One day Charley began to know the
gossip of the village about him from a source less
friendly than Jo Portugais. The Notary’s
wife, bringing her boy to be measured for a suit of
broadcloth, asked Charley if the things Jo had told
about him were true, and if it was also true that he
was a Protestant, and perhaps an Englishman.
As yet, Charley had been asked no direct questions,
for the people of Chaudiere had the consideration of
their temperament; but the Notary’s wife was
half English, and being a figure in the place, she
took to herself more privileges than did old Madame
Dugal, the Cure’s sister.
To her ill-disguised impertinence
in English, as bad as her French and as fluent, Charley
listened with quiet interest. When she had finished
her voluble statement she said, with a simper and a
sneer-for, after all, a Notary’s wife must keep
her position “And now, what is the
truth about it? And are you a Protestant?”
There was a sinister look in old Trudel’s
eyes as, cross-legged on his table, he listened to
Madame Dauphin. He remembered the time, twenty-five
years ago, when he had proposed to this babbling woman,
and had been rejected with scorn to his
subsequent satisfaction; for there was no visible
reason why any one should envy the Notary, in his house
or out of it. Already Trudel had a respect for
the tongue of M’sieu’. He had not
talked much the few days he had been in the shop, but,
as the old man had said to Filion Lacasse the saddler,
his brain was like a pair of shears it
went clip, clip, clip right through everything.
He now hoped that his new apprentice, with the hand
of a master-workman, would go clip, clip through madame’s
inquisitiveness. He was not disappointed, for
he heard Charley say:
“One person in the witness-box
at a time, Madame. Till Jo Portugais is cross-examined
and steps down, I don’t see what I can do!”
“But you are a Protestant!”
said the woman snappishly. This man was only
a tailor, dressed in fulled cloth, and no doubt his
past life would not bear inspection; and she was the
Notary’s wife, and had said to people in the
village that she would find out the man’s history
from himself.
“That is one good reason why
I should not go to confession,” he replied casually,
and turned to a table where he had been cutting a
waistcoat for the first time in his life.
“Do you think I’m going
to stand your impertinence? Do you know who I
am?”
Charley calmly put up his monocle.
He looked at the foolish little woman with so cruel
a flash of the eye that she shrank back.
“I should know you anywhere,” he said.
“Come, Stephan,” she said
nervously to her boy, and pulled him towards the door.
On the instant Charley’s feeling
changed. Was he then going to carry the old life
into the new, and rebuke a silly garish woman whose
faults were generic more than personal? He hurried
forward to the door and courteously opened it for
her.
“Permit me, Madame,” he said.
She saw that there was nothing ironical
in this politeness. She had a sudden apprehension
of an unusual quality called “the genteel,”
for no storekeeper in Chaudiere ever opened or shut
a shop-door for anybody. She smiled a vacuous
smile; she played “the lady” terribly,
as, with a curious conception of dignity, she held
her body stiff as a ramrod, and with a prim merci
sailed into the street.
This gorgeous exit changed her opinion
of the man she had been unable to catechise.
Undoubtedly he had snubbed her that was
the word she used in her mind but his last
act had enabled her, in the sight of several habitants
and even of Madame Dugal, “to put on airs,”
as the charming Madame Dugal said afterwards.
Thinking it better to give the impression
that she had had a successful interview, she shook
her head mysteriously when asked about M’sieu’,
and murmured, “He is quite the gentleman!”
which she thought a socially distinguished remark.
When she had gone, Charley turned to old Louis.
“I don’t want to turn
your customers away,” he said quietly, “but
there it is! I don’t need to answer questions
as a part of the business, do I?”
There was a sour grin on the face
of old Trudel. He grunted some inaudible answer,
then, after a pause, added: “I’d have
been hung for murder, if she’d answered the
question I asked her once as I wanted her to.”
He opened and shut his shears with a sardonic gesture.
Charley smiled, and went to the window.
For a minute he stood watching Madame Dauphin and
Rosalie at the post-office door. The memory of
his talk with Rosalie was vivid to him at the moment.
He was thinking also that he had not a penny in the
world to pay for the rest of the paper he had bought.
He turned round and put on his coat slowly.
“What are you doing that for?”
asked the old man, with a kind of snarl, yet with
trepidation.
“I don’t think I’ll work any more
to-day.”
“Not work! Smoke of the
devil, isn’t Sunday enough to play in? You’re
not put out by that fool wife of Dauphin’s?”
“Oh no not that! I want an understanding
about wages.”
To Louis the dread crisis had come.
He turned a little green, for he was very miserly-for
the love of God.
He had scarcely realised what was
happening when Charley first sat down on the bench
beside him. He had been taken by surprise.
Apart from the excitement of the new experience, he
had profited by the curiosity of the public, for he
had orders enough to keep him busy until summer, and
he had had to give out work to two extra women in the
parish, though he had never before had more than one
working for him. But his ruling passion was strong
in him. He always remembered with satisfaction
that once when the Cure was absent and he was supposed
to be dying, a priest from another parish came, and,
the ministrations over, he had made an offering of
a gold piece. When the young priest hesitated,
his fingers had crept back to the gold piece, closed
on it, and drawn it back beneath the coverlet again.
He had then peacefully fallen asleep. It was
a gracious memory.
“I don’t need much, I
don’t want a great deal,” continued Charley
when the tailor did not answer, “but I have
to pay for my bed and board, and I can’t do
it on nothing.”
“How have you done it so far?”
peevishly replied the tailor.
“By working after hours at carpentering
up there” he made a gesture towards
Vadrome Mountain. “But I can’t go
on doing that all the time, or I’ll be like
you too soon.”
“Be like me!” The voice of the tailor
rose shrilly.
“Be like me! What’s the matter with
me?”
“Only that you’re in a
bad way before your time, and that you mayn’t
get out of this hole without stepping into another.
You work too hard, Monsieur Trudel.”
“What do you want wages?”
Charley inclined his head. “If you think
I’m worth them.”
The tailor viciously snipped a piece
of cloth. “How can I pay you wages, if
you stand there doing nothing?” “This is
my day for doing nothing,” Charley answered
pleasantly, for the tailor-man amused him, and the
whimsical mental attitude of his past life was being
brought to the surface by this odd figure, with big
spectacles pushed up on a yellow forehead, and shrunken
hands viciously clutching the shears.
“You don’t mean to say
you’re not going to work to-day, and this suit
of clothes promised for to-morrow night for
the Manor House too!”
With a piece of chalk Charley idly
made heads on brown paper. “After all,
why should clothes be the first thing in one’s
mind when they are some one else’s!
It’s a beautiful day outside. I’ve
never felt the sun so warm and the air so crisp and
sweet never in all my life.”
“Then where have you lived?”
snapped out the tailor with a sneer. “You
must be a Yankee they have only what we
leave over down there!” he jerked
his head southward. “We don’t stop
to look at weather here. I suppose you did where
you come from?”
Charley smiled in a distant sort of
way. “Where I came from, when we weren’t
paid for our work we always stopped to consider our
health and the weather. I don’t
want a great deal. I put it to you honestly.
Do you want me? If you do, will you give me enough
to live on enough to buy a suit of clothes
a year, to pay for food and a room? If I work
for you for nothing, I have to live on others for
nothing, or kill myself as you’re doing.”
There was no answer at once, and Charley
went on: “I came to you because I saw you
wanted help badly. I saw that you were hard-pushed
and sick ”
“I wasn’t sick,” interrupted the
tailor with a snarl.
“Well, overworked, which is
the same thing in the end. I did the best I could:
I gave you my hands awkward enough they
were at first, I know, but ”
“It’s a lie. They
weren’t awkward,” churlishly cut in the
tailor.
“Well, perhaps they weren’t
so awkward, but they didn’t know quite what
to do ”
“You knew as well as if you’d
been taught,” came back in a growl.
“Well, then, I wasn’t
awkward, and I had a knack for the work. What
was more, I wanted work. I wanted to work at
the first thing that appealed to me. I had no
particular fancy for tailoring you get bowlegged
in time!” the old spirit was fighting
with the new “but here you were at
work, and there I was idle, and I had been ill, and
some one who wasn’t responsible for me a
stranger-worked for me and cared for me. Wasn’t
it natural, when you were playing the devil with yourself,
that I should step in and give you a hand? You’ve
been better since isn’t that so?”
The tailor did not answer.
“But I can’t go on as
we are, though I want only enough to keep me going,”
Charley continued.
“And if I don’t give you what you want,
you’ll leave?”
“No. I’m never going
to leave you. I’m going to stay here, for
you’ll never get another man so cheap; and it
suits me to stay you need some one to look
after you.”
A curious soft look suddenly flashed
into the tailor’s eyes.
“Will you take on the business
after I’m gone?” he asked at last.
“It’s along time to look ahead, I know,”
he added quickly, for not in words would he acknowledge
the possibility of the end.
“I should think so,” Charley
answered, his eyes on the bright sun and the soft
snow on the trees beyond the window.
The tailor snatched up a pattern and
figured on it for a moment. Then he handed it
to Charley. “Will that do?” he asked
with anxious, acquisitive look, his yellow eyes blinking
hard.
Charley looked at it musingly, then
said “Yes, if you give me a room here.”
“I meant board and lodging too,”
said Louis Trudel with an outburst of eager generosity,
for, as it was, he had offered about one-half of what
Charley was worth to him.
Charley nodded. “Very well,
that will do,” he said, and took off his coat
and went to work. For a long time they worked
silently. The tailor was in great good-humour;
for the terrible trial was over, and he now had an
assistant who would be a better tailor than himself.
There would be more profit, more silver nails for
the church door, and more masses for his soul.
“The Cure says you are all right....
When will you come here?” he said at last.
“To-morrow night I shall sleep here,”
answered Charley.
So it was arranged that Charley should
come to live in the tailor’s house, to sleep
in the room which the tailor had provided for a wife
twenty-five years before even for her that
was now known as Madame Dauphin.
All morning the tailor chuckled to
himself. When they sat down at noon to a piece
of venison which Charley had prepared himself taking
the frying-pan out of the hands of Margot Patry, the
old servant, and cooking it to a turn Louis
Trudel saw his years lengthen to an indefinite period.
He even allowed himself to nervously stand up, bow,
shake Charley’s hand jerkingly, and say:
“M’sieu’, I care
not what you are or where you come from, or even if
you’re a Protestant, perhaps an Englishman.
You’re a gentleman and a tailor, and old Louis
Trudel will not forget you. It shall be as you
said this morning it is no day for work.
We will play, and the clothes for the Manor can go
to the devil. Smoke of hell-fire, I will go and
have a pipe with that, poor wretch the Notary!”
So, a wonderful thing happened.
Louis Trudel, on a week-day and a market-day, went
to smoke a pipe with Narcisse Dauphin, and to tell
him that M. Mallard was going to stay with him for
ever, at fine wages. He also announced that he
had paid this whole week’s wages in advance;
but he did not tell what he did not know that
half the money had already been given to old Margot,
whose son lay ill at home with a broken leg, and whose
children were living on bread and water. Charley
had slowly drawn from the woman the story of her life
as he sat by the kitchen fire and talked to her, while
her master was talking to the Notary.