登陆注册
20287800000030

第30章 CHAPTER V(3)

"Lodgings for the night." The waiter paid for the ruined gambler, who was put to bed, where he remained till Christmas night. The managers of gambling-houses have some consideration for their customers, especially for high players. Philippe awoke about seven o'clock in the evening, his mouth parched, his face swollen, and he himself in the grip of a nervous fever. The strength of his constitution enabled him to get home on foot, where meanwhile he had, without willing it, brought mourning, desolation, poverty, and death.

The evening before, when dinner was ready, Madame Descoings and Agathe expected Philippe. They waited dinner till seven o'clock. Agathe always went to bed at ten; but as, on this occasion, she wished to be present at the midnight mass, she went to lie down as soon as dinner was over. Madame Descoings and Joseph remained alone by the fire in the little salon, which served for all, and the old woman asked the painter to add up the amount of her great stake, her monstrous stake, on the famous trey, which she was to pay that evening at the Lottery office. She wished to put in for the doubles and singles as well, so as to seize all chances. After feasting on the poetry of her hopes, and pouring the two horns of plenty at the feet of her adopted son, and relating to him her dreams which demonstrated the certainty of success, she felt no other uneasiness than the difficulty of bearing such joy, and waiting from mid-night until ten o'clock of the morrow, when the winning numbers were declared. Joseph, who saw nothing of the four hundred francs necessary to pay up the stakes, asked about them.

The old woman smiled, and led him into the former salon, which was now her bed-chamber.

"You shall see," she said.

Madame Descoings hastily unmade the bed, and searched for her scissors to rip the mattress; she put on her spectacles, looked at the ticking, saw the hole, and let fall the mattress. Hearing a sigh from the depths of the old woman's breast, as though she were strangled by a rush of blood to the heart, Joseph instinctively held out his arms to catch the poor creature, and placed her fainting in a chair, calling to his mother to come to them. Agathe rose, slipped on her dressing- gown, and ran in. By the light of a candle, she applied the ordinary remedies,--eau-de-cologne to the temples, cold water to the forehead, a burnt feather under the nose,--and presently her aunt revived.

"They were there is morning; HE has taken them, the monster!" she said.

"Taken what?" asked Joseph.

"I had twenty louis in my mattress; my savings for two years; no one but Philippe could have taken them."

"But when?" cried the poor mother, overwhelmed, "he has not been in since breakfast."

"I wish I might be mistaken," said the old woman. "But this morning in Joseph's studio, when I spoke before Philippe of my stakes, I had a presentiment. I did wrong not to go down and take my little all and pay for my stakes at once. I meant to, and I don't know what prevented me. Oh, yes!--my God! I went out to buy him some cigars."

"But," said Joseph, "you left the door locked. Besides, it is so infamous. I can't believe it. Philippe couldn't have watched you, cut open the mattress, done it deliberately,--no, no!"

"I felt them this morning, when I made my bed after breakfast," repeated Madame Descoings.

Agathe, horrified, went down stairs and asked if Philippe had come in during the day. The concierge related the tale of his return and the locksmith. The mother, heart-stricken, went back a changed woman.

White as the linen of her chemise, she walked as we might fancy a spectre walks, slowly, noiselessly, moved by some superhuman power, and yet mechanically. She held a candle in her hand, whose light fell full upon her face and showed her eyes, fixed with horror.

Unconsciously, her hands by a desperate movement had dishevelled the hair about her brow; and this made her so beautiful with anguish that Joseph stood rooted in awe at the apparition of that remorse, the vision of that statue of terror and despair.

"My aunt," she said, "take my silver forks and spoons. I have enough to make up the sum; I took your money for Philippe's sake; I thought I could put it back before you missed it. Oh! I have suffered much."

She sat down. Her dry, fixed eyes wandered a little.

"It was he who did it," whispered the old woman to Joseph.

"No, no," cried Agathe; "take my silver plate, sell it; it is useless to me; we can eat with yours."

She went to her room, took the box which contained the plate, felt its light weight, opened it, and saw a pawnbroker's ticket. The poor mother uttered a dreadful cry. Joseph and the Descoings ran to her, saw the empty box, and her noble falsehood was of no avail. All three were silent, and avoided looking at each other; but the next moment, by an almost frantic gesture, Agathe laid her finger on her lips as if to entreat a secrecy no one desired to break. They returned to the salon, and sat beside the fire.

"Ah! my children," cried Madame Descoings, "I am stabbed to the heart: my trey will turn up, I am certain of it. I am not thinking of myself, but of you two. Philippe is a monster," she continued, addressing her niece; "he does not love you after all that you have done for him. If you do not protect yourself against him he will bring you to beggary.

Promise me to sell out your Funds and buy a life-annuity. Joseph has a good profession and he can live. If you will do this, dear Agathe, you will never be an expense to Joseph. Monsieur Desroches has just started his son as a notary; he would take your twelve thousand francs and pay you an annuity."

Joseph seized his mother's candlestick, rushed up to his studio, and came down with three hundred francs.

"Here, Madame Descoings!" he cried, giving her his little store, "it is no business of ours what you do with your money; we owe you what you have lost, and here it is, almost in full."

同类推荐
  • 郴江百咏

    郴江百咏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 参天台五台山记

    参天台五台山记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 校雠通义

    校雠通义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杌萃编

    杌萃编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 拔陂菩萨经

    拔陂菩萨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 总裁的圈套

    总裁的圈套

    她,十八岁起被他囚禁,羞辱、折磨接连而至,当她成功出逃竟发现有了身孕!本以为她改头换面,可以避开这个主载黑暗世界的男人,谁知这狂妄的男人追来,夺走了她的一切,更毁了她的生活。那蚀人心魂的一夜注定是她此生都逃不开的劫数。
  • 梦兮三国

    梦兮三国

    茫茫然,一梦千年;飘飘然,三国征战。
  • 顶级超能坏男人:妖孽少爷

    顶级超能坏男人:妖孽少爷

    一个带着多层神秘身份的少年,夜店牛郎,豪门贵少,黑道大哥,富婆保姆,且看他在红尘都市中,如何用异能纵意花丛,怎样耍尽流氓与无赖,如何把对手玩弄于股掌之上,我为什么会变“坏”呢?因为我的本质就很“坏”!美女都是我的菜,谁也别动筷。
  • 林子大了

    林子大了

    青春难免理性与感性的锤炼,林容在校园中便尝遍了酸甜苦辣。帮派,武术,宗教,情感,创业等等元素,都将一一出现……
  • 累了人生

    累了人生

    曾经许多遗憾,现实许多尴尬,未来许多迷幻,道路始终不畅,心中还是昏暗。
  • 万道天逆

    万道天逆

    车祸穿越,重生的李炎风,父亲被扣下乱臣之名,母亲为护年幼的李炎风而陨落,“乱臣之名莫须有!亡亲之仇吾必报!”掌杀剑练道法,脱乱臣之名报血海深仇!修通灵布阵域,阴阳之力转乾坤,踏上天界至高点,渡轮回万劫吾成神!……这一切的恩怨,由我手中的剑来解决吧。
  • 重山烟雨诺

    重山烟雨诺

    苏伊诺一个什么都懂的逗B女,季曜沂一个一根筋的大好青年。携手经历了一些不敢想象的人生,出现了各种不忍直视的狗血桥段。从一个武功高强的高手,变成一个打架除了看就只能跑的逗B女,从一个天赋异禀的大好青年,变成快当配角的小男子。请看小女子和大,大,大豆腐的爱情和不同常人的人生。
  • 莲落重月

    莲落重月

    上一世,她是神界人人闻之变色的冰冷杀神,虽为神界第一神将,却只能孤独一世。冰冷的面具下,是渴望温暖的内心。上一世,他是战功赫赫的神界战神,人人尊崇的重月殿下,却有着不为人知的孤寂内心。情不知所起,一往而情深。上一世,他们未能为世所容,那就相约来生。再相见,遗忘了所有的她却一剑封印了她上一世用生命来守护的他,他也错把他人认成那个相约来生的她。此生,他们一直在错过,前世所承诺的,他们会实现吗……
  • 惊灵战歌

    惊灵战歌

    自古,水火难容,妖与人自然更是难容,所以,便出现了天河。自古,邪不胜正,代表正义的人族修行者,自然便高踞上风。可自古还有一个词,便是天意难测!所以,在这场妖族与人族的千千年相峙中,孰强孰弱,谁胜谁败,却也难测。
  • 解放大西南

    解放大西南

    本书展现了刘伯承、邓小平、贺龙坚决贯彻毛泽东战略思想,指挥决战解放战争最后一役的历史画卷。