M. Isidore Fortunat was not the man
to go to sleep over a plan when it was once formed.
Whenever he said to himself, “I’ll do this,
or that,” he did it as soon as possible — that
very evening, rather than the next day. Having
sworn that he would find out Madame d’Argeles’s
son, the heir to the Count de Chalusse’s millions,
it did not take him long to decide which of his agents
he would select to assist him in this difficult task.
Thus his first care, on returning home, was to ask
his bookkeeper for Victor Chupin’s address.
“He lives in the Faubourg Saint-Denis,”
replied the bookkeeper, “at No. .”
“Very well,” muttered
M. Fortunat; “I’ll go there as soon as
I have eaten my dinner.” And, indeed, as
soon as he had swallowed his coffee, he requested
Madame Dodelin to bring him his overcoat, and half
an hour later he reached the door of the house where
his clerk resided.
The house was one of those huge, ungainly
structures, large enough to shelter the population
of a small village, with three or four courtyards,
as many staircases as there are letters in the alphabet,
and a concierge who seldom remembers the names of the
tenants except on quarter-days when he goes to collect
the rent, and at New Year, when he expects a gratuity.
But, by one of those lucky chances made expressly
for M. Fortunat, the porter did recollect Chupin, knew
him and was kindly disposed toward him, and so he
told the visitor exactly how and where to find him.
It was very simple. He had only to cross the first
courtyard, take staircase D, on the left-hand side,
ascend to the sixth floor, go straight ahead, etc.,
etc.
Thanks to this unusual civility, M.
Fortunat did not lose his way more than five times
before reaching the door upon which was fastened a
bit of pasteboard bearing Victor Chupin’s name.
Noticing that a bell-rope hung beside the door, M.
Fortunat pulled it, whereupon there was a tinkling,
and a voice called out, “Come in!” He complied,
and found himself in a small and cheaply furnished
room, which was, however, radiant with the cleanliness
which is in itself a luxury. The waxed floor
shone like a mirror; the furniture was brilliantly
polished, and the counterpane and curtains of the
bed were as white as snow. What first attracted
the agent’s attention was the number of superfluous
articles scattered about the apartment — some
plaster statuettes on either side of a gilt clock,
an etagere crowded with knickknacks, and five or six
passable engravings. When he entered, Victor Chupin
was sitting, in his shirt-sleeves, at a little table,
where, by the light of a small lamp, and with a zeal
that brought a flush to his cheeks, he was copying,
in a very fair hand a page from a French dictionary.
Near the bed, in the shade, sat a poorly but neatly
clad woman about forty years of age, who was knitting
industriously with some long wooden needles.
“M. Victor Chupin?” inquired M. Fortunat.
The sound of his voice made the young
man spring to his feet. He quickly lifted the
shade from his lamp, and, without attempting to conceal
his astonishment, exclaimed: “M’sieur
Fortunat! — at this hour! Where’s
the fire?” Then, in a grave manner that contrasted
strangely with his accustomed levity: “Mother,”
said he, “this is one of my patrons, M’sieur
Fortunat — you know — the gentleman
whom I collect for.”
The knitter rose, bowed respectfully,
and said: “I hope, sir, that you are pleased
with my son, and that he’s honest.”
“Certainly, madame,”
replied the agent; “certainly. Victor is
one of my best and most reliable clerks.”
“Then I’m content,” said the woman,
reseating herself.
Chupin also seemed delighted “This
is my good mother, sir,” said he. “She’s
almost blind now; but, in less than six months she
will be able to stand at her window and see a pin
in the middle of the street, so the physician who
is treating her eyes promised me; then we shall be
all right again. But take a seat, sir. May
we venture to offer you anything?”
Although his clerk had more than once
alluded to his responsibilities, M. Fortunat was amazed.
He marvelled at the perfume of honesty which exhaled
from these poor people, at the dignity of this humble
woman, and at the protecting and respectful affection
evinced by her son — a young man, whose usual
tone of voice and general behavior had seemed to indicate
that he was decidedly a scapegrace. “Thanks,
Victor,” he replied, “I won’t take
any refreshment. I’ve just left the dinner-table.
I’ve come to give you my instructions respecting
a very important and very urgent matter.”
Chupin at once understood that his
employer wished for a private interview. Accordingly,
he took up the lamp, opened a door, and, in the pompous
tone of a rich banker who is inviting some important
personage to enter his private room, he said:
“Will you be kind enough to step into my chamber,
m’sieur?”
The room which Chupin so emphatically
denominated his “chamber” was a tiny nook,
extraordinarily clean, it is true, but scantily furnished
with a small iron bedstead, a trunk, and a chair.
He offered the chair to his visitor, placed the lamp
on the trunk, and seated himself on the bed, saying
as he did so: “This is scarcely on so grand
a scale as your establishment, m’sieur; but
I am going to ask the landlord to gild the window
of my snuff-box.”
M. Fortunat was positively touched.
He held out his hand to his clerk and exclaimed:
“You’re a worthy fellow, Chupin.”
“Nonsense, m’sieur, one
does what one can; but, zounds! how hard it is to
make money honestly! If my good mother could only
see, she would help me famously, for there is no one
like her for work! But you see one can’t
become a millionaire by knitting!”
“Doesn’t your father live with you?”
Chupin’s eyes gleamed angrily.
“Ah! don’t speak of that man to me, m’sieur!”
he exclaimed, “or I shall hurt somebody.”
And then, as if he felt it necessary to explain and
excuse his vindictive exclamation, he added:
“My father, Polyte Chupin, is a good-for-nothing
scamp. And yet he’s had his opportunities.
First, he was fortunate enough to find a wife like
my mother, who is honesty itself — so much
so that she was called Toinon the Virtuous when she
was young. She idolized him, and nearly killed
herself by working to earn money for him. And
yet he abused her so much, and made her weep so much,
that she has become blind. But that’s not
all. One morning there came to him — I
don’t know whence or how — enough money
for him to have lived like a gentleman. I believe
it was a munificent reward for some service he had
rendered a great nobleman at the time when my grandmother,
who is now dead, kept a dramshop called the Poivrière.
Any other man would have treasured that money, but
not he. What he did was to carouse day and night,
and all the while my poor mother was working her fingers
to the bone to earn food for me. She never saw
a penny of all his money; and, indeed, once when she
asked him to pay the rent, he beat her so cruelly that
she was laid up in bed for a week. However, monsieur,
you can very readily understand that when a man leads
that kind of life, he speedily comes to the end of
his banking account. So my father was soon without
a penny in his purse, and then he was obliged to work
in order to get something to eat, and this didn’t
suit him at all. But when he didn’t know
where to find a crust he remembered us; he sought
us out, and found us. Once I lent him a hundred
sous; the next day he came for forty more, and
the next for three francs; then for five francs again.
And so it was every day: ’Give me this,
or give me that!’ At last I said, ’Enough
of this, the bank’s closed!’ Then, what
do you think he did? He watched the house until
he saw me go out; then he came in with a second-hand
furniture-dealer, and tried to sell everything, pretending
that he was the master. And my poor, dear mother
would have allowed him to do it. Fortunately,
I happened to come in again. Let him sell my
furniture? Not I. I would sooner have been chopped
in pieces! I went and complained to the commissary
of police, who made my father leave the house, and
since then we’ve lived in peace.”
Certainly this was more than sufficient
to explain and excuse Victor Chupin’s indignation.
And yet he had prudently withheld the most serious
and important cause of his dislike. What he refrained
from telling was that years before, when he was still
a mere child, without will or discernment, his father
had taken him from his mother, and had started him
down that terrible descent, which inevitably leads
one to prison or the gallows, unless there be an almost
miraculous interposition on one’s behalf.
This miracle had occurred in Chupin’s case; but
he did not boast of it.
“Come, come!” said M.
Fortunat, “don’t worry too much about it.
A father’s a father after all, and yours will
undoubtedly reform by and by.”
He said this as he would have said
anything else, out of politeness and for the sake
of testifying a friendly interest; but he really cared
no more for this information concerning the Chupin
family than the grand Turk. His first emotion
had quickly vanished; and he was beginning to find
these confidential disclosures rather wearisome.
“Let us get back to business,” he remarked;
“that is to say, to Casimir. What did you
do with the fool after my departure?”
“First, monsieur, I sobered
him; which was no easy task. The greedy idiot
had converted himself into a wine-cask! At last,
however, when he could talk as well as you and I,
and walk straight, I took him back to the Hotel de
Chalusse.”
“That was right. But didn’t
you have some business to transact with him?”
“That’s been arranged,
monsieur; the agreement has been signed. The
count will have the best of funerals — the
finest hearse out, with six horses, twenty-four mourning
coaches — a grand display, in fact. It
will be worth seeing.”
M. Fortunat smiled graciously.
“That ought to bring you a handsome commission,”
he said, benignly.
Employed by the job, Chupin was the
master of his own time, free to utilize his intelligence
and industry as he chose, but M. Fortunat did not
like his subordinates to make any money except through
him. Hence his approval, in the present instance,
was so remarkable that it awakened Chupin’s
suspicions. “I shall make a few sous,
probably,” he modestly replied, “a trifle
to aid my good mother in keeping the pot boiling.”
“So much the better, my boy,”
said M. Fortunat. “I like to see money
gained by those who make a good use of it. And
to prove this, I’m about to employ you in an
affair which will pay you handsomely if you prosecute
it successfully.”
Chupin’s eyes brightened at
first but grew dark a moment afterward, for delight
had been quickly followed by a feeling of distrust.
He thought it exceedingly strange that an employer
should take the trouble to climb to a sixth floor
merely for the purpose of conferring a favor on his
clerk. There must be something behind all this;
and so it behove him to keep his eyes open. However,
he knew how to conceal his real feelings; and it was
with a joyous air that he exclaimed: “Eh!
What? Money? Now? What must I do to
earn it?”
“Oh! a mere trifle,” replied
the agent; “almost nothing, indeed.”
And drawing his chair nearer to the bed on which his
employee was seated, he added: “But first,
one question, Victor. By the way in which a woman
looks at a young man in the street, at the theatre
or anywhere — would you know if she were
watching her son?”
Chupin shrugged his shoulders.
“What a question!” he retorted. “Nonsense!
monsieur, it would be impossible to deceive me.
I should only have to remember my mother’s eyes
when I return home in the evening. Poor woman!
although she’s half blind, she sees me — and
if you wish to make her happy, you’ve only to
tell her I’m the handsomest and most amiable
youth in Paris.”
M. Fortunat could not refrain from
rubbing his hands, so delighted was he to see his
idea so perfectly understood and so admirably expressed.
“Good!” he declared; “very good!
That’s intelligence, if I am any judge.
I have not been deceived in you, Victor.”
Victor was on fire with curiosity.
“What am I to do, monsieur?” he asked
eagerly.
“This: you must follow
a woman whom I shall point out to you, follow her
everywhere without once losing sight of her, and so
skilfully as not to let her suspect it. You must
watch her every glance, and when her eyes tell you
that she is looking at her son, your task will be nearly
over. You will then only have to follow this
son, and find out his name and address, what he does,
and how he lives. I don’t know if I explain
what I mean very clearly.”
This doubt was awakened in M. Fortunat’s
mind by Chupin’s features, which were expressive
of lively astonishment and discontent. “Excuse
me, monsieur,” he said, at last, “I do
not understand at all.”
“It’s very simple, however.
The lady in question has a son about twenty.
I know it — I’m sure of it. But
she denies it; she conceals the fact, and he doesn’t
even know her. She secretly watches over him,
however — she provides him with money, and
every day she finds some way of seeing him. Now,
it is to my interest to find this son.”
Chupin’s mobile face became
actually threatening in its expression; he frowned
darkly, and his lips quivered. Still this did
not prevent M. Fortunat from adding, with the assurance
of a man who does not even suspect the possibility
of a refusal: “Now, when shall we set about
our task?”
“Never!” cried Chupin,
violently; and, rising, he continued: “No!
I wouldn’t let my good mother eat bread earned
in that way — it would strangle her!
Turn spy! I? Thanks — some one else
may have the job!” He had become as red as a
turkey-cock, and such was his indignation that he
forgot his accustomed reserve and the caution with
which he had so far concealed his antecedents.
“I know this game — I’ve tried
it!” he went on, vehemently. “One
might as well take one’s ticket to prison by
a direct road. I should be there now if it hadn’t
been for Monsieur Andre. I was thirsting for
gold, and, like the brigand that I was, I should have
killed the man; but in revenge he drew me from the
mire and placed my feet on solid ground once more.
And now, shall I go back to my vile tricks again?
Why, I’d rather cut my leg off! I’m
to hunt down this poor woman — I’m
to discover her secret so that you may extort money
from her, am I? No, not I! I should like
to be rich, and I shall be rich; but I’ll make
my money honestly. I hope to touch my hundred-franc
pieces without being obliged to wash my hands afterward.
So, a very good evening to your establishment.”
M. Fortunat was amazed, and at the
same time much annoyed, to find himself forsaken on
account of such a trifle. He feared, too, that
Chupin might let his tongue wag if he left his employment.
So, since he had confided this project to Chupin,
he was determined that Chupin alone should carry it
into execution. Assuming his most severe and injured
manner, he sternly exclaimed: “I think you
have lost your senses.” His demeanor and
intonation were so perfectly cool that Chupin seemed
slightly abashed. “It seems that you think
me capable of urging you to commit some dangerous
and dishonorable act,” continued M. Fortunat.
“Why — no — m’sieur — I
assure you.”
There was such evident hesitation
in the utterance of this “no” that the
agent at once resumed: “Come, you are not
ignorant of the fact that in addition to my business
as a collector, I give my attention to the discovery
of the heirs of unclaimed estates? You are aware
of this? Very well then: pray tell me how
I am to find them without searching for them?
If I wish this lady to be watched, it is only in view
of reaching a poor lad who is likely to be defrauded
of the wealth that rightfully belongs to him.
And when I give you a chance to make forty or fifty
francs in a couple of days, you receive my proposition
in this style! You are an ingrate and a fool,
Victor!”
Chupin’s nature combined, in
a remarkable degree, the vices and peculiarities of
the dweller in the Paris faubourgs, who is
born old, but who, when aged in years, still remains
a gamin. In his youth he had seen many strange
things, and acquired a knowledge of life that would
have put the experience of a philosopher to shame.
But he was not fit to cope with M. Fortunat, who had
an immense advantage over him, by reason of his position
of employer, as well as by his fortune and education.
So Chupin was both bewildered and disconcerted by the
cool arguments his patron brought forward; and what
most effectually allayed his suspicions was the small
compensation offered for the work — merely
forty or fifty francs. “Small potatoes,
upon my word!” he thought. “Just the
price of an honest service; he would have offered
more for a piece of rascality.” So, after
considering a moment, he said, aloud: “Very
well; I’m your man, m’sieur.”
M. Fortunat was secretly laughing
at the success of his ruse. Having come with
the intention of offering his agent a handsome sum,
he was agreeably surprised to find that Chupin’s
scruples would enable him to save his money.
“If I hadn’t found you engaged in study,
Victor,” he said, “I should have thought
you had been drinking. What venomous insect stung
you so suddenly? Haven’t I confided similar
undertakings to you twenty times since you have been
in my employment? Who ransacked Paris to find
certain debtors who were concealing themselves?
Who discovered the Vantrassons for me? Victor
Chupin. Very well. Then allow me to say
that I see nothing in this case in any way differing
from the others, nor can I understand why this should
be wrong, if the others were not.”
Chupin could only have answered this
remark by saying that there had been no mystery about
the previous affairs, that they had not been proposed
to him late at night at his own home, and that he had
acted openly, as a person who represents a creditor
has a recognized right to act. But, though he
felt that there was a difference in the present
case, it would have been very difficult for him to
explain in what this difference consisted. Hence,
in his most resolute tone: “I’m only
a fool, m’sieur,” he declared; “but
I shall know how to make amends for my folly.”
“That means you have recovered
your senses,” said M. Fortunat, ironically.
“Really, that’s fortunate. But let
me give you one bit of advice: watch yourself,
and learn to bridle your tongue. You won’t
always find me in such a good humor as I am this evening.”
So saying, he rose, passed out into
the adjoining room, bowed civilly to his clerk’s
mother, and went off. His last words, as he crossed
the threshold, were, “So I shall rely upon you.
Be at the office to-morrow a little before noon.”
“It’s agreed m’sieur.”
The blind woman had risen, and had
bowed respectfully; but, as soon as she was alone
with her son, she asked: “What is this business
he bids you undertake in such a high and mighty tone?”
“Oh! an every-day matter, mother.”
The old woman shook her head.
“Why were you talking so loud then?” she
inquired. “Weren’t you quarrelling?
It must be something very grave when it’s necessary
to conceal it from me. I couldn’t see your
employer’s face, my son; but I heard his voice,
and it didn’t please me. It isn’t
the voice of an honest, straightforward man. Take
care, Toto, and don’t allow yourself to be cajoled — be
prudent.”
However, it was quite unnecessary
to recommend prudence to Victor Chupin. He had
promised his assistance, but not without a mental
reservation. “No need to see danger till
it comes,” he had said to himself. “If
the thing proves to be of questionable propriety after
all, then good-evening; I desert.”
It remains to know what he meant by
questionable propriety; the meaning of the expression
is rather vague. He had returned in all honesty
and sincerity of purpose to an honest life, and nothing
in the world would have induced him, avaricious though
he was, to commit an act that was positively wrong.
Only the line that separates good from evil was not
very clearly defined in his mind. This was due
in a great measure to his education, and to the fact
that it had been long before he realized that police
regulations do not constitute the highest moral law.
It was due also to chance, and, since he had no decided
calling, to the necessity of depending for a livelihood
upon the many strange professions which impecunious
and untrained individuals, both of the higher and lower
classes, adopt in Paris.
However, on the following morning
he arrayed himself in his best apparel, and at exactly
half-past eleven o’clock he rang at his employer’s
door. M. Fortunat had made quick work with his
clients that morning, and was ready, dressed to go
out. He took up his hat and said only the one
word, “Come.” The place where the
agent conducted his clerk was the wine-shop in the
Rue de Berry, where he had made inquiries respecting
Madame d’Argeles the evening before; and on arriving
there, he generously offered him a breakfast.
Before entering, however, he pointed out Madame d’Argeles’s
pretty house on the opposite side of the street, and
said to him: “The woman whom you are to
follow, and whose son you are to discover, will emerge
from that house.”
At that moment, after a night passed
in meditating upon his mother’s prophetic warnings,
Chupin was again beset by the same scruples which
had so greatly disturbed him on the previous evening.
However, they soon vanished when he heard the wine-vendor,
in reply to M. Fortunat’s skilful questions,
begin to relate all he knew concerning Madame Lia
d’Argeles, and the scandalous doings at her house.
The seeker after lost heirs and his clerk were served
at a little table near the door; and while they partook
of the classical beef-steak and; potatoes — M.
Fortunat eating daintily, and Chupin bolting his food
with the appetite of a ship-wrecked mariner — they
watched the house opposite.
Madame d’Argeles received on
Saturdays, and, as Chupin remarked, “there was
a regular procession of visitors.”
Standing beside M. Fortunat, and flattered
by the attention which such a well-dressed gentleman
paid to his chatter, the landlord of the house mentioned
the names of all the visitors he knew. And he
knew a good number of them, for the coachmen came
to his shop for refreshments when their masters were
spending the night in play at Madame d’Argeles’s
house. So he was able to name the Viscount de
Coralth, who dashed up to the door in a two-horse
phaeton, as well as Baron Trigault, who came on foot,
for exercise, puffing and blowing like a seal.
The wine-vendor, moreover, told his customers that
Madame d’Argeles never went out before half-past
two or three o’clock, and then always in a carriage — a
piece of information which must have troubled Chupin;
for, as soon as the landlord had left them to serve
some other customers, he leant forward and said to
M. Fortunat: “Did you hear that? How
is it possible to track a person who’s in a
carriage?”
“By following in another vehicle, of course.”
“Certainly, m’sieur; that’s
as clear as daylight. But that isn’t the
question. The point is this: How can one
watch the face of a person who turns her back to you?
I must see this woman’s face to know whom she
looks at, and how.”
This objection, grave as it appeared,
did not seem to disturb M. Fortunat. “Don’t
worry about that, Victor,” he replied. “Under
such circumstances, a mother wouldn’t try to
see her son from a rapidly moving carriage. She
will undoubtedly alight, and contrive some means of
passing and repassing him — of touching him,
if possible. Your task will only consist in following
her closely enough to be on the ground as soon as
she is. Confine your efforts to that; and if you
fail to-day, you’ll succeed to-morrow or the
day after — the essential thing is to be
patient.”
He did better than to preach patience — he
practised it. The hours wore away, and yet he
did not stir from his post, though nothing could have
been more disagreeable to him than to remain on exhibition,
as it were, at the door of a wine-shop. At last,
at a little before three o’clock, the gates
over the way turned upon their hinges, and a dark-blue
victoria, in which a woman was seated, rolled
forth into the street. “Look!” said
M. Fortunat, eagerly. “There she is!”