Vermouth and absinthe had been served to whet their
appetites, and every one had been at once put into good spirits.
Captain Beausire, a funny little man who had become quite round by
dint of being rolled about at sea, and whose ideas also seemed to
have been worn round, like the pebbles of a beach, while he laughed
with his throat full of r's, looked upon life as a capital
thing, in which everything that might turn up was good to take. He
clinked his glass against father Roland's, while Jean was offering
two freshly filled glasses to the ladies. Mme. Rosemilly refused,
till Captain Beausire, who had known her husband, cried:
"Come, come, madame, bis repetita placent, as we say in
the lingo, which is as much as to say two glasses of vermouth never
hurt any one. Look at me; since I have left the sea, in this way I
give myself an artificial roll or two every day before dinner; I
add a little pitching after my coffee, and that keeps things lively
for the rest of the evening. I never rise to a hurricane, mind you,
never, never. I am too much afraid of damage."
Roland, whose nautical mania was humoured by the old mariner,
laughed heartily, his face flushed already and his eye watery from
the absinthe. He had a burly shop-keeping stomach—nothing but
stomach—in which the rest of his body seemed to have got stowed
away; the flabby paunch of men who spend their lives sitting, and
who have neither thighs, nor chest, nor arms, nor neck; the seat of
their chairs having accumulated all their substance in one spot.
Beausire, on the contrary, though short and stout, was as tight as
an egg and as hard as a cannon-ball.
Mme. Roland had not emptied her glass and was gazing at her son
Jean with sparkling eyes; happiness had brought a colour to her
cheeks.
In him, too, the fulness of joy had now blazed out. It was a
settled thing, signed and sealed; he had twenty thousand francs a
year. In the sound of his laugh, in the fuller voice with which he
spoke, in his way of looking at the others, his more positive
manners, his greater confidence, the assurance given by money was
at once perceptible.
Dinner was announced, and as the old man was about to offer his
arm to Mme. Rosemilly, his wife exclaimed:
"No, no, father. Everything is for Jean to-day."
Unwonted luxury graced the table. In front of Jean, who sat in
his father's place, an enormous bouquet of flowers—a bouquet for a
really great occasion—stood up like a cupola dressed with flags,
and was flanked by four high dishes, one containing a pyramid of
splendid peaches; the second, a monumental cake gorged with whipped
cream and covered with pinnacles of sugar—a cathedral in
confectionery; the third, slices of pine-apple floating in clear
sirup; and the fourth—unheard-of lavishness—black grapes brought
from the warmer south.
"The devil!" exclaimed Pierre as he sat down. "We are
celebrating the accession of Jean the rich."
After the soup, Madeira was passed round, and already every one
was talking at once. Beausire was giving the history of a dinner he
had eaten at San Domingo at the table of a negro general. Old
Roland was listening, and at the same time trying to get in,
between the sentences, his account of another dinner, given by a
friend of his at Mendon, after which every guest was ill for a
fortnight. Mme. Rosemilly, Jean, and his mother were planning an
excursion to breakfast at Saint Jouin, from which they promised
themselves the greatest pleasure; and Pierre was only sorry that he
had not dined alone in some pot-house by the sea, so as to escape
all this noise and laughter and glee which fretted him. He was
wondering how he could now set to work to confide his fears to his
brother, and induce him to renounce the fortune he had already
accepted and of which he was enjoying the intoxicating foretaste.
It would be hard on him, no doubt; but it must be done; he could
not hesitate; their mother's reputation was at stake.
The appearance of an enormous shade-fish threw Roland back on
fishing stories. Beausire told some wonderful tales of adventure on
the Gaboon, at Sainte-Marie, in Madagascar, and above all, off the
coasts of China and Japan, where the fish are as queer-looking as
the natives. And he described the appearance of these fishes—their
goggle gold eyes, their blue or red bellies, their fantastic fins
like fans, their eccentric crescent-shaped tails—with such droll
gesticulation that they all laughed till they cried as they
listened.
Pierre alone seemed incredulous, muttering to himself: "True
enough, the Normans are the Gascons of the north!"
After the fish came a vol-au-vent, then a roast fowl, a salad,
French beans with a Pithiviers lark-pie. Mme. Rosemilly's maid
helped to wait on them, and the fun rose with the number of glasses
of wine they drank. When the cork of the first champagne-bottle was
drawn with a pop, father Roland, highly excited, imitated the noise
with his tongue and then declared: "I like that noise better than a
pistol-shot."
Pierre, more and more fractious every moment, retorted with a
sneer:
"And yet it is perhaps a greater danger for you."
Roland, who was on the point of drinking, set his full glass
down on the table again, and asked:
"Why?"
He had for some time been complaining of his health, of
heaviness, giddiness, frequent and unaccountable discomfort. The
doctor replied:
"Because the bullet might very possibly miss you, while the
glass of wine is dead certain to hit you in the stomach."
"And what then?"
"Then it scorches your inside, upsets your nervous system, makes
the circulation sluggish, and leads the way to the apoplectic fit
which always threatens a man of your build."
The jeweller's incipient intoxication had vanished like smoke
before the wind. He looked at his son with fixed, uneasy eyes,
trying to discover whether he was making game of him.
But Beausire exclaimed:
"Oh, these confounded doctors! They all sing the same tune—eat
nothing, drink nothing, never make love or enjoy yourself; it all
plays the devil with your precious health. Well, all I can say is,
I have done all these things, sir, in every quarter of the globe,
wherever and as often as I have had the chance, and I am none the
worse."
Pierre answered with some asperity:
"In the first place, captain, you are a stronger man than my
father; and in the next, all free livers talk as you do till the
day when—when they come back no more to say to the cautious doctor:
'You were right.' When I see my father doing what is worst and most
dangerous for him, it is but natural that I should warn him. I
should be a bad son if I did otherwise."
Mme. Roland, much distressed, now put in her word: "Come,
Pierre, what ails you? For once it cannot hurt him.
1 comment