gayer,
    as though she were recovering from some indisposition.

    "You see, I told you it was fresh air you wanted!" exclaimed Quenu.
    "Your walk this morning has brightened you up wonderfully!"

    "No, indeed," she said after a pause, again assuming her look of
    severity; "the streets of Paris are not at all healthy places."

    In the evening they went to the Gaite to see the performance of "La
    Grace de Dieu." Quenu, in a frock-coat and drab gloves, with his hair
    carefully pomatumed and combed, was occupied most of the time in
    hunting for the names of the performers in the programme. Lisa looked
    superb in her low dress as she rested her hands in their tight-fitting
    white gloves on the crimson velvet balustrade. They were both of them
    deeply affected by the misfortunes of Marie. The commander, they
    thought, was certainly a desperate villain; while Pierrot made them
    laugh from the first moment of his appearance on the stage. But at
    last Madame Quenu cried. The departure of the child, the prayer in the
    maiden's chamber, the return of the poor mad creature, moistened her
    eyes with gentle tears, which she brushed away with her handkerchief.

    However, the pleasure which the evening afforded her turned into a
    feeling of triumph when she caught sight of La Normande and her mother
    sitting in the upper gallery. She thereupon puffed herself out more
    than ever, sent Quenu off to the refreshment bar for a box of
    caramels, and began to play with her fan, a mother-of-pearl fan,
    elaborately gilt. The fish-girl was quite crushed; and bent her head
    down to listen to her mother, who was whispering to her. When the
    performance was over and beautiful Lisa and the beautiful Norman met
    in the vestibule they exchanged a vague smile.

    Florent had dined early at Monsieur Lebigre's that day. He was
    expecting Logre, who had promised to introduce to him a retired
    sergeant, a capable man, with whom they were to discuss the plan of
    attack upon the Palais Bourbon and the Hotel de Ville. The night
    closed in, and the fine rain, which had begun to fall in the
    afternoon, shrouded the vast markets in a leaden gloom. They loomed
    darkly against the copper-tinted sky, while wisps of murky cloud
    skimmed by almost on a level with the roofs, looking as though they
    were caught and torn by the points of the lightning-conductors.
    Florent felt depressed by the sight of the muddy streets, and the
    streaming yellowish rain which seemed to sweep the twilight away and
    extinguish it in the mire. He watched the crowds of people who had
    taken refuge on the foot-pavements of the covered ways, the umbrellas
    flitting past in the downpour, and the cabs that dashed with increased
    clatter and speed along the wellnigh deserted roads. Presently there
    was a rift in the clouds; and a red glow arose in the west. Then a
    whole army of street-sweepers came into sight at the end of the Rue
    Montmartre, driving a lake of liquid mud before them with their
    brooms.

    Logre did not turn up with the sergeant; Gavard had gone to dine with
    some friends at Batignolles, and so Florent was reduced to spending
    the evening alone with Robine. He had all the talking to himself, and
    ended by feeling very low-spirited. His companion merely wagged his
    beard, and stretched out his hand every quarter of an hour to raise
    his glass of beer to his lips. At last Florent grew so bored that he
    went off to bed. Robine, however, though left to himself, still
    lingered there, contemplating his glass with an expression of deep
    thought. Rose and the waiter, who had hoped to shut up early, as the
    coterie of politicians was absent, had to wait a long half hour before
    he at last made up his mind to leave.

    When Florent got to his room, he felt afraid to go to bed. He was
    suffering from one of those nervous attacks which sometimes plunged
    him into horrible nightmares until dawn. On the previous day he had
    been to Clamart to attend the funeral of Monsieur Verlaque, who had
    died after terrible sufferings; and he still felt sad at the
    recollection of the narrow coffin which he had seen lowered into the
    earth. Nor could he banish from his mind the image of Madame Verlaque,
    who, with a tearful voice, though there was not a tear in her eyes,
    kept following him and speaking to him about the coffin, which was not
    paid for, and of the cost of the funeral, which she was quite at a
    loss about, as she had not a copper in the place, for the druggist, on
    hearing of her husband's death on the previous day, had insisted upon
    his bill being paid. So Florent had been obliged to advance the money
    for the coffin and other funeral expenses, and had even given the
    gratuities to the mutes. Just as he was going away, Madame Verlaque
    looked at him with such a heartbroken expression that he left her
    twenty francs.

    And now Monsieur Verlaque's death worried him very much. It affected
    his situation in the markets. He might lose his berth, or perhaps be
    formally appointed inspector. In either case he foresaw vexatious
    complications which might arouse the suspicions of the police. He
    would have been delighted if the insurrection could have broken out
    the very next day, so that he might at once have tossed the laced cap
    of his inspectorship into the streets. With his mind full of harassing
    thoughts like these, he stepped out upon the balcony, as though
    soliciting of the warm night some whiff of air to cool his fevered
    brow. The rain had laid the wind, and a stormy heat still reigned
    beneath the deep blue, cloudless heavens. The markets, washed by the
    downpour, spread out below him, similar in hue to the sky, and, like
    the sky, studded with the yellow stars of their gas lamps.

    Leaning on the iron balustrade, Florent recollected that sooner or
    later he would certainly be punished for having accepted the
    inspectorship. It seemed to lie like a stain on his life. He had
    become an official of the Prefecture, forswearing himself, serving the
    Empire in spite of all the oaths he had taken in his exile. His
    anxiety to please Lisa, the charitable purpose to which he had devoted
    the salary he received, the just and scrupulous manner in which he had
    always struggled to carry out his duties, no longer seemed to him
    valid excuses for his base abandonment of principle. If he had
    suffered in the midst of all that sleek fatness, he had deserved to
    suffer. And before him arose a vision of the evil year which he had
    just spent, his persecution by the fish-wives, the sickening
    sensations he had felt on close, damp days, the continuous indigestion
    which had afflicted his delicate stomach, and the latent hostility
    which was gathering strength against him. All these things he now
    accepted as chastisement. That dull rumbling of hostility and spite,
    the cause of which he could not divine, must forebode some coming
    catastrophe before whose approach he already stooped, with the shame
    of one who knows there is a transgression that he must expiate. Then
    he felt furious with himself as he thought of the popular rising he
    was preparing; and reflected that he was no longer unsullied enough to
    achieve success.

    In how many dreams he had indulged in that lofty little room, with his
    eyes wandering over the spreading roofs of the market pavilions! They
    usually appeared to him like grey seas that spoke to him of far-off
    countries. On moonless nights they would darken and turn into stagnant
    lakes of black and pestilential water. But on bright nights they
    became shimmering fountains of light, the moonbeams streaming over
    both tiers like water, gliding along the huge plates of zinc, and
    flowing over the edges of the vast superposed basins. Then frosty
    weather seemed to turn these roofs into rigid ice, like the Norwegian
    bays over which skaters skim; while the warm June nights lulled them
    into deep sleep. One December night, on opening his window, he had
    seen them white with snow, so lustrously white that they lighted up
    the coppery sky. Unsullied by a single footstep, they then stretched
    out like the lonely plains of the Far North, where never a sledge
    intrudes. Their silence was beautiful, their soft peacefulness
    suggestive of innocence.

    And at each fresh aspect of the ever-changing panorama before him,
    Florent yielded to dreams which were now sweet, now full of bitter
    pain. The snow calmed him; the vast sheet of whiteness seemed to him
    like a veil of purity thrown over the filth of the markets. The
    bright, clear nights, the shimmering moonbeams, carried him away into
    the fairy-land of story-books. It was only the dark, black nights, the
    burning nights of June, when he beheld, as it were, a miasmatic marsh,
    the stagnant water of a dead and accursed sea, that filled him with
    gloom and grief; and then ever the same dreadful visions haunted his
    brain.

    The markets were always there. He could never open the window and rest
    his elbows on the balustrade without having them before him, filling
    the horizon. He left the pavilions in the evening only to behold their
    endless roofs as he went to bed. They shut him off from the rest of
    Paris, ceaselessly intruded their huge bulk upon him, entered into
    every hour of his life. That night again horrible fancies came to him,
    fancies aggravated by the vague forebodings of evil which distressed
    him. The rain of the afternoon had filled the markets with malodorous
    dampness, and as they wallowed there in the centre of the city, like
    some drunken man lying, after his last bottle, under the table, they
    cast all their foul breath into his face. He seemed to see a thick
    vapour rising up from each pavilion. In the distance the meat and
    tripe markets reeked with the sickening steam of blood; nearer in, the
    vegetable and fruit pavilions diffused the odour of pungent cabbages,
    rotten apples, and decaying leaves; the butter and cheese exhaled a
    poisonous stench; from the fish market came a sharp, fresh gust; while
    from the ventilator in the tower of the poultry pavilion just below
    him, he could see a warm steam issuing, a fetid current rising in
    coils like the sooty smoke from a factory chimney. And all these
    exhalations coalesced above the roofs, drifted towards the
    neighbouring houses, and spread themselves out in a heavy cloud which
    stretched over the whole of Paris. It was as though the markets were
    bursting within their tight belt of iron, were beating the slumber of
    the gorged city with the stertorous fumes of their midnight
    indigestion.

    However, on the footway down below Florent presently heard a sound of
    voices, the laughter of happy folks. Then the door of the passage was
    closed noisily. It was Quenu and Lisa coming home from the theatre.
    Stupefied and intoxicated, as it were, by the atmosphere he was
    breathing, Florent thereupon left the balcony, his nerves still
    painfully excited by the thought of the tempest which he could feel
    gathering round his head. The source of his misery was yonder, in
    those markets, heated by the day's excesses. He closed the window with
    violence, and left them wallowing in the darkness, naked and
    perspiring beneath the stars.
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    Chapter VI


    A week later, Florent thought that he would at last be able to proceed
    to action. A sufficiently serious outburst of public dissatisfaction
    furnished an opportunity for launching his insurrectionary forces upon
    Paris. The Corps Legislatif, whose members had lately shown great
    variance of opinion respecting certain grants to the Imperial family,
    was now discussing a bill for the imposition of a very unpopular tax,
    at which the lower orders had already begun to growl. The Ministry,
    fearing a defeat, was straining every nerve. It was probable, thought
    Florent, that no better pretext for a rising would for a long time
    present itself.

    One morning, at daybreak, he went to reconnoitre the neighbourhood of
    the Palais Bourbon. He forgot all about his duties as inspector, and
    lingered there, studying the approaches of the palace, till eight
    o'clock, without ever thinking that his absence would revolutionise
    the fish market. He perambulated all the surrounding streets, the Rue
    de Lille, the Rue de l'Universite, the Rue de Bourgogne, the Rue Saint
    Dominique, and even extended his examination to the Esplanade des
    Invalides, stopping at certain crossways, and measuring distances as
    he walked along. Then, on coming back to the Quai d'Orsay, he sat down
    on the parapet, and determined that the attack should be made
    simultaneously from all sides. The contingents from the Gros-Caillou
    district should arrive by way of the Champ de Mars; the sections from
    the north of Paris should come down by the Madeleine; while those from
    the west and the south would follow the quays, or make their way in
    small detachments through the then narrow streets of the Faubourg
    Saint Germain. However, the other side of the river, the Champs
    Elysees, with their open avenues, caused him some uneasiness; for he
    foresaw that cannon would be stationed there to sweep the quays. He
    thereupon modified several details of his plan, and marked down in a
    memorandum-book the different positions which the several sections
    should occupy during the combat. The chief attack, he concluded, must
    certainly be made from the Rue de Bourgogne and the Rue de
    l'Universite, while a diversion might be effected on the side of the
    river.

    Whilst he thus pondered over his plans the eight o'clock sun, warming
    the nape of his neck, shone gaily on the broad footways, and gilded
    the columns of the great structure in front of him. In imagination he
    already saw the contemplated battle; clusters of men clinging round
    those columns, the gates burst open, the peristyle invaded; and then
    scraggy arms suddenly appearing high aloft and planting a banner
    there.

    At last he slowly went his way homewards again with his gaze fixed
    upon the ground. But all at once a cooing sound made him look up, and
    he saw that he was passing through the garden of the Tuileries. A
    number of wood-pigeons, bridling their necks, were strutting over a
    lawn near by. Florent leant for a moment against the tub of an orange-
    tree, and looked at the grass and the pigeons steeped in sunshine.
    Right ahead under the chestnut-trees all was black. The garden was
    wrapped in a warm silence, broken only by the distant rumbling which
    came from behind the railings of the Rue de Rivoli. The scent of all
    the greenery affected Florent, reminding him of Madame Francois.
    However, a little girl ran past, trundling a hoop, and alarmed the
    pigeons. They flew off, and settled in a row on the arm of a marble
    statue of an antique wrestler standing in the middle of the lawn, and
    once more, but with less vivacity, they began to coo and bridle their
    necks.

    As Florent was returning to the markets by way of the Rue Vauvilliers,
    he heard Claude Lantier calling to him. The artist was going down into
    the basement of the poultry pavilion. "Come with me!" he cried. "I'm
    looking for that brute Marjolin."

    Florent followed, glad to forget his thoughts and to defer his return
    to the fish market for a little longer. Claude told him that his
    friend Marjolin now had nothing further to wish for: he had become an
    utter animal. Claude entertained an idea of making him pose on all-
    fours in future. Whenever he lost his temper over some disappointing
    sketch he came to spend whole hours in the idiot's company, never
    speaking, but striving to catch his expression when he laughed.

    "He'll be feeding his pigeons, I dare say," he said; "but
    unfortunately I don't know whereabouts Monsieur Gavard's storeroom
    is."

    They groped about the cellar. In the middle of it some water was
    trickling from a couple of taps in the dim gloom. The storerooms here
    are reserved for pigeons exclusively, and all along the trellising
    they heard faint cooings, like the hushed notes of birds nestling
    under the leaves when daylight is departing. Claude began to laugh as
    he heard it.

    "It sounds as though all the lovers in Paris were embracing each other
    inside here, doesn't it?" he exclaimed to his companion.

    However, they could not find a single storeroom open, and were
    beginning to think that Marjolin could not be in the cellar, when a
    sound of loud, smacking kisses made them suddenly halt before a door
    which stood slightly ajar. Claude pulled it open and beheld Marjolin,
    whom Cadine was kissing, whilst he, a mere dummy, offered his face
    without feeling the slightest thrill at the touch of her lips.

    "Oh, so this is your little game, is it?" said Claude with a laugh.

    "Oh," replied Cadine, quite unabashed, "he likes being kissed, because
    he feels afraid now in the dim light. You do feel frightened, don't
    you?"

    Like the idiot he was, Marjolin stroked his face with his hands as
    though trying to find the kisses which the girl had just printed
    there. And he was beginning to stammer out that he was afraid, when
    Cadine continued: "And, besides, I came to help him; I've been feeding
    the pigeons."

    Florent looked at the poor creatures. All along the shelves were rows
    of lidless boxes, in which pigeons, showing their motley plumage,
    crowded closely on their stiffened legs. Every now and then a tremor
    ran along the moving mass; and then the birds settled down again, and
    nothing was heard but their confused, subdued notes. Cadine had a
    saucepan near her; she filled her mouth with the water and tares which
    it contained, and then, taking up the pigeons one by one, shot the
    food down their throats with amazing rapidity. The poor creatures
    struggled and nearly choked, and finally fell down in the boxes with
    swimming eyes, intoxicated, as it were, by all the food which they
    were thus forced to swallow.


  • This is the customary mode of fattening pigeons at the Paris
        markets. The work is usually done by men who make a specialty of
        it, and are called /gaveurs/.--Translator.

    "Poor creatures!" exclaimed Claude.

    "Oh, so much the worse for them," said Cadine, who had now finished.
    "They are much nicer eating when they've been well fed. In a couple of
    hours or so all those over yonder will be given a dose of salt water.
    That makes their flesh white and tender. Then two hours afterwards
    they'll be killed. If you would like to see the killing, there are
    some here which are quite ready. Marjolin will settle their account
    for them in a jiffy."

    Marjolin carried away a box containing some fifty pigeons, and Claude
    and Florent followed him. Squatting upon the ground near one of the
    water-taps, he placed the box by his side. Then he laid a framework of
    slender wooden bars on the top of a kind of zinc trough, and forthwith
    began to kill the pigeons. His knife flashed rapidly in his fingers,
    as he seized the birds by the wings, stunned them by a blow on the
    head from the knife-handle, and then thrust the point of the blade
    into their throats. They quivered for an instant, and ruffled their
    feathers as Marjolin laid them in a row, with their heads between the
    wooden bars above the zinc trough, into which their blood fell drop by
    drop. He repeated each different movement with the regularity of
    clockwork, the blows from the knife-handle falling with a monotonous
    tick-tack as he broke the birds' skulls, and his hand working
    backwards and forwards like a pendulum as he took up the living
    pigeons on one side and laid them down dead on the other. Soon,
    moreover, he worked with increasing rapidity, gloating over the
    massacre with glistening eyes, squatting there like a huge delighted
    bull-dog enjoying the sight of slaughtered vermin. "Tick-tack! Tick-
    tack!" whilst his tongue clucked as an accompaniment to the rhythmical
    movements of his knife. The pigeons hung down like wisps of silken
    stuff.

    "Ah, you enjoy that, don't you, you great stupid?" exclaimed Cadine.
    "How comical those pigeons look when they bury their heads in their
    shoulders to hide their necks! They're horrid things, you know, and
    would give one nasty bites if they got the chance." Then she laughed
    more loudly at Marjolin's increasing, feverish haste; and added: "I've
    killed them sometimes myself, but I can't get on as quickly as he
    does. One day he killed a hundred in ten minutes."

    The wooden frame was nearly full; the blood could be heard falling
    into the zinc trough; and as Claude happened to turn round he saw
    Florent looking so pale that he hurriedly led him away. When they got
    above-ground again he made him sit down on a step.

    "Why, what's the matter with you?" he exclaimed, tapping him on the
    shoulder. "You're fainting away like a woman!"

    "It's the smell of the cellar," murmured Florent, feeling a little
    ashamed of himself.

    The truth was, however, that those pigeons, which were forced to
    swallow tares and salt water, and then had their skulls broken and
    their throats slit, had reminded him of the wood-pigeons of the
    Tuileries gardens, strutting over the green turf, with their satiny
    plumage flashing iridescently in the sunlight. He again heard them
    cooing on the arm of the marble wrestler amidst the hushed silence of
    the garden, while children trundled their hoops in the deep gloom of
    the chestnuts. And then, on seeing that big fair-haired animal
    massacring his boxful of birds, stunning them with the handle of his
    knife and driving its point into their throats, in the depths of that
    foul-smelling cellar, he had felt sick and faint, his legs had almost
    given way beneath him, while his eyelids quivered tremulously.

    "Well, you'd never do for a soldier!" Claude said to him when he
    recovered from his faintness. "Those who sent you to Cayenne must have
    been very simple-minded folks to fear such a man as you! Why, my good
    fellow, if ever you do put yourself at the head of a rising, you won't
    dare to fire a shot. You'll be too much afraid of killing somebody."

    Florent got up without making any reply. He had become very gloomy,
    his face was furrowed by deep wrinkles; and he walked off, leaving
    Claude to go back to the cellar alone. As he made his way towards the
    fish market his thoughts returned to his plan of attack, to the levies
    of armed men who were to invade the Palais Bourbon. Cannon would roar
    from the Champs Elysees; the gates would be burst open; blood would
    stain the steps, and men's brains would bespatter the pillars. A
    vision of the fight passed rapidly before him; and he beheld himself
    in the midst of it, deadly pale, and hiding his face in his hands, not
    daring to look around him.

    As he was crossing the Rue du Pont Neuf he fancied he espied Auguste's
    pale face peering round the corner of the fruit pavilion. The
    assistant seemed to be watching for someone, and his eyes were
    starting from his head with an expression of intense excitement.
    Suddenly, however, he vanished and hastened back to the pork shop.

    "What's the matter with him?" thought Florent. "Is he frightened of
    me, I wonder?"

    Some very serious occurrences had taken place that morning at the
    Quenu-Gradelles'. Soon after daybreak, Auguste, breathless with
    excitement, had awakened his mistress to tell her that the police had
    come to arrest Monsieur Florent. And he added, with stammering
    incoherence, that the latter had gone out, and that he must have done
    so with the intention of escaping. Lisa, careless of appearances, at
    once hurried up to her brother-in-law's room in her dressing-wrapper,
    and took possession of La Normande's photograph, after glancing round
    to see if there was anything lying about that might compromise herself
    and Quenu. As she was making her way downstairs again, she met the
    police agents on the first floor. The commissary requested her to
    accompany them to Florent's room, where, after speaking to her for a
    moment in a low tone, he installed himself with his men, bidding her
    open the shop as usual so as to avoid giving the alarm to anyone. The
    trap was set.

    Lisa's only worry in the matter was the terrible blow that the arrest
    would prove to poor Quenu. She was much afraid that if he learned that
    the police were in the house, he would spoil everything by his tears;
    so she made Auguste swear to observe the most rigid silence on the
    subject. Then she went back to her room, put on her stays, and
    concocted some story for the benefit of Quenu, who was still drowsy.
    Half an hour later she was standing at the door of the shop with all
    her usual neatness of appearance, her hair smooth and glossy, and her
    face glowing rosily. Auguste was quietly setting out the window. Quenu
    came for a moment on to the footway, yawning slightly, and ridding
    himself of all sleepiness in the fresh morning air. There was nothing
    to indicate the drama that was in preparation upstairs.

    The commissary himself, however, gave the alarm to the neighbourhood
    by paying a domiciliary visit to the Mehudins' abode in the Rue
    Pirouette. He was in possession of the most precise information. In
    the anonymous letters which had been sent to the Prefecture, all sorts
    of statements were made respecting Florent's alleged intrigue with the
    beautiful Norman. Perhaps, thought the commissary, he had now taken
    refuge with her; and so, accompanied by two of his men, he proceeded
    to knock at the door in the name of the law. The Mehudins had only
    just got up. The old woman opened the door in a fury; but suddenly
    calmed down and began to smile when she learned the business on hand.
    She seated herself and fastened her clothes, while declaring to the
    officers: "We are honest folks here, and have nothing to be afraid of.
    You can search wherever you like."

    However, as La Normande delayed to open the door of her room, the
    commissary told his men to break it open. The young woman was scarcely
    clad when the others entered, and this unceremonious invasion, which
    she could not understand, fairly exasperated her. She flushed crimson
    from anger rather than from shame, and seemed as though she were about
    to fly at the officers. The commissary, at the sight, stepped forward
    to protect his men, repeating in his cold voice: "In the name of the
    law! In the name of the law!"

    Thereupon La Normande threw herself upon a chair, and burst into a
    wild fit of hysterical sobbing at finding herself so powerless. She
    was quite at a loss to understand what these men wanted with her. The
    commissary, however, had noticed how scantily she was clad, and taking
    a shawl from a peg, he flung it over her. Still she did not wrap it
    round her, but only sobbed the more bitterly as she watched the men
    roughly searching the apartment.

    "But what have I done?" she at last stammered out. "What are you
    looking for here?"

    Thereupon the commissary pronounced the name of Florent; and La
    Normande, catching sight of the old woman, who was standing at the
    door, cried out: "Oh, the wretch! This is her doing!" and she rushed
    at her mother.

    She would have struck her if she had reached her; but the police
    agents held her back, and forcibly wrapped her in the shawl.
    Meanwhile, she struggled violently, and exclaimed in a choking voice:

    "What do you take me for? That Florent has never been in this room, I
    tell you. There was nothing at all between us. People are always
    trying to injure me in the neighbourhood; but just let anyone come
    here and say anything before my face, and then you'll see! You'll lock
    me up afterwards, I dare say, but I don't mind that! Florent, indeed!
    What a lie! What nonsense!"

    This flood of words seemed to calm her; and her anger now turned
    against Florent, who was the cause of all the trouble. Addressing the
    commissary, she sought to justify herself.

    "I did not know his real character, sir," she said. "He had such a
    mild manner that he deceived us all. I was unwilling to believe all I
    heard, because I know people are so malicious. He only came here to
    give lessons to my little boy, and went away directly they were over.
    I gave him a meal here now and again, that's true and sometimes made
    him a present of a fine fish. That's all. But this will be a warning
    to me, and you won't catch me showing the same kindness to anyone
    again."

    "But hasn't he given you any of his papers to take care of?" asked the
    commissary.

    "Oh no, indeed! I swear it. I'd give them up to you at once if he had.
    I've had quite enough of this, I can tell you! It's no joke to see you
    tossing all my things about and ferreting everywhere in this way. Oh!
    you may look; there's nothing."

    The officers, who examined every article of furniture, now wished to
    enter the little closet where Muche slept. The child had been awakened
    by the noise, and for the last few moments he had been crying
    bitterly, as though he imagined that he was going to be murdered.

    "This is my boy's room," said La Normande, opening the door.

    Muche, quite naked, ran up and threw his arms round his mother's neck.
    She pacified him, and laid him down in her own bed. The officers came
    out of the little room again almost immediately, and the commissary
    had just made up his mind to retire, when the child, still in tears,
    whispered in his mother's ear: "They'll take my copy-books. Don't let
    them have my copy-books."

    "Oh, yes; that's true," cried La Normande; "there are some copy-books.
    Wait a moment, gentlemen, and I'll give them to you. I want you to see
    that I'm not hiding anything from you. Then, you'll find some of his
    writing inside these. You're quite at liberty to hang him as far as
    I'm concerned; you won't find me trying to cut him down."

    Thereupon she handed Muche's books and the copies set by Florent to
    the commissary. But at this the boy sprang angrily out of bed, and
    began to scratch and bite his mother, who put him back again with a
    box on the ears. Then he began to bellow.

    In the midst of the uproar, Mademoiselle Saget appeared on the
    threshold, craning her neck forward. Finding all the doors open, she
    had come in to offer her services to old Madame Mehudin. She spied
    about and listened, and expressed extreme pity for these poor women,
    who had no one to defend them. The commissary, however, had begun to
    read the copies with a grave air. The frequent repetition of such
    words as "tyrannically," "liberticide," "unconstitutional," and
    "revolutionary" made him frown; and on reading the sentence, "When the
    hour strikes, the guilty shall fall," he tapped his fingers on the
    paper and said: "This is very serious, very serious indeed."

    Thereupon he gave the books to one of his men, and went off. Claire,
    who had hitherto not shown herself, now opened her door, and watched
    the police officers go down the stairs. And afterwards she came into
    her sister's bedroom, which she had not entered for a year.
    Mademoiselle Saget appeared to be on the best of terms with La
    Normande, and was hanging over her in a caressing way, bringing the
    shawl forward to cover her the better, and listening to her angry
    indignation with an expression of the deepest sympathy.

    "You wretched coward!" exclaimed Claire, planting herself in front of
    her sister.

    La Normande sprang up, quivering with anger, and let the shawl fall to
    the floor.

    "Ah, you've been playing the spy, have you?" she screamed. "Dare to
    repeat what you've just said!"

    "You wretched coward!" repeated Claire, in still more insulting tones
    than before.

    Thereupon La Normande struck Claire with all her force; and in return
    Claire, turning terribly pale, sprang upon her sister and dug her
    nails into her neck. They struggled together for a moment or two,
    tearing at each other's hair and trying to choke one another. Claire,
    fragile though she was, pushed La Normande backward with such
    tremendous violence that they both fell against the wardrobe, smashing
    the mirror on its front. Muche was roaring, and old Madame Mehudin
    called to Mademoiselle Saget to come and help her separate the
    sisters. Claire, however, shook herself free.

    "Coward! Coward!" she cried; "I'll go and tell the poor fellow that it
    is you who have betrayed him."

    Her mother, however, blocked the doorway, and would not let her pass,
    while La Normande seized her from behind, and then, Mademoiselle Saget
    coming to the assistance of the other two, the three of them dragged
    Claire into her bedroom and locked the door upon her, in spite of all
    her frantic resistance. In her rage she tried to kick the door down,
    and smashed everything in the room. Soon afterwards, however, nothing
    could be heard except a furious scratching, the sound of metal
    scarping at the plaster. The girl was trying to loosen the door hinges
    with the points of her scissors.

    "She would have murdered me if she had had a knife," said La Normande,
    looking about for her clothes, in order to dress herself. "She'll be
    doing something dreadful, you'll see, one of these days, with that
    jealousy of hers! We mustn't let her get out on any account: she'd
    bring the whole neighbourhood down upon us!"

    Mademoiselle Saget went off in all haste. She reached the corner of
    the Rue Pirouette just as the commissary of police was re-entering the
    side passage of the Quenu-Gradelles' house. She grasped the situation
    at once, and entered the shop with such glistening eyes that Lisa
    enjoined silence by a gesture which called her attention to the
    presence of Quenu, who was hanging up some pieces of salt pork. As
    soon as he had returned to the kitchen, the old maid in a low voice
    described the scenes that had just taken place at the Mehudins'. Lisa,
    as she bent over the counter, with her hand resting on a dish of
    larded veal, listened to her with the happy face of one who triumphs.
    Then, as a customer entered the shop, and asked for a couple of pig's
    trotters, Lisa wrapped them up, and handed them over with a thoughtful
    air.

    "For my own part, I bear La Normande no ill-will," she said to
    Mademoiselle Saget, when they were alone again. "I used to be very
    fond of her, and have always been sorry that other people made
    mischief between us. The proof that I've no animosity against her is
    here in this photograph, which I saved from falling into the hands of
    the police, and which I'm quite ready to give her back if she will
    come and ask me for it herself."

    She took the photograph out of her pocket as she spoke. Mademoiselle
    Saget scrutinised it and sniggered as she read the inscription,
    "Louise, to her dear friend Florent."

    "I'm not sure you'll be acting wisely," she said in her cutting voice.
    "You'd do better to keep it."

    "No, no," replied Lisa; "I'm anxious for all this silly nonsense to
    come to an end. To-day is the day of reconciliation. We've had enough
    unpleasantness, and the neighbourhood's now going to be quiet and
    peaceful again."

    "Well, well, shall I go and tell La Normande that you are expecting
    her?" asked the old maid.

    "Yes; I shall be very glad if you will."

    Mademoiselle Saget then made her way back to the Rue Pirouette, and
    greatly frightened the fish-girl by telling her that she had just seen
    her photograph in Lisa's pocket. She could not, however, at once
    prevail upon her to comply with her rival's terms. La Normande
    propounded conditions of her own. She would go, but Madame Quenu must
    come to the door of the shop to receive her. Thus the old maid was
    obliged to make another couple of journeys between the two rivals
    before their meeting could be satisfactorily arranged. At last,
    however, to her great delight, she succeeded in negotiating the peace
    which was destined to cause so much talk and excitement. As she passed
    Claire's door for the last time she still heard the sound of the
    scissors scraping away at the plaster.

    When she had at last carried a definite reply to Madame Quenu,
    Mademoiselle Saget hurried off to find Madame Lecoeur and La
    Sarriette; and all three of them took up their position on the footway
    at the corner of the fish market, just in front of the pork shop. Here
    they would be certain to have a good view of every detail of the
    meeting. They felt extremely impatient, and while pretending to chat
    together kept an anxious look-out in the direction of the Rue
    Pirouette, along which La Normande must come. The news of the
    reconciliation was already travelling through the markets, and while
    some saleswomen stood up behind their stalls trying to get a view of
    what was taking place, others, still more inquisitive, actually left
    their places and took up a position in the covered way. Every eye in
    the markets was directed upon the pork shop; the whole neighbourhood
    was on the tip-toe of expectation.

    It was a very solemn affair. When La Normande at last turned the
    corner of the Rue Pirouette the excitement was so great that the women
    held their breath.

    "She has got her diamonds on," murmured La Sarriette.

    "Just look how she stalks along," added Madame Lecoeur; "the stuck-up
    creature!"

    The beautiful Norman was, indeed, advancing with the mien of a queen
    who condescends to make peace. She had made a most careful toilet,
    frizzing her hair and turning up a corner of her apron to display her
    cashmere skirt. She had even put on a new and rich lace bow. Conscious
    that the whole market was staring at her, she assumed a still
    haughtier air as she approached the pork shop. When she reached the
    door she stopped.

    "Now it's beautiful Lisa's turn," remarked Mademoiselle Saget. "Mind
    you pay attention."

    Beautiful Lisa smilingly quitted her counter. She crossed the shop-
    floor at a leisurely pace, and came and offered her hand to the
    beautiful Norman. She also was smartly dressed, with her dazzling
    linen and scrupulous neatness. A murmur ran through the crowd of fish-
    wives, all their heads gathered close together, and animated chatter
    ensued. The two women had gone inside the shop, and the /crepines/ in
    the window prevented them from being clearly seen. However, they
    seemed to be conversing affectionately, addressing pretty compliments
    to one another.

    "See!" suddenly exclaimed Mademoiselle Saget, "the beautiful Norman's
    buying something! What is it she's buying? It's a chitterling, I
    believe! Ah! Look! look! You didn't see it, did you? Well, beautiful
    Lisa just gave her the photograph; she slipped it into her hand with
    the chitterling."

    Fresh salutations were then seen to pass between the two women; and
    the beautiful Lisa, exceeding even the courtesies which had been
    agreed upon, accompanied the beautiful Norman to the footway. There
    they stood laughing together, exhibiting themselves to the
    neighbourhood like a couple of good friends. The markets were quite
    delighted; and the saleswomen returned to their stalls, declaring that
    everything had passed off extremely well.

    Mademoiselle Saget, however, detained Madame Lecoeur and La Sarriette.
    The drama was not over yet. All three kept their eyes fixed on the
    house opposite with such keen curiosity that they seemed trying to
    penetrate the very walls. To pass the time away they once more began
    to talk of the beautiful Norman.

    "She's without a lover now," remarked Madame Lecoeur.

    "Oh! she's got Monsieur Lebigre," replied La Sarriette, with a laugh.

    "But surely Monsieur Lebigre won't have anything more to say to her."

    Mademoiselle Saget shrugged her shoulders. "Ah, you don't know him,"
    she said. "He won't care a straw about all this business. He knows
    what he's about, and La Normande is rich. They'll come together in a
    couple of months, you'll see. Old Madame Mehudin's been scheming to
    bring about their marriage for a long time past."

    "Well, anyway," retorted the butter dealer, "the commissary found
    Florent at her lodgings."

    "No, no, indeed; I'm sure I never told you that. The long spindle-
    shanks had gone way," replied the old maid. She paused to take a
    breath; then resumed in an indignant tone, "What distressed me most
    was to hear of all the abominable things that the villain had taught
    little Muche. You'd really never believe it. There was a whole bundle
    of papers."

    "What sort of abominable things?" asked La Sarriette with interest.

    "Oh, all kinds of filth. The commissary said there was quite
    sufficient there to hang him. The fellow's a perfect monster! To go
    and demoralise a child! Why, it's almost past believing! Little Muche
    is certainly a scamp, but that's no reason why he should be given over
    to the 'Reds,' is it?"

    "Certainly not," assented the two others.

    "However, all these mysterious goings-on will come to an end now. You
    remember my telling you once that there was some strange goings-on at
    the Quenus'? Well, you see, I was right in my conclusions, wasn't I?
    Thank God, however, the neighbourhood will now be able to breathe
    easily. It was high time strong steps were taken, for things had got
    to such a pitch that one actually felt afraid of being murdered in
    broad daylight. There was no pleasure in life. All the dreadful
    stories and reports one heard were enough to worry one to death. And
    it was all owing to that man, that dreadful Florent. Now beautiful
    Lisa and the beautiful Norman have sensibly made friends again. It was
    their duty to do so for the sake of the peace and quietness of us all.
    Everything will go on satisfactorily now, you'll find. Ah! there's
    poor Monsieur Quenu laughing yonder!"

    Quenu had again come on to the footway, and was joking with Madame
    Taboureau's little servant. He seemed quite gay and skittish that
    morning. He took hold of the little servant's hands, and squeezed her
    fingers so tightly, in the exuberance of his spirits, that he made her
    cry out. Lisa had the greatest trouble to get him to go back into the
    kitchen. She was impatiently pacing about the shop, fearing lest
    Florent should make his appearance; and she called to her husband to
    come away, dreading a meeting between him and his brother.

    "She's getting quite vexed," said Mademoiselle Saget. "Poor Monsieur
    Quenu, you see, knows nothing at all about what's taking place. Just
    look at him there, laughing like a child! Madame Taboureau, you know,
    said that she should have nothing more to do with the Quenus if they
    persisted in bringing themselves into discredit by keeping that
    Florent with them."

    "Well, now, I suppose, they will stick to the fortune," remarked
    Madame Lecoeur.

    "Oh, no, indeed, my dear. The other one has had his share already."

    "Really? How do you know that?"

    "Oh, it's clear enough, that is!" replied the old maid after a
    momentary hesitation, but without giving any proof of her assertions.
    "He's had even more than his share. The Quenus will be several
    thousand francs out of pocket. Money flies, you know, when a man has
    such vices as he has. I dare say you don't know that there was another
    woman mixed up in it all. Yes, indeed, old Madame Verlaque, the wife
    of the former inspector; you know the sallow-faced thing well enough."

    The others protested that it surely wasn't possible. Why, Madame
    Verlaque was positively hideous!

    "What! do you think me a liar?" cried Mademoiselle Saget, with angry
    indignation. "Why, her letters to him have been found, a whole pile of
    letters, in which she asks for money, ten and twenty francs at a time.
    There's no doubt at all about it. I'm quite certain in my own mind
    that they killed the husband between them."

    La Sarriette and Madame Lecoeur were convinced; but they were
    beginning to get very impatient. They had been waiting on the footway
    for more than an hour, and feared that somebody might be robbing their
    stalls during their long absence. So Mademoiselle Saget began to give
    them some further interesting information to keep them from going off.
    Florent could not have taken to flight, said she; he was certain to
    return, and it would be very interesting to see him arrested. Then she
    went on to describe the trap that had been laid for him, while Madame
    Lecoeur and La Sarriette continued scrutinising the house from top to
    bottom, keeping watch upon every opening, and at each moment expecting
    to see the hats of the detectives appear at one of the doors or
    windows.

    "Who would ever imagine, now, that the place was full of police?"
    observed the butter dealer.

    "Oh! they're in the garret at the top," said the old maid. "They've
    left the window open, you see, just as they found it. Look! I think I
    can see one of them hiding behind the pomegranate on the balcony."

    The others excitedly craned out their necks, but could see nothing.

    "Ah, no, it's only a shadow," continued Mademoiselle Saget. "The
    little curtains even are perfectly still. The detectives must be
    sitting down in the room, and keeping quiet."

    Just at that moment the women caught sight of Gavard coming out of the
    fish market with a thoughtful air. They looked at him with glistening
    eyes, without speaking. They had drawn close to one another, and stood
    there rigid in their drooping skirts. The poultry dealer came up to
    them.

    "Have you seen Florent go by?" he asked.

    They replied that they had not.

    "I want to speak to him at once," continued Gavard. "He isn't in the
    fish market. He must have gone up to his room. But you would have seen
    him, though, if he had."

    The women had turned rather pale. They still kept looking at each
    other with a knowing expression, their lips twitching slightly every
    now and then. "We have only been here some five minutes, said Madame
    Lecoeur unblushingly, as her brother-in-law still stood hesitating.

    "Well, then, I'll go upstairs and see. I'll risk the five flights,"
    rejoined Gavard with a laugh.

    La Sarriette stepped forward as though she wished to detain him, but
    her aunt took hold of her arm and drew her back.

    "Let him alone, you big simpleton!" she whispered. "It's the best
    thing that can happen to him. It'll teach him to treat us with respect
    in future."

    "He won't say again that I ate tainted meat," muttered Mademoiselle
    Saget in a low tone.

    They said nothing more. La Sarriette was very red; but the two others
    still remained quite yellow. But they now averted their heads, feeling
    confused by each other's looks, and at a loss what to do with their
    hands, which they buried beneath their aprons. Presently their eyes
    instinctively came back to the house, penetrating the walls, as it
    were, following Gavard in his progress up the stairs. When they
    imagined that he had entered Florent's room they again exchanged
    furtive glances. La Sarriette laughed nervously. All at once they
    fancied they could see the window curtains moving, and this led them
    to believe that a struggle was taking place. But the house-front
    remained as tranquil as ever in the sunshine; and another quarter of
    an hour of unbroken quietness passed away, during which the three
    women's nervous excitement became more and more intense. They were
    beginning to feel quite faint when a man hurriedly came out of the
    passage and ran off to get a cab. Five minutes later Gavard appeared,
    followed by two police officers. Lisa, who had stepped out on to the
    footway on observing the cab, hastily hurried back into the shop.

    Gavard was very pale. The police had searched him upstairs, and had
    discovered the revolver and cartridge case in his possession. Judging
    by the commissary's stern expression on hearing his name, the poultry
    dealer deemed himself lost. This was a terrible ending to his plotting
    that had never entered into his calculations. The Tuileries would
    never forgive him! His legs gave way beneath him as though the firing
    party was already awaiting him outside. When he got into the street,
    however, his vanity lent him sufficient strength to walk erect; and he
    even managed to force a smile, as he knew the market people were
    looking at him. They should see him die bravely, he resolved.

    However, La Sarriette and Madame Lecoeur rushed up to him and
    anxiously inquired what was the matter; and the butter dealer began to
    cry, while La Sarriette embraced her uncle, manifesting the deepest
    emotion. As Gavard held her clasped in his arms, he slipped a key into
    her hand, and whispered in her ear: "Take everything, and burn the
    papers."

    Then he got into the cab with the same mien as he would have ascended
    the scaffold. As the vehicle disappeared round the corner of the Rue
    Pierre Lescot, Madame Lecoeur observed La Sarriette trying to hide the
    key in her pocket.

    "It's of no use you trying that little game on me, my dear," she
    exclaimed, clenching her teeth; "I saw him slip it into your hand. As
    true as there's a God in Heaven, I'll go to the gaol and tell him
    everything, if you don't treat me properly."

    "Of course I shall treat you properly, aunt, dear," replied La
    Sarriette, with an embarrassed smile.

    "Very well, then, let us go to his rooms at once. It's of no use to
    give the police time to poke their dirty hands in the cupboards."

    Mademoiselle Saget, who had been listening with gleaming eyes,
    followed them, running along in the rear as quickly as her short legs
    could carry her. She had no thought, now, of waiting for Florent. From
    the Rue Rambuteau to the Rue de la Cossonnerie she manifested the most
    humble obsequiousness, and volunteered to explain matters to Madame
    Leonce, the doorkeeper.

    "We'll see, we'll see," the butter dealer curtly replied.

    However, on reaching the house a preliminary parley--as Mademoiselle
    Saget had opined--proved to be necessary. Madame Leonce refused to
    allow the women to go up to her tenant's room. She put on an
    expression of severe austerity, and seemed greatly shocked by the
    sight of La Sarriette's loosely fastened fichu. However, after the old
    maid had whispered a few words to her and she was shown the key, she
    gave way. When they got upstairs she surrendered the rooms and
    furniture to the others article by article, apparently as heartbroken
    as if she had been compelled to show a party of burglars the place
    where her own money was secreted.

    "There, take everything and have done with it!" she cried at last,
    throwing herself into an arm-chair.

    La Sarriette was already eagerly trying the key in the locks of
    different closets. Madame Lecoeur, all suspicion, pressed her so
    closely that she exclaimed: "Really, aunt, you get in my way. Do leave
    my arms free, at any rate."

    At last they succeeded in opening a wardrobe opposite the window,
    between the fireplace and the bed. And then all four women broke into
    exclamations. On the middle shelf lay some ten thousand francs in
    gold, methodically arranged in little piles. Gavard, who had prudently
    deposited the bulk of his fortune in the hands of a notary, had kept
    this sum by him for the purposes of the coming outbreak. He had been
    wont to say with great solemnity that his contribution to the
    revolution was quite ready. The fact was that he had sold out certain
    stock, and every night took an intense delight in contemplating those
    ten thousand francs, gloating over them, and finding something quite
    roysterous and insurrectional in their appearance. Sometimes when he
    was in bed he dreamed that a fight was going on in the wardrobe; he
    could hear guns being fired there, paving-stones being torn up and
    piled into barricades, and voices shouting in clamorous triumph; and
    he said to himself that it was his money fighting against the
    Government.

    La Sarriette, however, had stretched out her hands with a cry of
    delight.

    "Paws off, little one!" exclaimed Madame Lecoeur in a hoarse voice.

    As she stood there in the reflection of the gold, she looked yellower
    than ever--her face discoloured by biliousness, her eyes glowing
    feverishly from the liver complaint which was secretly undermining
    her. Behind her Mademoiselle Saget on tip-toe was gazing ecstatically
    into the wardrobe, and Madame Leonce had now risen from her seat, and
    was growling sulkily.

    "My uncle said I was to take everything," declared the girl.

    "And am I to have nothing, then; I who have done so much for him?"
    cried the doorkeeper.

    Madame Lecoeur was almost choking with excitement. She pushed the
    others away, and clung hold of the wardrobe, screaming: "It all
    belongs to me! I am his nearest relative. You are a pack of thieves,
    you are! I'd rather throw it all out of the window than see you have
    it!"

    Then silence fell, and they all four stood glowering at each other.
    The kerchief that La Sarriette wore over her breast was now altogether
    unfastened, and she displayed her bosom heaving with warm life, her
    moist red lips, her rosy nostrils. Madame Lecoeur grew still more sour
    as she saw how lovely the girl looked in the excitement of her longing
    desire.

    "Well," she said in a lower tone, "we won't fight about it. You are
    his niece, and I'll divide the money with you. We will each take a
    pile in turn."

    Thereupon they pushed the other two aside. The butter dealer took the
    first pile, which at once disappeared within her skirts. Then La
    Sarriette took a pile. They kept a close watch upon one another, ready
    to fight at the slightest attempt at cheating. Their fingers were
    thrust forward in turn, the hideous knotted fingers of the aunt and
    the white fingers of the niece, soft and supple as silk. Slowly they
    filled their pockets. When there was only one pile left, La Sarriette
    objected to her aunt taking it, as she had commenced; and she suddenly
    divided it between Mademoiselle Saget and Madame Leonce, who had
    watched them pocket the gold with feverish impatience.

    "Much obliged to you!" snarled the doorkeeper. "Fifty francs for
    having coddled him up with tisane and broth! The old deceiver told me
    he had no relatives!"

    Before locking the wardrobe up again, Madame Lecoeur searched it
    thoroughly from top to bottom. It contained all the political works
    which were forbidden admission into the country, the pamphlets printed
    at Brussels, the scandalous histories of the Bonapartes, and the
    foreign caricatures ridiculing the Emperor. One of Gavard's greatest
    delights was to shut himself up with a friend, and show him all these
    compromising things.

    "He told me that I was to burn all the papers," said La Sarriette.

    "Oh, nonsense! we've no fire, and it would take up too long. The
    police will soon be here! We must get out of this!"

    They all four hastened off; but they had not reached the bottom of the
    stairs before the police met them, and made Madame Leonce return with
    them upstairs. The three others, making themselves as small as
    possible, hurriedly escaped into the street. They walked away in
    single file at a brisk pace; the aunt and niece considerably
    incommoded by the weight of their drooping pockets. Mademoiselle Saget
    had kept her fifty francs in her closed fist, and remained deep in
    thought, brooding over a plan for extracting something more from the
    heavy pockets in front of her.

    "Ah!" she exclaimed, as they reached the corner of the fish market,
    "we've got here at a lucky moment. There's Florent yonder, just going
    to walk into the trap."

    Florent, indeed, was just then returning to the markets after his
    prolonged perambulation. He went into his office to change his coat,
    and then set about his daily duties, seeing that the marble slabs were
    properly washed, and slowly strolling along the alleys. He fancied
    that the fish-wives looked at him in a somewhat strange manner; they
    chuckled too, and smiled significantly as he passed them. Some new
    vexation, he thought, was in store for him. For some time past those
    huge, terrible women had not allowed him a day's peace. However, as he
    passed the Mehudins' stall he was very much surprised to hear the old
    woman address him in a honeyed tone: "There's just been a gentleman
    inquiring for you, Monsieur Florent; a middle-aged gentleman. He's
    gone to wait for you in your room."

    As the old fish-wife, who was squatting, all of a heap, on her chair,
    spoke these words, she felt such a delicious thrill of satisfied
    vengeance that her huge body fairly quivered. Florent, still doubtful,
    glanced at the beautiful Norman; but the young woman, now completely
    reconciled with her mother, turned on her tap and slapped her fish,
    pretending not to hear what was being said.

    "You are quite sure?" said Florent to Mother Mehudin.

    "Oh, yes, indeed. Isn't that so, Louise?" said the old woman in a
    shriller voice.

    Florent concluded that it must be some one who wanted to see him about
    the great business, and he resolved to go up to his room. He was just
    about to leave the pavilion, when, happening to turn round, he
    observed the beautiful Norman watching him with a grave expression on
    her face. Then he passed in front of the three gossips.

    "Do you notice that there's no one in the pork shop?" remarked
    Mademoiselle Saget. "Beautiful Lisa's not the woman to compromise
    herself."

    The shop was, indeed, quite empty. The front of the house was still
    bright with sunshine; the building looked like some honest, prosperous
    pile guilelessly warming itself in the morning rays. Up above, the
    pomegranate on the balcony was in full bloom. As Florent crossed the
    roadway he gave a friendly nod to Logre and Monsieur Lebigre, who
    appeared to be enjoying the fresh air on the doorstep of the latter's
    establishment. They returned his greeting with a smile. Florent was
    then about to enter the side-passage, when he fancied he saw Auguste's
    pale face hastily vanishing from its dark and narrow depths. Thereupon
    he turned back and glanced into the shop to make sure that the middle-
    aged gentleman was not waiting for him there. But he saw no one but
    Mouton, who sat on a block displaying his double chin and bristling
    whiskers, and gazed at him defiantly with his great yellow eyes. And
    when he had at last made up his mind to enter the passage, Lisa's face
    appeared behind the little curtain of a glazed door at the back of the
    shop.

    A hush had fallen over the fish market. All the huge paunches and
    bosoms held their breath, waiting till Florent should disappear from
    sight. Then there was an uproarious outbreak; and the bosoms heaved
    wildly and the paunches nearly burst with malicious delight. The joke
    had succeeded. Nothing could be more comical. As old Mother Mehudin
    vented her merriment she shook and quivered like a wine-skin that is
    being emptied. Her story of the middle-aged gentleman went the round
    of the market, and the fish-wives found it extremely amusing. At last
    the long spindle-shanks was collared, and they would no longer always
    have his miserable face and gaol-bird's expression before their eyes.
    They all wished him a pleasant journey, and trusted that they might
    get a handsome fellow for their next inspector. And in their delight
    they rushed about from one stall to another, and felt inclined to
    dance round their marble slabs like a lot of holiday-making
    schoolgirls. The beautiful Norman, however, watched this outbreak of
    joy in a rigid attitude, not daring to move for fear she should burst
    into tears; and she kept her hands pressed upon a big skate to cool
    her feverish excitement.

    "You see how those Mehudins turn their backs upon him now that he's
    come to grief," said Madame Lecoeur.

    "Well, and they're quite right too," replied Mademoiselle Saget.
    "Besides, matters are settled now, my dear, and we're to have no more
    disputes. You've every reason to be satisfied; leave the others to act
    as they please."

    "It's only the old woman who is laughing," La Sarriette remarked; "La
    Normande looks anything but happy."

    Meantime, upstairs in his bedroom, Florent allowed himself to be taken
    as unresistingly as a sheep. The police officers sprang roughly upon
    him, expecting, no doubt, that they would meet with a desperate
    resistance. He quietly begged them to leave go of him; and then sat
    down on a chair while they packed up his papers, and the red scarves,
    armlets, and banners. He did not seem at all surprised at this ending;
    indeed, it was something of a relief to him, though he would not
    frankly confess it. But he suffered acutely at thought of the bitter
    hatred which had sent him into that room; he recalled Auguste's pale
    face and the sniggering looks of the fish-wives; he bethought himself
    of old Madame Mehudin's words, La Normande's silence, and the empty
    shop downstairs. The markets were leagued against him, he reflected;
    the whole neighbourhood had conspired to hand him over to the police.
    The mud of those greasy streets had risen up all around to overwhelm
    him!

    And amidst all the round faces which flitted before his mind's eye
    there suddenly appeared that of Quenu, and a spasm of mortal agony
    contracted his heart.

    "Come, get along downstairs!" exclaimed one of the officers, roughly.

    Florent rose and proceeded to go downstairs. When he reached the
    second floor he asked to be allowed to return; he had forgotten
    something, he said. But the officers refused to let him go back, and
    began to hustle him forward. Then he besought them to let him return
    to his room again, and even offered them the money he had in his
    pocket. Two of them at last consented to return with him, threatening
    to blow his brains out should he attempt to play them any trick; and
    they drew their revolvers out of their pockets as they spoke. However,
    on reaching his room once more Florent simply went straight to the
    chaffinch's cage, took the bird out of it, kissed it between its
    wings, and set it at liberty. He watched it fly away through the open
    window, into the sunshine, and alight, as though giddy, on the roof of
    the fish market. Then it flew off again and disappeared over the
    markets in the direction of the Square des Innocents. For a moment
    longer Florent remained face to face with the sky, the free and open
    sky; and he thought of the wood-pigeons cooing in the garden of the
    Tuileries, and of those other pigeons down in the market cellars with
    their throats slit by Marjolin's knife. Then he felt quite broken, and
    turned and followed the officers, who were putting their revolvers
    back into their pockets as they shrugged their shoulders.

    On reaching the bottom of the stairs, Florent stopped before the door
    which led into the kitchen. The commissary, who was waiting for him
    there, seemed almost touched by his gentle submissiveness, and asked
    him: "Would you like to say good-bye to your brother?"

    For a moment Florent hesitated. He looked at the door. A tremendous
    noise of cleavers and pans came from the kitchen. Lisa, with the
    design of keeping her husband occupied, had persuaded him to make the
    black-puddings in the morning instead of in the evening, as was his
    wont. The onions were simmering on the fire, and over all the noisy
    uproar Florent could hear Quenu's joyous voice exclaiming, "Ah, dash
    it all, the pudding will be excellent, that it will! Auguste, hand me
    the fat!"

    Florent thanked the commissary, but refused his offer. He was afraid
    to return any more into that warm kitchen, reeking with the odour of
    boiling onions, and so he went on past the door, happy in the thought
    that his brother knew nothing of what had happened to him, and
    hastening his steps as if to spare the establishment all further
    worry. However, on emerging into the open sunshine of the street he
    felt a touch of shame, and got into the cab with bent back and ashen
    face. He was conscious that the fish market was gazing at him in
    triumph; it seemed to him, indeed, as though the whole neighbourhood
    had gathered there to rejoice at his fall.

    "What a villainous expression he's got!" said Mademoiselle Saget.

    "Yes, indeed, he looks just like a thief caught with his hand in
    somebody's till," added Madame Lecoeur.

    "I once saw a man guillotined who looked exactly like he does,"
    asserted La Sarriette, showing her white teeth.

    They stepped forward, lengthened their necks, and tried to see into
    the cab. Just as it was starting, however, the old maid tugged sharply
    at the skirts of her companions, and pointed to Claire, who was coming
    round the corner of the Rue Pirouette, looking like a mad creature,
    with her hair loose and her nails bleeding. She had at last succeeded
    in opening her door. When she discovered that she was too late, and
    that Florent was being taken off, she darted after the cab, but
    checked herself almost immediately with a gesture of impotent rage,
    and shook her fists at the receding wheels. Then, with her face quite
    crimson beneath the fine plaster dust with which she was covered, she
    ran back again towards the Rue Pirouette.

    "Had he promised to marry her, eh?" exclaimed La Sarriette, laughing.
    "The silly fool must be quite cracked."

    Little by little the neighbourhood calmed down, though throughout the
    day groups of people constantly assembled and discussed the events of
    the morning. The pork shop was the object of much inquisitive
    curiosity. Lisa avoided appearing there, and left the counter in
    charge of Augustine. In the afternoon she felt bound to tell Quenu of
    what had happened, for fear the news might cause him too great a shock
    should he hear it from some gossiping neighbour. She waited till she
    was alone with him in the kitchen, knowing that there he was always
    most cheerful, and would weep less than if he were anywhere else.
    Moreover, she communicated her tidings with all sorts of motherly
    precautions. Nevertheless, as soon as he knew the truth he fell on the
    chopping-block, and began to cry like a calf.

    "Now, now, my poor dear, don't give way like that; you'll make
    yourself quite ill," exclaimed Lisa, taking him in her arms.

    His tears were inundating his white apron, the whole of his massive,
    torpid form quivered with grief. He seemed to be sinking, melting
    away. When he was at last able to speak, he stammered: "Oh, you don't
    know how good he was to me when we lived together in the Rue Royer-
    Collard! He did everything. He swept the room and cooked the meals. He
    loved me as though I were his own child; and after his day's work he
    used to come back splashed with mud, and so tired that he could
    scarcely move, while I stayed warm and comfortable in the house, and
    had nothing to do but eat. And now they're going to shoot him!"

    At this Lisa protested, saying that he would certainly not be shot.
    But Quenu only shook his head.

    "I haven't loved him half as much as I ought to have done," he
    continued. "I can see that very well now. I had a wicked heart, and I
    hesitated about giving him his half of the money."

    "Why, I offered it to him a dozen times and more!" Lisa interrupted.
    "I'm sure we've nothing to reproach ourselves with."

    "Oh, yes, I know that you are everything that is good, and that you
    would have given him every copper. But I hesitated, I didn't like to
    part with it; and now it will be a sorrow to me for the rest of my
    life. I shall always think that if I'd shared the fortune with him he
    wouldn't have gone wrong a second time. Oh, yes; it's my fault! It is
    I who have driven him to this."

    Then Lisa, expostulating still more gently, assured him that he had
    nothing to blame himself for, and even expressed some pity for
    Florent. But he was really very culpable, she said, and if he had had
    more money he would probably have perpetrated greater follies.
    Gradually she gave her husband to understand that it was impossible
    matters could have had any other termination, and that now everything
    would go on much better. Quenu was still weeping, wiping his cheeks
    with his apron, trying to suppress his sobs to listen to her, and then
    breaking into a wilder fit of tears than before. His fingers had
    mechanically sought a heap of sausage-meat lying on the block, and he
    was digging holes in it, and roughly kneading it together.

    "And how unwell you were feeling, you know," Lisa continued. "It was
    all because our life had got so shifted out of its usual course. I was
    very anxious, though I didn't tell you so, at seeing you getting so
    low."

    "Yes, wasn't I?" he murmured, ceasing to sob for a moment.

    "And the business has been quite under a cloud this year. It was as
    though a spell had been cast on it. Come, now, don't take on so;
    you'll see that everything will look up again now. You must take care
    of yourself, you know, for my sake and your daughter's. You have
    duties to us as well as to others, remember."

    Quenu was now kneading the sausage-meat more gently. Another burst of
    emotion was thrilling him, but it was a softer emotion, which was
    already bringing a vague smile to his grief-stricken face. Lisa felt
    that she had convinced him, and she turned and called to Pauline, who
    was playing in the shop, and sat her on Quenu's knee.

    "Tell your father, Pauline, that he ought not to give way like this.
    Ask him nicely not to go on distressing us so."

    The child did as she was told, and their fat, sleek forms united in a
    general embrace. They all three looked at one another, already feeling
    cured of that twelve months' depression from which they had but just
    emerged. Their big, round faces smiled, and Lisa softly repeated, "And
    after all, my dear, there are only we three, you know, only we three."

    Two months later Florent was again sentenced to transportation. The
    affair caused a great stir. The newspapers published all possible
    details, and gave portraits of the accused, sketches of the banners
    and scarves, and plans of the places w
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