Piperaud. He came out
with her at once and they went off along the Rue de l'Oiseau. There
must be some child ill."
"Oh dear, dear; the poor little creature!" would come with a
sigh from Françoise, who could not hear of any calamity befalling a
person unknown to her, even in some distant part of the world,
without beginning to lament. Or:
"Françoise, for whom did they toll the passing-bell just now? Oh
dear, of course, it would be for Mme. Rousseau. And to think that I
had forgotten that she passed away the other night. Indeed, it is
time the Lord called me home too; I don't know what has become of
my head since I lost my poor Octave. But I am wasting your time, my
good girl."
"Indeed no, Mme. Octave, my time is not so precious; whoever
made our time didn't sell it to us. I am just going to see that my
fire hasn't gone out."
In this way Françoise and my aunt made a critical valuation
between them, in the course of these morning sessions, of the
earliest happenings of the day. But sometimes these happenings
assumed so mysterious or so alarming an air that my aunt felt she
could not wait until it was time for Françoise to come upstairs,
and then a formidable and quadruple peal would resound through the
house.
"But, Mme. Octave, it is not time for your pepsin," Françoise
would begin. "Are you feeling faint?"
"No, thank you, Françoise," my aunt would reply, "that is to
say, yes; for you know well that there is very seldom a time when I
don't feel faint; one day I shall pass away like Mme. Rousseau,
before I know where I am; but that is not why I rang. Would you
believe that I have just seen, as plainly as I see you, Mme. Goupil
with a little girl I didn't know at all. Run and get a pennyworth
of salt from Camus. It's not often that Théodore can't tell you who
a person is."
"But that must be M. Pupin's daughter," Françoise would say,
preferring to stick to an immediate explanation, since she had been
perhaps twice already into Camus's shop that morning.
"M. Pupin's daughter! Oh, that's a likely story, my poor
Françoise. Do you think I should not have recognised M. Pupin's
daughter!"
"But I don't mean the big one, Mme. Octave; I mean the little
girl, he one who goes to school at Jouy. I seem to have seen her
once already his morning."
"Oh, if that's what it is!" my aunt would say, "she must have
come over for the holidays. Yes, that is it. No need to ask, she
will have come over for the holidays. But then we shall soon see
Mme. Sazerat come along and ring her sister's door-bell, for her
luncheon. That will be it! I saw the boy from Galopin's go by with
a tart. You will see that the tart was for Mme.
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