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Reflecting thus, Dubourg was beginning to doze, when he heard a great uproar in the courtyard,--outcries, oaths, and roars of laughter,--and, in the midst of it, he fancied that he recognized the voice of one of his jockeys. He rose, partly dressed himself, and opened the window looking on the courtyard. He saw a number of servants a.s.sembled there, and old Lunel fighting for a chicken with one of the little Poles, while the other was shrieking and weeping in a corner.
The two scullions, faithful to the orders Dubourg had given them, had replied only by signs to the other servants; but Lunel, who was Monsieur Chambertin's steward, valet, and groom, all in one, was very ill disposed toward the baron's servants, as well as toward their master, whom he had driven to Gren.o.ble, and from whom he had received no other _pourboire_ than a tap on the cheek. The two boys had bruised themselves behind, when they were thrown out of the carriage; that was why, when trying to make themselves understood by signs, they frequently put their hands to the injured part: a gesture which seemed to Lunel most insulting, and he was convinced that the young Poles intended to make sport of him.
To be revenged on them, he had taken them up to a small room under the eaves, and left them there, supperless. The little fellows did not go to bed, thinking all the time that food would be brought to them, or that they would be called to supper. At last, tired of waiting, they went downstairs. Everybody had retired except Lunel, who was sitting up because he suspected that the baron's servants would not remain quiet.
The little fellows, spurred on by hunger, got scent of the store-closet, which was in the kitchen; and as one of the kitchen windows was open, they easily crawled in, and, making a hole in the canvas door of the closet, one of them seized a chicken which had not been touched, the other the carca.s.s of a hare which still had some meat on it. They were about to fly with their booty when Lunel discovered them; he shouted _thief!_ and struck at them with a whip with which he had armed himself.
The scullions ran to the window and climbed through; one fell and bruised his nose; the other, being less awkward, was running off with his chicken, when Lunel overtook him and tried to wrest it from him.
Thereupon a struggle began.
"You shan't have it!" cried the boy.
"Oho! you little rascal! you can talk French now, can you? I'll teach you to make insulting signs to me!"
Meanwhile, the one who had fallen cried:
"I've broke my nose; it's that old dodger's fault for not giving us any supper!"
It was at this crisis that Dubourg appeared at his window. All the servants had come down into the courtyard; and Monsieur Chambertin also appeared on his balcony, in his robe de chambre.
"What's the meaning of all this noise?" he demanded.
"Those are my little Poles."
"Yes, your Poles, who talk French now," retorted Lunel; "I caught 'em stealing in the store-closet."
"He didn't give us any supper," said the boys, "and he was waiting for us in a corner with a whip."
"A miracle!" cried Dubourg; "they have spoken! they understand! That whip seems to have taught them more quickly than any schooling!--Come, my young friends, come up here and let me hear you speak French, and you shall have some supper."
"And you, knave," shouted Monsieur Chambertin to his servant, "if you presume to lay a finger on monsieur le baron's Poles again, I'll have you horsewhipped, and discharge you!"
"They're no more Poles than I am a Turk!" muttered Lunel, as he walked away.
The jockeys went up to their master's apartments, with the chicken and the hare they had rescued from the battle; the servants returned to bed, and Monsieur Chambertin resumed his place beside his wife, who was dreaming that she was in the summer-house, and that they were about to set off a petard.
Dubourg concluded that it would be imprudent to keep with him two young imps who would surely get into further mischief. So, early the next morning, he gave them each three francs and sent them back to Gren.o.ble, to the great contentment of Lunel, who did not like Poles.
The following days pa.s.sed quietly; a few friends came to share Monsieur Chambertin's pleasure and to listen to all the fables Dubourg chose to tell them concerning his estates, his chateaux, his family, and his duties at the court of Poland. Menard did not say much, but he ate and drank vigorously, and cited a Latin author now and then; so that the company, not understanding him, regarded him with renewed respect.
Dubourg gambled every evening, but only for small stakes. Frossard was absent, Monsieur Chambertin never got excited over the game, and Dubourg began to think that he would not double his capital. But the host's birthday was approaching, and on that occasion the house was to be turned topsy-turvy once more. Some very wealthy friends from Paris were expected, who would play as high as monsieur le baron wished. It was Madame Chambertin who had invited them, for she did everything that she could to detain the agreeable guest; and she said to her husband every day:
"You don't realize all the honor Monsieur de Potoski does you by paying you a visit; you have no conception of it!"
"I a.s.sure you, my dear love, that I am very proud of it, and that I will do all that I can to keep him."
"You will do well, monsieur; for his going would leave a great void in my life. He is a man who would be very hard to replace. He is n.o.ble to his finger-tips."
But everything was in commotion at Monsieur Chambertin's, where great preparations were being made for the approaching function, of which the charming stranger was again to be the hero. Monsieur Chambertin seemed determined to outdo himself; he sent for workmen, whom he employed with a great show of mystery in the garden, and they seemed always to be in the neighborhood of the summer-house. He was preparing a surprise for his guest; and as his last fireworks were talked about all over the neighborhood, he determined that the renown of his next display should reach to Lyon.
The great day came at last, and many guests arrived. Monsieur Chambertin was immensely pleased with the surprise he had arranged for the baron, and would not even take his wife into his confidence. The former wine merchant's circle was augmented by new faces. A sumptuous banquet was served; the dishes were exquisite, the wines delicious, and Dubourg did the honors of the table almost una.s.sisted, because whenever he called his host "my friend D'Allevard," he was certain to turn his head.
"Twice happy the day that I met you!" he whispered to madame.
"What do you say? twice?" she replied, with a sigh; "oh! that is not enough! say rather four, or five, or six times!"
"Let us call it seven, and stop at that!" said Dubourg.
The dinner came to an end. Monsieur Chambertin had but one regret--that his friend Durosey, whom he had been expecting from Paris for several days, had not arrived. Every time that he heard friend Durosey's name, Dubourg said to himself:
"I used to know someone of that name in Paris; but where in the devil did I know him?"
He asked Chambertin who this Monsieur Durosey might be.
"He's a wholesale merchant, who has just retired from business with twenty thousand francs a year."
"In that case," thought Dubourg, "it can't be the man I knew, for I never a.s.sociated with wholesale merchants."
They returned to the salon, where a rich landowner, who was very fond of ecarte, seemed inclined to try his luck against monsieur le baron, when Lunel announced that Monsieur Durosey had arrived. Chambertin was delighted; he left the room, and soon returned with his friend, whom he introduced to the a.s.sembled company. Dubourg glanced at the new-comer and recognized the former keeper of a restaurant in Paris, to whom he owed a matter of four hundred francs, which had been standing two years, and which he had not found himself in a position to pay. Monsieur Chambertin, through vanity, had represented him as a wholesale merchant instead of a retired restaurant keeper.
The meeting was exceedingly disagreeable to Dubourg, but he did not lose his head; and when Chambertin came forward with Durosey, saying: "I present you to Monsieur le Baron de Potoski, a Polish palatine," Dubourg bowed and smirked, blinking his eyes, twisting his mouth, and making such grimaces that it was improbable that his creditor could recognize him.
Monsieur Durosey did not stop in front of Dubourg, who felt more at ease and resumed his game more tranquilly. From time to time, however, he glanced about the salon, and when he met his former entertainer's eye he fancied that the latter was scrutinizing him carefully; whereupon he resumed his facial contortions and grimacing, and tried to affect a sort of Saint Vitus's dance by constantly twisting his nose and mouth toward his left ear.
But his creditor's presence annoyed and embarra.s.sed him; he could not pay attention to his game, he lost his head completely, and his money slowly but surely pa.s.sed into his adversary's possession. Dubourg suggested doubling, then trebling, the stakes; the rich squire agreed, for he could not refuse monsieur le baron. A large part of the company stood about the table, which was covered with five-hundred-franc notes; and Monsieur Durosey planted himself exactly in front of Dubourg, who could not raise his eyes without meeting his creditor's, and who, to fill his cup to the brim, had the worst possible luck. In half an hour, the travelling fund had pa.s.sed into other hands, and Dubourg rose, saying that he was going to get some more money.
But as he was looking about for his friend Chambertin, to borrow a few thousand francs, with which he hoped to recover what he had lost,--for a gambler continues to hope until he is on his death-bed,--the former restaurant keeper, who had not lost sight of him, joined him in a window recess. It was impossible to avoid him.
"How is Monsieur Dubourg?" he asked, with a roguish air.
"Dubourg? what do you mean by Dubourg?" replied the pretended baron, working his nose and mouth more violently than ever.
"Oh! I have the honor to recognize monsieur," retorted the creditor, in a louder tone; "but I didn't know that he was a Polish baron----"
"Hush! not another word, my dear Monsieur Durosey," said Dubourg, seeing that it was impossible to hoodwink his interlocutor. "I didn't recognize you at first, but now I place you perfectly. I am delighted to see you."
"The same with me, monsieur. You seem to be in very comfortable circ.u.mstances now, staking five hundred francs at once at ecarte, and I trust that you will pay me the four hundred francs you----"
"Yes, yes, with great pleasure; I will give them to you this very evening. When I left Paris, I forgot that trifling debt."
"But I called on monsieur more than twenty times when he lived on the fifth floor on Rue d'Enfer, and again on Rue de----"
"Hush! I know all about that; silence, Monsieur Durosey! Since then, I have come into my property, and my t.i.tles--I will pay you in a moment."
"Oh! in that case, monsieur le baron may be a.s.sured that this will remain a secret between us."
Dubourg walked away from Monsieur Durosey and once more looked about for Chambertin, when that gentleman entered the salon, crying:
"Come into the garden, everybody; we are going to set off the fireworks."