THE SWINDLE
It was nine o’clock. The
little town of Vauchamp, dark and silent, had just
retired to bed amid a chilly November rain. In
the Rue des Récollets, one of the narrowest
and most deserted streets of the district of Saint-Jean,
a single window was still alight on the third floor
of an old house, from whose damaged gutters torrents
of water were falling into the street. Mme Burle
was sitting up before a meager fire of vine stocks,
while her little grandson Charles pored over his lessons
by the pale light of a lamp.
The apartment, rented at one hundred
and sixty francs per annum, consisted of four large
rooms which it was absolutely impossible to keep warm
during the winter. Mme Burle slept in the largest
chamber, her son Captain and Quartermaster Burle occupying
a somewhat smaller one overlooking the street, while
little Charles had his iron cot at the farther end
of a spacious drawing room with mildewed hangings,
which was never used. The few pieces of furniture
belonging to the captain and his mother, furniture
of the massive style of the First Empire, dented and
worn by continuous transit from one garrison town to
another, almost disappeared from view beneath the
lofty ceilings whence darkness fell. The flooring
of red-colored tiles was cold and hard to the feet;
before the chairs there were merely a few threadbare
little rugs of poverty-stricken aspect, and athwart
this desert all the winds of heaven blew through the
disjointed doors and windows.
Near the fireplace sat Mme Burle,
leaning back in her old yellow velvet armchair and
watching the last vine branch smoke, with that stolid,
blank stare of the aged who live within themselves.
She would sit thus for whole days together, with her
tall figure, her long stern face and her thin lips
that never smiled. The widow of a colonel who
had died just as he was on the point of becoming a
general, the mother of a captain whom she had followed
even in his campaigns, she had acquired a military
stiffness of bearing and formed for herself a code
of honor, duty and patriotism which kept her rigid,
desiccated, as it were, by the stern application of
discipline. She seldom, if ever, complained.
When her son had become a widower after five years
of married life she had undertaken the education of
little Charles as a matter of course, performing her
duties with the severity of a sergeant drilling recruits.
She watched over the child, never tolerating the slightest
waywardness or irregularity, but compelling him to
sit up till midnight when his exercises were not finished,
and sitting up herself until he had completed them.
Under such implacable despotism Charles, whose constitution
was delicate, grew up pale and thin, with beautiful
eyes, inordinately large and clear, shining in his
white, pinched face.
During the long hours of silence Mme
Burle dwelt continuously upon one and the same idea:
she had been disappointed in her son. This thought
sufficed to occupy her mind, and under its influence
she would live her whole life over again, from the
birth of her son, whom she had pictured rising amid
glory to the highest rank, till she came down to mean
and narrow garrison life, the dull, monotonous existence
of nowadays, that stranding in the post of a quartermaster,
from which Burle would never rise and in which he
seemed to sink more and more heavily. And yet
his first efforts had filled her with pride, and she
had hoped to see her dreams realized. Burle had
only just left Saint-Cyr when he distinguished himself
at the battle of Solferino, where he had captured
a whole battery of the enemy’s artillery with
merely a handful of men. For this feat he had
won the cross; the papers had recorded his heroism,
and he had become known as one of the bravest soldiers
in the army. But gradually the hero had grown
stout, embedded in flesh, timorous, lazy and satisfied.
In 1870, still a captain, he had been made a prisoner
in the first encounter, and he returned from Germany
quite furious, swearing that he would never be caught
fighting again, for it was too absurd. Being
prevented from leaving the army, as he was incapable
of embracing any other profession, he applied for
and obtained the position of captain quartermaster,
“a kennel,” as he called it, “in
which he would be left to kick the bucket in peace.”
That day Mme Burle experienced a great internal disruption.
She felt that it was all over, and she ever afterward
preserved a rigid attitude with tightened lips.
A blast of wind shook the Rue
des Récollets and drove the rain angrily
against the windowpanes. The old lady lifted her
eyes from the smoking vine roots now dying out, to
make sure that Charles was not falling asleep over
his Latin exercise. This lad, twelve years of
age, had become the old lady’s supreme hope,
the one human being in whom she centered her obstinate
yearning for glory. At first she had hated him
with all the loathing she had felt for his mother,
a weak and pretty young lacemaker whom the captain
had been foolish enough to marry when he found out
that she would not listen to his passionate addresses
on any other condition. Later on, when the mother
had died and the father had begun to wallow in vice,
Mme Burle dreamed again in presence of that little
ailing child whom she found it so hard to rear.
She wanted to see him robust, so that he might grow
into the hero that Burle had declined to be, and for
all her cold ruggedness she watched him anxiously,
feeling his limbs and instilling courage into his soul.
By degrees, blinded by her passionate desires, she
imagined that she had at last found the man of the
family. The boy, whose temperament was of a gentle,
dreamy character, had a physical horror of soldiering,
but as he lived in mortal dread of his grandmother
and was extremely shy and submissive, he would echo
all she said and resignedly express his intention of
entering the army when he grew up.
Mme Burle observed that the exercise
was not progressing. In fact, little Charles,
overcome by the deafening noise of the storm, was
dozing, albeit his pen was between his fingers and
his eyes were staring at the paper. The old lady
at once struck the edge of the table with her bony
hand; whereupon the lad started, opened his dictionary
and hurriedly began to turn over the leaves.
Then, still preserving silence, his grandmother drew
the vine roots together on the hearth and unsuccessfully
attempted to rekindle the fire.
At the time when she had still believed
in her son she had sacrificed her small income, which
he had squandered in pursuits she dared not investigate.
Even now he drained the household; all its resources
went to the streets, and it was through him that she
lived in penury, with empty rooms and cold kitchen.
She never spoke to him of all those things, for with
her sense of discipline he remained the master.
Only at times she shuddered at the sudden fear that
Burle might someday commit some foolish misdeed which
would prevent Charles from entering the army.
She was rising up to fetch a fresh
piece of wood in the kitchen when a fearful hurricane
fell upon the house, making the doors rattle, tearing
off a shutter and whirling the water in the broken
gutters like a spout against the window. In the
midst of the uproar a ring at the bell startled the
old lady. Who could it be at such an hour and
in such weather? Burle never returned till after
midnight, if he came home at all. However, she
went to the door. An officer stood before her,
dripping with rain and swearing savagely.
“Hell and thunder!” he growled. “What
cursed weather!”
It was Major Laguitte, a brave old
soldier who had served under Colonel Burle during
Mme Burle’s palmy days. He had started in
life as a drummer boy and, thanks to his courage rather
than his intellect, had attained to the command of
a battalion, when a painful infirmity the
contraction of the muscles of one of his thighs, due
to a wound obliged him to accept the post
of major. He was slightly lame, but it would have
been imprudent to tell him so, as he refused to own
it.
“What, you, Major?” said
Mme Burle with growing astonishment.
“Yes, thunder,” grumbled
Laguitte, “and I must be confoundedly fond of
you to roam the streets on such a night as this.
One would think twice before sending even a parson
out.”
He shook himself, and little rivulets
fell from his huge boots onto the floor. Then
he looked round him.
“I particularly want to see
Burle. Is the lazy beggar already in bed?”
“No, he is not in yet,”
said the old woman in her harsh voice.
The major looked furious, and, raising
his voice, he shouted: “What, not at home?
But in that case they hoaxed me at the cafe, Melanie’s
establishment, you know. I went there, and a maid
grinned at me, saying that the captain had gone home
to bed. Curse the girl! I suspected as much
and felt like pulling her ears!”
After this outburst he became somewhat
calmer, stamping about the room in an undecided way,
withal seeming greatly disturbed. Mme Burle looked
at him attentively.
“Is it the captain personally
whom you want to see?” she said at last.
“Yes,” he answered.
“Can I not tell him what you have to say?”
“No.”
She did not insist but remained standing
without taking her eyes off the major, who did not
seem able to make up his mind to leave. Finally
in a fresh burst of rage he exclaimed with an oath:
“It can’t be helped. As I am here
you may as well know after all, it is, perhaps,
best.”
He sat down before the chimney piece,
stretching out his muddy boots as if a bright fire
had been burning. Mme Burle was about to resume
her own seat when she remarked that Charles, overcome
by fatigue, had dropped his head between the open
pages of his dictionary. The arrival of the major
had at first interested him, but, seeing that he remained
unnoticed, he had been unable to struggle against his
sleepiness. His grandmother turned toward the
table to slap his frail little hands, whitening in
the lamplight, when Laguitte stopped her.
“No no!” he
said. “Let the poor little man sleep.
I haven’t got anything funny to say. There’s
no need for him to hear me.”
The old lady sat down in her armchair;
deep silence reigned, and they looked at one another.
“Well, yes,” said the
major at last, punctuating his words with an angry
motion of his chin, “he has been and done it;
that hound Burle has been and done it!”
Not a muscle of Mme Burle’s
face moved, but she became livid, and her figure stiffened.
Then the major continued: “I had my doubts.
I had intended mentioning the subject to you.
Burle was spending too much money, and he had an idiotic
look which I did not fancy. Thunder and lightning!
What a fool a man must be to behave so filthily!”
Then he thumped his knee furiously
with his clenched fist and seemed to choke with indignation.
The old woman put the straightforward question:
“He has stolen?”
“You can’t have an idea
of it. You see, I never examined his accounts;
I approved and signed them. You know how those
things are managed. However, just before the
inspection as the colonel is a crotchety
old maniac I said to Burle: ’I
say, old man, look to your accounts; I am answerable,
you know,’ and then I felt perfectly secure.
Well, about a month ago, as he seemed queer and some
nasty stories were circulating, I peered a little
closer into the books and pottered over the entries.
I thought everything looked straight and very well
kept ”
At this point he stopped, convulsed
by such a fit of rage that he had to relieve himself
by a volley of appalling oaths. Finally he resumed:
“It isn’t the swindle that angers me;
it is his disgusting behavior to me. He has gammoned
me, Madame Burle. By God! Does he take me
for an old fool?”
“So he stole?” the mother again questioned.
“This evening,” continued
the major more quietly, “I had just finished
my dinner when Gagneux came in you know
Gagneux, the butcher at the corner of the Place aux
Herbes? Another dirty beast who got the meat
contract and makes our men eat all the diseased cow
flesh in the neighborhood! Well, I received him
like a dog, and then he let it all out blurted
out the whole thing, and a pretty mess it is!
It appears that Burle only paid him in driblets and
had got himself into a muddle a confusion
of figures which the devil himself couldn’t
disentangle. In short, Burle owes the butcher
two thousand francs, and Gagneux threatens that he’ll
inform the colonel if he is not paid. To make
matters worse, Burle, just to blind me, handed me every
week a forged receipt which he had squarely signed
with Gagneux’s name. To think he did that
to me, his old friend! Ah, curse him!”
With increasing profanity the major
rose to his feet, shook his fist at the ceiling and
then fell back in his chair. Mme Burle again repeated:
“He has stolen. It was inevitable.”
Then without a word of judgment or
condemnation she added simply: “Two thousand
francs we have not got them. There
are barely thirty francs in the house.”
“I expected as much,”
said Laguitte. “And do you know where all
the money goes? Why, Melanie gets it yes,
Melanie, a creature who has turned Burle into a perfect
fool. Ah, those women! Those fiendish women!
I always said they would do for him! I cannot
conceive what he is made of! He is only five
years younger than I am, and yet he is as mad as ever.
What a woman hunter he is!”
Another long silence followed.
Outside the rain was increasing in violence, and throughout
the sleepy little town one could hear the crashing
of slates and chimney pots as they were dashed by the
blast onto the pavements of the streets.
“Come,” suddenly said
the major, rising, “my stopping here won’t
mend matters. I have warned you and
now I’m off.”
“What is to be done? To
whom can we apply?” muttered the old woman drearily.
“Don’t give way we
must consider. If I only had the two thousand
francs but you know that I am not rich.”
The major stopped short in confusion.
This old bachelor, wifeless and childless, spent his
pay in drink and gambled away at écarte whatever
money his cognac and absinthe left in his pocket.
Despite that, however, he was scrupulously honest
from a sense of discipline.
“Never mind,” he added
as he reached the threshold. “I’ll
begin by stirring him up. I shall move heaven
and earth! What! Burle, Colonel Burle’s
son, condemned for theft! That cannot be!
I would sooner burn down the town. Now, thunder
and lightning, don’t worry; it is far more annoying
for me than for you.”
He shook the old lady’s hand
roughly and vanished into the shadows of the staircase,
while she held the lamp aloft to light the way.
When she returned and replaced the lamp on the table
she stood for a moment motionless in front of Charles,
who was still asleep with his face lying on the dictionary.
His pale cheeks and long fair hair made him look like
a girl, and she gazed at him dreamily, a shade of tenderness
passing over her harsh countenance. But it was
only a passing emotion; her features regained their
look of cold, obstinate determination, and, giving
the youngster a sharp rap on his little hand, she said:
“Charles your lessons.”
The boy awoke, dazed and shivering,
and again rapidly turned over the leaves. At
the same moment Major Laguitte, slamming the house
door behind him, received on his head a quantity of
water falling from the gutters above, whereupon he
began to swear in so loud a voice that he could be
heard above the storm. And after that no sound
broke upon the pelting downpour save the slight rustle
of the boy’s pen traveling over the paper.
Mme Burle had resumed her seat near the chimney piece,
still rigid, with her eyes fixed on the dead embers,
preserving, indeed, her habitual attitude and absorbed
in her one idea.