Few people have any idea of the great
number of estates which, in default of heirs to claim
them, annually revert to the government. The
treasury derives large sums from this source every
year. And this is easily explained, for nowadays
family ties are becoming less and less binding.
Brothers cease to meet; their children no longer know
each other; and the members of the second generation
are as perfect strangers as though they were not united
by a bond of consanguinity. The young man whom
love of adventure lures to a far-off country, and the
young girl who marries against her parents’
wishes, soon cease to exist for their relatives.
No one even inquires what has become of them.
Those who remain at home are afraid to ask whether
they are prosperous or unfortunate, lest they should
be called upon to assist the wanderers. Forgotten
themselves, the adventurers in their turn soon forget.
If fortune smiles upon them, they are careful not to
inform their relatives. Poor — they
have been cast off; wealthy — they themselves
deny their kindred. Having become rich unaided,
they find an egotistical satisfaction in spending
their money alone in accordance with their own fancies.
Now when a man of this class dies what happens?
The servants and people around him profit of his loneliness
and isolation, and the justice of the peace is only
summoned to affix the seals, after they have removed
all the portable property. An inventory is taken,
and after a few formalities, as no heirs present themselves,
the court declares the inheritance to be in abeyance,
and appoints a trustee.
This trustee’s duties are very
simple. He manages the property and remits the
income to the Treasury until a legal judgment declares
the estate the property of the country, regardless
of any heirs who may present themselves in future.
“If I only had a twentieth part
of the money that is lost in this way, my fortune
would be made,” exclaimed a shrewd man, some
thirty years ago.
The person who spoke was Antoine Vaudore.
For six months he secretly nursed the idea, studying
it, examining it in all respects, weighing its advantages
and disadvantages, and at last he decided that it was
a good one. That same year, indeed, assisted
by a little capital which he had obtained no one knew
how, he created a new, strange, and untried profession
to supply a new demand.
Thus Vaudore was the first man who
made heir-hunting a profession. As will be generally
admitted, it is not a profession that can be successfully
followed by a craven. It requires the exercise
of unusual shrewdness, untiring activity, extraordinary
energy and courage, as well as great tact and varied
knowledge. The man who would follow it successfully
must possess the boldness of a gambler, the sang-froid
of a duelist, the keen perceptive powers and patience
of a detective, and the resources and quick wit of
the shrewdest attorney.
It is easier to decry the profession
than to exercise it. To begin with, the heir-hunter
must be posted up with information respecting unclaimed
inheritances, and he must have sufficient acquaintance
with the legal world to be able to obtain information
from the clerks of the different courts, notaries,
and so on. When he learns that a man has died
without any known heirs, his first care is to ascertain
the amount of unclaimed property, to see if it will
pay him to take up the case. If he finds that
the inheritance is a valuable one, he begins operations
without delay. He must first ascertain the deceased’s
full name and age. It is easy to procure this
information; but it is more difficult to discover
the name of the place where the deceased was born,
his profession, what countries he lived in, his tastes
and mode of life — in a word, everything
that constitutes a complete biography.
However, when he has armed himself
with the more indispensable facts, our agent opens
the campaign with extreme prudence, for it would be
ruinous to awake suspicion. It is curious to observe
the incomparable address which the agent displays
in his efforts to learn the particulars of the deceased’s
life, by consulting his friends, his enemies, his
debtors, and all who ever knew him, until at last some
one is found who says: “Such and such a
man — why, he came from our part of the country.
I never knew him, but I am acquainted with one
of his brothers — with one of his uncles — or
with one of his nephews.”
Very often years of constant research,
a large outlay of money, and costly and skilful advertising
in all the European journals, are necessary before
this result is reached. And it is only when it
has been attained that the agent can take time to
breathe. But now the chances are greatly in his
favor. The worst is over. The portion of
his task which depended on chance alone is concluded.
The rest is a matter of skill, tact, and shrewdness.
The detective must give place to the crafty lawyer.
The agent must confer with this heir, who has been
discovered at the cost of so much time and trouble
and induce him to bestow a portion of this prospective
wealth on the person who is able to establish his
claim. There must be an agreement in writing clearly
stating what proportion — a tenth, a third,
or a half — the agent will be entitled to.
The negotiation is a very delicate and difficult one,
requiring prodigious presence of mind, and an amount
of duplicity which would make the most astute diplomatist
turn pale with envy. Occasionally, the heir suspects
the truth, sneers at the proposition, and hurries off
to claim the whole of the inheritance that belongs
to him. The agent may then bid his hopes farewell.
He has worked and spent money for nothing.
However, such a misfortune is of rare
occurrence. On hearing of the unexpected good
fortune that has befallen him, the heir is generally
unsuspicious, and willingly promises to pay the amount
demanded of him. A contract is drawn up and signed;
and then, but only then, does the agent take his client
into his confidence. “You are the relative
of such a person, are you not?” “Yes.”
“Very well. He is dead, and you are his
heir. Thank Providence, and make haste to claim
your money.”
As a rule, the heir loyally fulfils
his obligation. But sometimes it happens that,
when he has obtained undisputed possession of the
property, he declares that he has been swindled, and
refuses to fulfil his part of the contract. Then
the case must go to the courts. It is true, however,
that the judgment of the tribunals generally recalls
the refractory client to a sense of gratitude and
humility.
Now our friend M. Isidore Fortunat
was a hunter of missing heirs. Undoubtedly he
often engaged in other business which was a trifle
less respectable; but heir-hunting was one of the
best and most substantial sources of his income.
So we can readily understand why he so quickly left
off lamenting that forty thousand francs lent to the
Marquis de Valorsay.
Changing his tactics, he said to himself
that, even if he had lost this amount through M. de
Chalusse’s sudden death, it was much less than
he might obtain if he succeeded in discovering the
unknown heirs to so many millions. And he had
some reason to hope that he would be able to do so.
Having been employed by M. de Chalusse when the latter
was seeking Mademoiselle Marguerite, M. Fortunat had
gained some valuable information respecting his client,
and the additional particulars which he had obtained
from Madame Vantrasson elated him to such an extent
that more than once he exclaimed: “Ah,
well! it is, perhaps, a blessing in disguise, after
all.”
Still, M. Isidore Fortunat slept but
little after his stormy interview with the Marquis
de Valorsay. A loss of forty thousand francs is
not likely to impart a roseate hue to one’s
dreams — and M. Fortunat prized his money
as if it had been the very marrow of his bones.
By way of consolation, he assured himself that he
would not merely regain the sum, but triple it; and
yet this encouragement did not entirely restore his
peace of mind. The gain was only a possibility,
and the loss was a certainty. So he twisted,
and turned, and tossed on his bed as if it had been
a hot gridiron, exhausting himself in surmises, and
preparing his mind for the difficulties which he would
be obliged to overcome.
His plan was a simple one, but its
execution was fraught with difficulties. “I
must discover M. de Chalusse’s sister, if she
is still living — I must discover her children,
if she is dead,” he said to himself. It
was easy to say this; but how was he to do it?
How could he hope to find this unfortunate girl, who
had abandoned her home thirty years previously, to
fly, no one knew where, or with whom? How was
he to gain any idea of the life she had lived, or
the fate that had befallen her? At what point
on the social scale, and in what country, should he
begin his investigations? These daughters of noble
houses, who desert the paternal roof in a moment of
madness, generally die most miserably after a wretched
life. The girl of the lower classes is armed against
misfortune, and has been trained for the conflict.
She can measure and calculate the force of her fall,
and regulate and control it to a certain extent.
But the others cannot. They have never known privation
and hardship, and are, therefore, defenceless.
And for the very reason that they have been hurled
from a great height, they often fall down into the
lowest depths of infamy.
“If morning would only come,”
sighed M. Isidore Fortunat, as he tossed restlessly
to and fro. “As soon as morning comes I
will set to work!”
But just before daybreak he fell asleep;
and at nine o’clock he was still slumbering
so soundly that Madame Dodelin, his housekeeper, had
considerable difficulty in waking him. “Your
clerks have come,” she exclaimed, shaking him
vigorously; “and two clients are waiting for
you in the reception-room.”
He sprang up, hastily dressed himself,
and went into his office. It cost him no little
effort to receive his visitors that morning; but it
would have been folly to neglect all his other business
for the uncertain Chalusse affair. The first
client who entered was a man still young, of common,
even vulgar appearance. Not being acquainted with
M. Fortunat, he deemed it proper to introduce himself
without delay. “My name is Leplaintre,
and I am a coal merchant,” said he. “I
was recommended to call on you by my friend Bouscat,
who was formerly in the wine trade.”
M. Fortunat bowed. “Pray
be seated,” was his reply. “I remember
your friend very well. If I am not mistaken I
gave him some advice with reference to his third failure.”
“Precisely; and it is because
I find myself in the same fix as Bouscat that I have
called on you. Business is very bad, and I have
notes to a large amount overdue, so that — ”
“You will be obliged to go into bankruptcy.”
“Alas! I fear so.”
M. Fortunat already knew what his
client desired, but it was against his principles
to meet these propositions more than half way.
“Will you state your case?” said he.
The coal merchant blushed. It
was hard to confess the truth; but the effort had
to be made. “This is my case,” he
replied, at last. “Among my creditors I
have several enemies, who will refuse me a release.
They would like to deprive me of everything I possess.
And in that case, what would become of me? Is
it right that I should be compelled to starve?”
“It is a bad outlook.”
“It is, indeed, monsieur; and
for this reason, I desire — if possible, if
I can do so without danger — for I am an honest
man, monsieur — I wish to retain a little
property — secretly, of course, not for myself,
by any means, but I have a young wife and — ”
M. Fortunat took compassion on the
man’s embarrassment. “In short,”
he interrupted, “you wish to conceal a part of
your capital from your creditors?”
On hearing this precise and formal
statement of his honorable intentions, the coal-merchant
trembled. His feelings of integrity would not
have been alarmed by a periphrasis, but this plain
speaking shocked him. “Oh, monsieur!”
he protested, “I would rather blow my brains
out than defraud my creditors of a single penny that
was rightfully theirs. What I am doing is for
their interest, you understand. I shall begin
business again under my wife’s name; and if I
succeed, they shall be paid — yes, monsieur,
every sou, with interest. Ah! if I had only myself
to think of, it would be quite different; but I have
two children, two little girls, so that — ”
“Very well,” replied M.
Fortunat. “I should suggest to you the same
expedient as I suggested to your friend Bouscat.
But you must gather a little ready money together
before going into bankruptcy.”
“I can do that by secretly disposing
of a part of my stock, so — ”
“In that case, you are saved.
Sell it and put the money beyond your creditors’
reach.”
The worthy merchant scratched his
ear in evident perplexity. “Excuse me,”
said he. “I had thought of this plan; but
it seemed to me — dishonorable — and — also
very dangerous. How could I explain this decrease
in my stock? My creditors hate me. If they
suspected anything, they would accuse me of fraud,
and perhaps throw me into prison; and then — ”
M. Fortunat shrugged his shoulders.
“When I give advice,” he roughly replied,
“I furnish the means of following it without
danger. Listen to me attentively. Let us
suppose, for a moment, that some time ago you purchased,
at a very high figure, a quantity of stocks and shares,
which are to-day almost worthless, could not this unfortunate
investment account for the absence of the sum which
you wish to set aside? Your creditors would be
obliged to value these securities, not at their present,
but at their former value.”
“Evidently; but, unfortunately,
I do not possess any such securities.”
“You can purchase them.”
The coal-merchant opened his eyes
in astonishment. “Excuse me,” he
muttered, “I don’t exactly understand you.”
He did not understand in the least;
but M. Fortunat enlightened him by opening his safe,
and displaying an enormous bundle of stocks and shares
which had flooded the country a few years previously,
and ruined a great many poor, ignorant fools which
were hungering for wealth; among them were shares
in the Tifila Mining Company, the Berchem Coal Mines,
the Greenland Fisheries, the Mutual Trust and Loan
Association, and so on. There had been a time
when each of these securities would have fetched five
hundred or a thousand francs at the Bourse, but now
they were not worth the paper on which they were printed.
“Let us suppose, my dear sir,”
resumed M. Fortunat, “that you had a drawer
full of these securities — ”
But the other did not allow him to
finish. “I see,” he exclaimed; “I
see — I can sell my stock, and put the proceeds
in my pocket with perfect safety. There is enough
to represent my capital a thousand times over.”
And, in a paroxysm of delight, he added:
“Give me enough of these shares
to represent a capital of one hundred and twenty thousand
francs; and give me some of each kind. I should
like my creditors to have a variety.”
Thereupon M. Fortunat counted out
a pile of these worthless securities as carefully
as if he had been handling bank-notes; and his client
at the same time drew out his pocketbook.
“How much do I owe you?” he inquired.
“Three thousand francs.”
The honest merchant bounded from his
chair. “Three thousand francs!” he
repeated. “You must be jesting. That
trash is not worth a louis.”
“I would not even give five
francs for it,” rejoined M. Fortunat, coldly;
“but it is true that I don’t desire to
purchase these shares in my creditors’ interest.
With you it is quite a different matter — this
trash, as you very justly call it, will save you at
least a hundred thousand francs. I ask only three
per cent., which is certainly not dear. Still,
you know, I don’t force any one to purchase them.”
And, in a terribly significant tone, he added:
“You can undoubtedly buy similar securities
on better terms; but take care you don’t arouse
your creditors’ suspicions by applying elsewhere.”
“He would betray me, the scoundrel!”
thought the merchant. And, realizing that he
had fallen into a trap, “Here are three thousand
francs,” he sighed; “but at least, my dear
sir, give me good measure, and throw in a few thousand
francs more.”
The coal-merchant smiled the ghastly
smile of a man who sees no way of escape from imposition,
and has, therefore, resolved to submit with the best
grace possible. But M. Fortunat’s gravity
did not relax. He gave what he had promised — neither
more nor less — in exchange for the bank-notes,
and even gravely exclaimed: “See if the
amount is correct.”
His client pocketed the shares without
counting them: but before leaving the room he
made his estimable adviser promise to assist him at
the decisive moment, and help him to prepare one of
those clear financial statements which make creditors
say: “This is an honest man who has been
extremely unfortunate.”
M. Fortunat was admirably fitted to
render this little service; for he devoted such part
of his time as was not spent in hunting for missing
heirs to difficult liquidations, and he had indeed
made bankruptcy a specialty in which he was without
a rival. The business was a remunerative one,
thanks to the expedient he had revealed to the coal-merchant — an
expedient which is common enough nowadays, but of
which he might almost be called the inventor.
It consisted in compelling the persons who asked for
his advice to purchase worthless shares at whatever
price he chose to set upon them, and they were forced
to submit, under penalty of denunciation and exposure.
The client who followed the coal-merchant
proved to be a simple creature, who had called to
ask for some advice respecting a slight difficulty
between himself and his landlord. M. Fortunat
speedily disposed of him, and then, opening the door
leading into the outer office, he called: “Cashier!”
A shabbily-dressed man, some thirty-five
years of age, at once entered the private sanctum,
carrying a money-bag in one hand and a ledger in the
other.
“How many debtors were visited
yesterday?” inquired M. Fortunat.
“Two hundred and thirty-seven.”
“What was the amount collected?”
“Eighty-nine francs.”
M. Isidore Fortunat’s grimace
was expressive of satisfaction. “Not bad,”
said he, “not at all bad.”
Then a singular performance began.
M. Fortunat called over the names of his debtors,
one by one, and the cashier answered each name by reading
a memorandum written against it on the margin of a
list he held. “Such a one,” said
the agent, “and such a one — and such — ”
Whereupon the cashier replied: “Has paid
two francs — was not at home — paid
twenty sous — would not pay anything.”
How did it happen that M. Fortunat
had so many debtors? This question can be easily
answered. In settling bankrupts’ estates
it was easy for him to purchase a large number of
debts which were considered worthless, at a trifling
cost, and he reaped a bountiful harvest on a field
which would have yielded nothing to another person.
It was not because he was rigorous in his demands;
he conquered by patience, gentleness, and politeness,
but also by unwearying perseverance and tenacity.
When he decided that a debtor was to pay him a certain
sum, it was paid. He never relaxed in his efforts.
Every other day some one was sent to visit the debtor,
to follow him, and harass him; he was surrounded by
M. Fortunat’s agents; they pursued him to his
office, shop, or cafe — everywhere, continually,
incessantly — and always with the most perfect
urbanity. At last even the most determined succumbed;
to escape this frightful persecution, they, somehow
or other, found the money to satisfy M. Fortunat’s
claim. Besides Victor Chupin, he had five other
agents whose business it was to visit these poor wretches.
A list was assigned to each man every morning; and
when evening came, he made his report to the cashier,
who in turn reported to his employer. This branch
of industry added considerably to the profits of M.
Fortunat’s other business, and was the third
and last string to his bow.
The report proceeded as usual, but
it was quite evident that M. Fortunat’s thoughts
were elsewhere. He paused each moment to listen
eagerly for the slightest sound outside, for before
receiving the coal-merchant he had told Victor Chupin
to run to the Rue de Courcelles and ask M. Casimir
for news of the Count de Chalusse. He had done
this more than an hour before; and Victor Chupin,
who was usually so prompt, had not yet made his appearance.
At last, however, he returned, whereupon
M. Fortunat dismissed the cashier, and addressed his
messenger: “Well?” he asked.
“He is no longer living.
They think he died without a will, and that the pretty
young lady will be turned out of the house.”
This information agreed so perfectly
with M. Fortunat’s presentiments that he did
not even wince, but calmly asked: “Will
Casimir keep his appointment?”
“He told me that he would endeavor
to come, and I’d wager a hundred to one that
he will be there; he would travel ten leagues to put
something good into his stomach.”
M. Fortunat’s opinion coincided
with Chupin’s. “Very well,”
said he. “Only you were a long time on
the road, Victor.”
“That’s true, m’sieur;
but I had a little matter of my own to attend to — a
matter of a hundred francs, if you please.”
M. Fortunat knit his brows angrily.
“It’s only right to attend to business,”
said he; “but you think too much of money, Victor — altogether
too much. You are insatiable.”
The young man proudly lifted his head,
and with an air of importance, replied: “I
have so many responsibilities — ”
“Responsibilities! — you?”
“Yes, indeed, m’sieur.
And why not? My poor, good mother hasn’t
been able to work for a year, and who would care for
her if I didn’t? Certainly not my father,
the good-for-nothing scamp, who squandered all the
Duke de Sairmeuse’s money without giving us a
sou of it. Besides, I’m like other men,
I’m anxious to be rich, and enjoy myself.
I should like to ride in my carriage like other people
do. And whenever a gamin, such as I was once,
opened the door for me, I should put a five-franc
piece in his hand — ”
He was interrupted by Madame Dodelin,
the worthy housekeeper, who rushed into the room without
knocking, in a terrible state of excitement.
“Monsieur!” she exclaimed, in the same
tone as if she would have called “Fire!”
“here is Monsieur de Valorsay.”
M. Fortunat sprang up and turned extremely
pale. “What to the devil brings him here?”
he anxiously stammered. “Tell him that I’ve
gone out — tell him — ”
But it was useless, for the marquis
at that very moment entered the room, and the agent
could only dismiss his housekeeper and Chupin.
M. de Valorsay seemed to be very angry,
and it looked as if he meant to give vent to his passion.
Indeed, as soon as he was alone with M. Fortunat,
he began: “So this is the way you betray
your friends, Master Twenty-per-Cent! Why did
you deceive me last night about the ten thousand francs
you had promised me? Why didn’t you tell
me the truth? You knew of the misfortune that
had befallen M. de Chalusse. I heard of it first
scarcely an hour ago through a letter from Madame Leon.”
M. Fortunat hesitated somewhat.
He was a quiet man, opposed to violence of any kind;
and it seemed to him that M. de Valorsay was twisting
and turning his cane in a most ominous manner.
“I must confess, Monsieur lé Marquis,”
he at last replied, “that I had not the courage
to tell you of the dreadful misfortune which had befallen
us.”
“How — us?”
“Certainly. If you lose
the hope of several millions, I also lose the amount
I advanced to you, forty thousand francs — my
entire fortune. And yet, you see that I don’t
complain. Do as I do — confess that the
game is lost.”
The marquis was listening with an
air of suppressed wrath; his face was crimson, there
was a dark frown on his brow, and his hands were clinched.
He was apparently furious with passion, but in reality
he was perfectly self-possessed. The best proof
that can be given of his coolness is that he was carefully
studying M. Fortunat’s face, and trying to discover
the agent’s real intentions under his meaningless
words. He had expected to find “his dear
extortioner” exasperated by his loss, cursing
and swearing, and demanding his money — but
not at all. He found him more gentle and calm,
colder and more reserved than ever; brimful of resignation
indeed, and preaching submission to the inevitable.
“What can this mean?” he thought, with
an anxious heart. “What mischief is the
scoundrel plotting now? I’d wager a thousand
to one that he’s forging some thunderbolt to
crush me.” And, in a haughty tone, he said
aloud:
“In a word, you desert me.”
With a deprecatory gesture, M. Fortunat
exclaimed: “I desert you, Monsieur
lé Marquis! What have I done that you should
think so ill of me? Alas! circumstances are the
only traitors. I shouldn’t like to deprive
you of the courage you so much need, but, honestly,
it would be folly to struggle against destiny.
How can you hope to succeed in your plans? Have
you not resorted to every possible expedient to prolong
your apparently brilliant existence until the present
time? Are you not at such a point that you must
marry Mademoiselle Marguerite in a month’s time,
or perish? And now the count’s millions
are lost! If I might be allowed to give you some
advice, I should say, ’The shipwreck is inevitable;
think only of saving yourself.’ By tact
and shrewdness, you might yet save something from
your creditors. Compromise with them. And
if you need my services, here I am. Go to Nice,
and give me a power of attorney to act for you.
From the debris of your fortune, I will undertake
to guarantee you a competence which would satisfy many
an ambitious man.”
The marquis laughed sneeringly.
“Excellent!” he exclaimed. “You
would rid yourself of me and recover your forty thousand
francs at the same time. A very clever arrangement.”
M. Fortunat realized that his client
understood him; but what did it matter? “I
assure you — ” he began.
But the marquis silenced him with
a contemptuous gesture. “Let us stop this
nonsense,” said he. “We understand
each other better than that. I have never made
any attempt to deceive you, nor have I ever supposed
that I had succeeded in doing so, and pray do me the
honor to consider me as shrewd as yourself.”
And still refusing to listen to the agent, he continued:
“If I have come to you, it is only because the
case is not so desperate as you suppose. I still
hold some valuable cards which you are ignorant of.
In your opinion, and every one else’s, Mademoiselle
Marguerite is ruined. But I know that she is still
worth three millions, at the very least.”
“Mademoiselle Marguerite?”
“Yes, Monsieur Twenty-per-Cent.
Let her become my wife, and the very next day I will
place her in possession of an income of a hundred and
fifty thousand francs. But she must marry me first;
and this scornful maiden will not grant me her hand
unless I can convince her of my love and disinterestedness.”
“But your rival?”
M. de Valorsay gave a nervous start,
but quickly controlled himself. “He no
longer exists. Read this day’s Figaro, and
you will be edified. I have no rival now.
If I can only conceal my financial embarrassment a
little longer, she is mine. A friendless and homeless
girl cannot defend herself long in Paris — especially
when she has an adviser like Madame Leon. Oh!
I shall win her! I shall have her! — she
is a necessity to me. Now you can judge if it
would be wise on your part to deprive me of your assistance.
Would you like to know what I want? Simply this — the
means to sustain me two or three months longer — some
thirty thousand francs. You can procure the money — will
you? It would make, in all, seventy thousand
francs that I should owe you, and I will promise to
pay you two hundred and fifty thousand if I succeed — and
I shall succeed! Such profit is worth some risk.
Reflect, and decide. But no more subterfuges,
if you please. Let your answer be plain yes or
no.”
Without a second’s hesitation, M. Fortunat replied,
“No.”
The flush on the marquis’s face
deepened, and his voice became a trifle harsher; but
that was all. “Confess, then, that you have
resolved to ruin me,” he said. “You
refuse before you have heard me to the end. Wait,
at least, until I have told you my plans, and shown
you the solid foundation which my hopes rest upon.”
But M. Fortunat had resolved to listen
to nothing. He wished for no explanations, so
distrustful was he of himself — so much did
he fear that his adventurous nature would urge him
to incur further risk. He was positively afraid
of the Marquis de Valorsay’s eloquence; besides,
he knew well enough that the person who consents to
listen is at least half convinced. “Tell
me nothing, monsieur,” he hastily answered; “it
would be useless. I haven’t the money.
If I had given you ten thousand francs last night,
I should have been compelled to borrow them of M. Prosper
Bertomy. And even if I had the money, I should
still say ‘Impossible.’ Every man
has his system — his theory, you know.
Mine is, never to run after my money. With me,
whatever I may lose, I regard it as finally lost;
I think no more about it, and turn to something else.
So your forty thousand francs have already been entered
on my profit and loss account. And yet it would
be easy enough for you to repay me, if you would follow
my advice and go quietly into bankruptcy.”
“Never!” interrupted M.
de Valorsay; “never! I do not wish to temporize,”
he continued. “I will save all, or save
nothing. If you refuse me your help, I shall
apply elsewhere. I will never give my good friends,
who detest me, and whom I cordially hate in return,
the delicious joy of seeing the Marquis de Valorsay
fall step by step from the high position he has occupied.
I will never truckle to the men whom I have eclipsed
for fifteen years. No, never! I would rather
die, or even commit the greatest crime!”
He suddenly checked himself, a trifle
astonished, perhaps, by his own plain-speaking; and,
for a moment, he and M. Fortunat looked into each
other’s eyes, striving to divine their respective
secret thoughts.
The marquis was the first to speak.
“And so,” said he, in a tone which he
strove to make persuasive, but which was threatening
instead, “it is settled — your decision
is final?”
“Final.”
“You will not even condescend to listen to my
explanation?”
“It would be a loss of time.”
On receiving this cruel reply, M.
de Valorsay struck the desk such a formidable blow
with his clenched fist that several bundles of papers
fell to the floor. His anger was not feigned now.
“What are you plotting, then?” he exclaimed;
“and what do you intend to do? What is
your object in betraying me? Take care! It
is my life that I am going to defend, and as truly
as there is a God in heaven, I shall defend it well.
A man who is determined to blow his brains out if he
is defeated, is a terribly dangerous adversary.
Woe to you, if I ever find you standing between me
and the Count de Chalusse’s millions!”
Every drop of blood had fled from
M. Fortunat’s face, still his mien was composed
and dignified. “You do wrong to threaten
me,” said he. “I don’t fear
you in the least. If I were your enemy, I should
bring suit against you for the forty thousand francs
you owe me. I should not obtain my money, of
course, but I could shatter the tottering edifice of
your fortune by a single blow. Besides, you forget
that I possess a copy of our agreement, signed by
your own hand, and that I have only to show it to
Mademoiselle Marguerite to give her a just opinion
of your disinterestedness. Let us sever our connection
now, monsieur, and each go his own way without reference
to the other. If you should succeed you will
repay me.”
Victory perched upon the agent’s
banner, and it was with a feeling of pride that he
saw his noble client depart, white and speechless with
rage. “What a rascal that marquis is,”
he muttered. “I would certainly warn Mademoiselle
Marguerite, poor girl, if I were not so much afraid
of him.”