Nothing was known of his early
life, and all sorts of legends had been current among the indoor
and outdoor patients and afterward among his neighbours. This
reputation as a terrible conspirator, a nihilist, a regicide, a
patriot ready for anything and everything, who had escaped death by
a miracle, had bewitched Pierre Roland's lively and bold
imagination; he had made friends with the old Pole, without,
however, having ever extracted from him any revelation as to his
former career. It was owing to the young doctor that this worthy
had come to settle at Havre, counting on the large custom which the
rising practitioner would secure him. Meanwhile he lived very
poorly in his little shop, selling medicines to the small tradesmen
and workmen in his part of the town.
Pierre often went to see him and chat with him for an hour after
dinner, for he liked Marowsko's calm look and rare speech, and
attributed great depth to his long spells of silence.
A simple gas-burner was alight over the counter crowded with
phials. Those in the window were not lighted, from motives of
economy. Behind the counter, sitting on a chair with his legs
stretched out and crossed, an old man, quite bald, with a large
beak of a nose which, as a prolongation of his hairless forehead,
gave him a melancholy likeness to a parrot, was sleeping soundly,
his chin resting on his breast. He woke at the sound of the
shop-bell, and recognising the doctor, came forward to meet him,
holding out both hands.
His black frock-coat, streaked with stains of acids and sirups,
was much too wide for his lean little person, and looked like a
shabby old cassock; and the man spoke with a strong Polish accent
which gave the childlike character to his thin voice, the lisping
note and intonations of a young thing learning to speak.
Pierre sat down, and Marowsko asked him: "What news, dear
doctor?"
"None. Everything as usual, everywhere."
"You do not look very gay this evening."
"I am not often gay."
"Come, come, you must shake that off. Will you try a glass of
liqueur?"
"Yes, I do not mind."
"Then I will give you something new to try. For these two months
I have been trying to extract something from currants, of which
only a sirup has been made hitherto—well, and I have done it. I
have invented a very good liqueur—very good indeed; very good."
And quite delighted, he went to a cupboard, opened it, and
picked out a bottle which he brought forth. He moved and did
everything in jerky gestures, always incomplete; he never quite
stretched out his arm, nor quite put out his legs; nor made any
broad and definite movements. His ideas seemed to be like his
actions; he suggested them, promised them, sketched them, hinted at
them, but never fully uttered them.
And, indeed, his great end in life seemed to be the concoction
of sirups and liqueurs. "A good sirup or a good liqueur is enough
to make a fortune," he would often say.
He had compounded hundreds of these sweet mixtures without ever
succeeding in floating one of them. Pierre declared that Marowsko
always reminded him of Marat.
Two little glasses were fetched out of the back shop and placed
on the mixing-board. Then the two men scrutinized the colour of the
fluid by holding it up to the gas.
"A fine ruby," Pierre declared.
"Isn't it?" Marowsko's old parrot-face beamed with
satisfaction.
The doctor tasted, smacked his lips, meditated, tasted again,
meditated again, and spoke:
"Very good—capital; and quite new in flavour. It is a find, my
dear fellow."
"Ah, really? Well, I am very glad."
Then Marowsko took counsel as to baptizing the new liqueur. He
wanted to call it "Extract of currants," or else "Fine
Groseille" or "Groselia," or again "Groseline."
Pierre did not approve of either of these names.
Then the old man had an idea:
"What you said just now would be very good, very good: 'Fine
Ruby.'" But the doctor disputed the merit of this name, though it
had originated with him. He recommended simply "Groseillette,"
which Marowsko thought admirable.
Then they were silent, and sat for some minutes without a word
under the solitary gas-lamp. At last Pierre began, almost in spite
of himself:
"A queer thing has happened at home this evening. A friend of my
father's, who is lately dead, has left his fortune to my
brother."
The druggist did not at first seem to understand, but after
thinking it over he hoped that the doctor had half the inheritance.
When the matter was clearly explained to him he appeared surprised
and vexed; and to express his dissatisfaction at finding that his
young friend had been sacrificed, he said several times over:
"It will not look well."
Pierre, who was relapsing into nervous irritation, wanted to
know what Marowsko meant by this phrase.
Why would it not look well? What was there to look badly in the
fact that his brother had come into the money of a friend of the
family?
But the cautious old man would not explain further.
"In such a case the money is left equally to the two brothers,
and I tell you, it will not look well."
And the doctor, out of all patience, went away, returned to his
father's house, and went to bed. For some time afterward he heard
Jean moving softly about the adjoining room, and then, after
drinking two glasses of water, he fell asleep.
CHAPTER III
The doctor awoke next morning firmly resolved to make his
fortune. Several times already he had come to the same
determination without following up the reality. At the outset of
all his trials of some new career the hopes of rapidly acquired
riches kept up his efforts and confidence, till the first obstacle,
the first check, threw him into a fresh path. Snug in bed between
the warm sheets, he lay meditating. How many medical men had become
wealthy in quite a short time! All that was needed was a little
knowledge of the world; for in the course of his studies he had
learned to estimate the most famous physicians, and he judged them
all to be asses. He was certainly as good as they, if not better.
If by any means he could secure a practice among the wealth and
fashion of Havre, he could easily make a hundred thousand francs a
year. And he calculated with great exactitude what his certain
profits must be. He would go out in the morning to visit his
patients; at the very moderate average of ten a day, at twenty
francs each, that would mount up to seventy-two thousand francs a
year at least, or even seventy-five thousand; for ten patients was
certainly below the mark. In the afternoon he would be at home to,
say, another ten patients, at ten francs each—thirty-six thousand
francs.
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