Money, which nowadays has taken the
place of the good fairies of former times, had gratified
M. Wilkie’s every longing in a single night.
Without any period of transition, dreamlike as it were,
he had passed from what he called “straitened
circumstances” to the splendid enjoyment of
a princely fortune. Madame d’Argeles’s
renunciation had been so correctly drawn up, that
as soon as he presented his claims and displayed his
credentials he was placed in possession of the Chalusse
estate. It is true that a few trifling difficulties
presented themselves. For instance, the old justice
of the peace who had affixed the seals refused to
remove them from certain articles of furniture, especially
from the late count’s escritoire, without an
order from the court, and several days were needed
to obtain this. But what did that matter to M.
Wilkie? The house, with its splendid reception-rooms,
pictures, statuary and gardens, was at his disposal,
and he installed himself therein at once. Twenty
horses neighed and stamped in his stables; there were
at least a dozen carriages in the coach-house.
He devoted his attention exclusively to the horses
and vehicles; but acting upon the advice of Casimir,
who had become his valet and oracle, he retained all
the former servants of the house, from Bourigeau the
concierge down to the humblest scullery maid.
Still, he gave them to understand that this was only
a temporary arrangement. A man like himself,
living in this progressive age, could scarcely be expected
to content himself with what had satisfied the Count
de Chalusse. “For I have my plans,”
he remarked to Casimir, “but let Paris wait awhile.”
He repudiated his former friends.
Costard and Serpillon, pretended viscounts though
they were, were quite beneath the notice of a Gordon-Chalusse,
as M. Wilkie styled himself on his visiting cards.
However, he purchased their share of Pompier de Nanterre,
feeling convinced that this remarkable steeplechaser
had a brilliant future before him. He did not
trouble himself to any great extent about his mother.
Like every one else, he knew that she had disappeared,
but nothing further. On the other hand, the thought
of his father, the terrible chevalier d’industrie,
hung over his joy like a pall; and each time the great
entrance bell announced a visitor, he trembled, turned
pale, and muttered: “Perhaps it’s
he!”
Tortured by this fear, he clung closely
to the Marquis de Valorsay as if he felt that this
distinguished friend was a powerful support. Besides,
people of rank and distinction naturally exercised
a powerful attraction over him, and he fancied he
grew several inches taller when, in some public place,
in the street, or a restaurant, he was able to call
out, “I say, Valorsay, my good friend,”
or, “Upon my word! my dear marquis!”
M. de Valorsay received these
effusions graciously enough, although, in point
of fact, he was terribly bored by the platitudes of
his new acquaintance. He intended to send him
to Coventry later on, but just now M. Wilkie was too
useful to be ignored. So he had introduced him
to his club, and was seen with him everywhere — in
the Bois, at the restaurants, and the theatres.
At times, some of his friends inquired: “Who
is that queer little fellow?” with a touch of
irony in their tone, but when the marquis carelessly
answered: “A poor devil who has just come
into possession of a property worth twenty millions!”
they became serious, and requested the pleasure and
honor of an introduction to this fortunate young man.
So M. de Valorsay had invited Gordon-Chalusse
to accompany him to Baron Trigault’s approaching
fête. It was to be an entertainment for gentlemen
only, a monster card-party; but every one knew the
wealthy baron, and no doubt with a view of stimulating
curiosity he had declared, and the Figaro had repeated,
that he had a great surprise in store for his guests.
Oh! such a surprise! They could have no idea what
it was! This fête was to take place on the second
day after Mademoiselle Marguerite’s arrest;
and on the appointed evening, between nine and ten
o’clock, M. de Valorsay and his friend Coralth
sat together in the former’s smoking-room waiting
for Wilkie to call for them, as had been agreed upon.
They were both in the best of spirits. The viscount’s
apprehensions had been entirely dispelled; and the
marquis had quite forgotten the twinges of pain in
his injured limb. “Marguerite will only
leave prison to marry me,” said M. de Valorsay,
triumphantly; and he added: “What a willing
tool this Wilkie is! A single word sufficed to
make him give all his servants leave of absence.
The Hotel de Chalusse will be deserted, and Madame
Leon and Vantrasson can operate at their leisure.”
It was ten o’clock when M. Wilkie
made his appearance. “Come, my good friends!”
said he, “my carriage is below.”
They started off at once, and five
minutes later they were ushered into the presence
of Baron Trigault, who received M. Wilkie as if he
had never seen him before. There was quite a
crowd already. At least three or four hundred
people had assembled in the Baron’s reception-rooms,
and among them were several former habitues of Madame
d’Argeles’s house; one could also espy
M. de Fondege ferociously twirling his mustaches as
usual, together with Kami-Bey, who was conspicuous
by reason of his portly form and eternal red fez.
However, among these men, all noticeable for their
studied elegance of attire and manner, and all of
them known to M. de Valorsay, there moved numerous
others of very different appearance. Their waistcoats
were less open, and their clothes did not fit them
as perfectly; on the other hand, there was something
else than a look of idiotic self-complacency on their
faces. “Who can these people be?”
whispered the marquis to M. de Coralth. “They
look like lawyers or magistrates.” But
although he said this he did not really believe it,
and it was without the slightest feeling of anxiety
that he strolled from group to group, shaking hands
with his friends and introducing M. Wilkie.
A strange rumor was in circulation
among the guests. Many of them declared — where
could they have heard such a thing? — that
in consequence of a quarrel with her husband, Madame
Trigault had left Paris the evening before. They
even went so far as to repeat her parting words to
the Baron: “You will never see me again,”
she had said. “You are amply avenged.
Farewell!” However, the best informed among the
guests, the folks who were thoroughly acquainted with
all the scandals of the day, declared the story false,
and said that if the baroness had really fled, handsome
Viscount de Coralth would not appear so calm and smiling.
The report was true, however.
But M. de Coralth did not trouble himself much about
the baroness now. Had he not got in his pocket
M. Wilkie’s signature insuring him upward of
half a million? Standing near one of the windows
in the main reception-room, between the Marquis de
Valorsay and M. Wilkie, the brilliant viscount was
gayly chatting with them, when a footman, in a voice
loud enough to interrupt all conversation, suddenly
announced: “M. Maumejan!”
It seemed such a perfectly natural
thing to M. de Valorsay that Maumejan, as one of the
baron’s business agents, should be received at
his house, that he was not in the least disturbed.
But M. de Coralth, having heard the name, wished to
see the man who had aided and advised the marquius
so effectually. He abruptly turned, and as he
did so the words he would have spoken died upon his
lips. He became livid, his eyes seemed to start
from their sockets, and it was with difficulty that
he ejaculated: “He!”
“Who?” inquired the astonished marquis.
“Look!”
M. de Valorsay did so, and to his
utter amazement he perceived a numerous party in the
rear of the man announced under the name of Maumejan.
First came Mademoiselle Marguerite, leaning on the
arm of the white-haired magistrate, and then Madame
Ferailleur; next M. Isidore Fortunat, and finally
Chupin — Victor Chupin, resplendent in a handsome,
bran-new, black dress-suit.
The marquis could no longer fail to
understand the truth. He realized who Maumejan
really was, and the audacious comedy he had been duped
by. He was so frightfully agitated that five
or six persons sprang forward exclaiming: “What
is the matter, marquis? Are you ill?” But
he made no reply. He felt that he was caught
in a trap, and he glanced wildly around him seeking
for some loophole of escape.
However, the word of command had evidently
been given. Suddenly all the guests scattered
about the various drawing-rooms poured into the main
hall, and the doors were closed. Then, with a
solemnity of manner which no one had ever seen him
display before, Baron Trigault took the so-called
Maumejan by the hand and led him into the centre of
the apartment opposite the lofty chimney-piece.
“Gentlemen,” he began, in a commanding
tone, “this is M. Pascal Ferailleur, the honorable
man who was falsely accused of cheating at cards at
Madame d’Argeles’s house. You owe
him a hearing.”
Pascal was greatly agitated.
The strangeness of the situation, the certainty of
speedy and startling rehabilitation, perhaps the joy
of vengeance, the silence, which was so profound that
he could hear his own panting breath, and the many
eyes riveted upon him, all combined to unnerve him.
But only for a moment. He swiftly conquered his
weakness, and surveying his audience with flashing
eyes, he explained, in a clear and ringing voice,
the shameful conspiracy to obtain possession of the
count’s millions, and the abominable machinations
by which Mademoiselle Marguerite and himself had been
victimized. Then when he had finished his explanations
he added, in a still more commanding voice, “Now
look; you can read the culprits’ guilt on their
faces. One is the scoundrel known to you as the
Viscount de Coralth, but Paul Violaine is his true
name. He was formerly an accomplice of the notorious
Mascarot; he is a cowardly villain, for he is married,
and leaves his wife and children to die of starvation!”
The Viscount de Coralth fairly bellowed with rage.
But Pascal did not heed him. “The other
criminal is the Marquis de Valorsay,” he added,
in the same ringing tone. There was, moreover,
a third culprit who would have inspired mingled pity
and disgust if any one had noticed him shrinking into
a corner, terrified and muttering: “It
wasn’t my fault, my wife compelled me to do it!”
This was General de Fondege.
Pascal did not mention his name.
But it was not absolutely necessary he should do so,
and besides, he remembered Marguerite’s entreaty
respecting the son.
However, while the young lawyer was
speaking, the marquis had summoned all his energy
and assurance to his aid. Desperate as his plight
might be, he would not surrender. “This
is an infamous conspiracy,” he exclaimed.
“Baron, you shall atone for this. The man’s
an impostor! — he lies! — all that
he says is false!”
“Yes, it is false!” echoed M. de Coralth.
But a clamor arose, drowning these
protestations, and the most opprobrious epithets could
be heard on every side.
“How will you prove your assertion?”
cried M. de Valorsay.
“Don’t try that dodge
on us!” shouted Chupin. “Vantrasson
and mother Leon have confessed everything.”
“Who defrauded us all with Domingo?”
cried several people; and, loud above all the others,
Kami-Bey bawled out: “To say nothing of
the fact that the sale of your racing stud was a complete
swindle!”
Meanwhile, Pascal’s former friends
and associates, his brother advocates and the magistrates
who had listened to his first efforts at the bar,
crowded round him, pressing his hands, embracing him
almost to suffocation, censuring themselves for having
suspected him, the very soul of honor, and pleading
in self-justification the degenerate age in which
we live — an age in which we daily see those
whom we had considered immaculate suddenly yield to
temptation. And a murmur of respectful admiration
rose from the throng when the excitement had subsided
a little, and the guests had an opportunity to observe
Mademoiselle Marguerite, whose eyes sparkled more
brightly than ever through her happy tears; and whose
beauty acquired an almost sublime expression from
her deep emotion.
The wretched Valorsay felt that all
was over — that he was irretrievably lost.
Seized by a blind fury like that which impels a hunted
animal to turn and face the hounds that pursue him,
and bid them defiance, he confronted the throng with
his face distorted with passion, his eyes bloodshot,
and foam upon his lips; he was absolutely frightful
in his cynicism, hatred, and scorn. “Ah!
well, yes!” he exclaimed — “yes,
all that you have just heard is true. I was sinking,
and I tried to save myself as best I could. Beggars
cannot be choosers; I staked my all upon a single
die. If I had won, you would have been at my feet;
but I have lost and you spurn me. Cowards! hypocrites!
that you are, insult me if you like, but tell me how
many among you all are sufficiently pure and upright
to have a right to despise me! Are there a hundred
among you? are there even fifty?”
A tempest of hisses momentarily drowned
his voice, but as soon as the uproar had ceased, he
resumed, sneeringly: “Ah! the truth wounds
you, my dear friends. Pray, don’t pretend
to be so distressingly virtuous! I was ruined — that
is the long and short of it. But what man of you
is not embarrassed? Who among you finds his income
sufficient? Which one of you is not encroaching
upon his capital? And when you have come to your
last louis, you will do what I have done, or
something worse. Do not deny it, for not one
among you has a more uncompromising conscience, more
moral firmness, or more generous aspirations than
I once possessed. You are pursuing what I pursued.
You desire what I desired — a life of luxury,
brief if it must be, but happy — a life of
gayety, wild excitement, and dissipation. You,
too, have a passion for pleasure and gambling, race-horses,
and notorious women, a table always bountifully spread,
glasses ever overflowing with wine, all the delights
of luxury, and everything that gratifies your vanity!
But an abyss of shame awaits you at the end of it
all. I am in it now. I await you there, for
there you will surely, necessarily, inevitably come.
Ah, ha! you will not then think my downfall so very
strange. Let me pass! make way! if you please.”
He advanced with his head haughtily
erect, and would actually have made his escape if
a frightened servant had not at that moment appeared
crying: “Monsieur Monsieur
lé Baron! a commissary of police is downstairs.
He is coming up. He has a warrant!”
The marquis’s frenzied assurance
deserted him. He turned even paler than he already
was if that were possible, and reeled like an ox but
partially stunned by the butcher’s hammer.
Suddenly a desperate resolution could be read in his
eyes, the resolution of the condemned criminal, who,
knowing that he cannot escape the scaffold, ascends
it with a firm step.
He hastily approached Baron Trigault,
and asked in a husky voice: “Will you allow
me to be arrested in your house, baron? me — a
Valorsay!”
It might have been supposed that the
baron had expected this reproach, for without a word
he led the marquis and M. de Coralth to a little room
at the end of the hall, pushed them inside, and closed
the door again.
It was time he did so, for the commissary
of police was already upon the threshold. “Which
of you gentlemen is the Marquis de Valorsay?”
he asked. “Which of you is Paul Violaine,
alias the Viscount de — ”
The sharp report of firearms suddenly
interrupted him. Every one at once rushed to
the little room, where the wretched men had been conducted.
There extended, face upward, on the floor, lay the
Marquis de Valorsay, with his brains oozing from his
fractured skull, and his right hand still clutching
a revolver. He was dead. “And the other!”
cried the throng; “the other!”
The open window, and a curtain rudely
torn from its fastenings and secured to the balustrade,
told how M. de Coralth had made his escape. It
was not till later that people learned what precautions
the baron had taken. On the table in that room
he had laid two revolvers, and two packages containing
ten thousand francs each. The viscount had not
hesitated.
Pascal Ferailleur and Mademoiselle
Marguerite de Chalusse were married at the church
of Saint Etienne du Mont, only a few steps from the
Rue d’Ulm. Those who knew the mystery connected
with the bride’s parentage were greatly astonished
when they saw Baron Trigault act as a witness on this
occasion, in company with the venerable justice of
the peace. But such was the fact, nevertheless.
Treated more and more outrageously by his daughter
and her husband, separated from his wife, who had nearly
lost her reason, although her letters were saved, the
baron has nowadays found affection and a home with
Pascal and his wife. He plays cards but seldom
now — only an occasional game of piquet with
Madame Ferailleur, and he amuses himself by making
her start when she is too long in discarding, by ejaculating,
in a stentorian voice: “We are wasting
precious time!” Sometimes they go out together,
to the great astonishment of such as chance to meet
the puritanical old lady leaning on the baron’s
arm. She often goes to visit and console the widow
Gordon, formerly known as Lia d’Argeles, who
now keeps an establishment near Montrouge, where she
provides poor, betrayed and forsaken girls with a
home and employment. She has yet to receive any
token of remembrance from her son. As for her
husband, she supposes he is dead or incarcerated in
some prison.
It is to Madame Gordon that the Fondeges
are often indebted for bread. Obliged to disgorge
their plunder, and left with no resources save the
fifty francs a month allowed them by their son, who
has been promoted to the rank of captain, their poverty
is necessarily extreme. Oh! those Fondeges!
M. Fortunat only speaks of them with horror. But
he is loud in his praises of Madame Marguerite, who
repaid him the forty thousand francs he had advanced
to M. de Valorsay. He speaks in the highest terms
of Chupin also; but in this, he is scarcely sincere,
for Victor, who has been set up in business by Pascal,
told him very plainly that he was determined not to
put his hand to any more dirty work, and that expression,
“dirty work,” rankles in M. Fortunat’s
heart.
Chupin’s resolution did not,
however, prevent him from attending the trial of Vantrasson
and Madame Leon — the former of whom was sentenced
to hard labor for life, and the latter to ten years’
imprisonment. Nothing is known concerning M.
de Coralth; but his wife has disappeared, to the great
disappointment of M. Mouchon. As a dentist, Dr.
Jodon is successful. As for M. Wilkie, you can
learn anything you wish to know concerning him in
the newspapers, for his sayings, doings, and movements,
are constantly being chronicled. The reporters
exhaust all the resources of their vocabulary in describing
his horses, carriages, and stables, and the gorgeous
liveries of his servants. His changes of residence
are always mentioned; his brilliant sayings are quoted.
He is a social success; he is admired, fondled, and
flattered. He makes a great stir in the fashionable
world — in fact, he reigns over it like a
king. After all, assurance is the winning card
in the game of life!