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This was called a furnished lodging.
It is probable, however, that all the rooms in the Hotel du Sanglier were not furnished so shabbily; and the Chevalier Pa.s.sedix knew something about it; for when he first became a tenant of Dame Cadichard, he occupied a room on the first floor; at the next quarter day, the Gascon had gone up to the second floor; three months later, he had been consigned to the third; the following term, he had occupied the fourth; and the fifth term, which was now running, he had been relegated to the eaves. In case the chevalier should prolong his residence at Madame Cadichard's, he could be sure, at all events, that they would send him no higher.
Why these peregrinations of the gallant Pa.s.sedix on each succeeding quarter day? That we shall probably learn in the sequel.
On leaving Master Hugonnet's house, the Gascon returned with long strides to Place aux Chats, his mind engrossed by the pretty foreigner with whom he had fallen in love so suddenly. He was already meditating the means to which he might resort in order to see her; and from time to time he put his hand to his belt, in which he usually carried his purse; but the little leather bag in which he kept his money contained at that moment only a few copper coins.
"Sandioux! my family is very dilatory about sending me money!" muttered Pa.s.sedix, shaking his head angrily. "And without money it is very difficult to corrupt servants, to procure the delivery of a billet-doux.
I know that my genius will supply the lack, but it would go more quickly with the help of funds.--But, no matter! first of all, I must put on an entirely clean ruff. I must also have those two b.u.t.tons sewn on my doublet; then I will take my stand as a sentinel in front of the Hotel de Mongarcin, and I will observe what goes on there, and what persons come from and go to the citadel."
Pa.s.sedix, arrived at his hotel, entered by the low door, then, turning to the right, pa.s.sed into a room where the mistress of the house was usually to be found, and where each tenant's keys hung on the wall, with the numbers attached.
Widow Cadichard was seated in a capacious armchair, before a table; she was in the act of eating a vegetable soup so thick that one could eat it with a fork; beside the soup tureen, which exhaled a vapor by no means disagreeable to a keen appet.i.te, four very fine eggs lay on a napkin in a plate. An egg gla.s.s and a bountiful supply of small squares of toast, which were beside the plate, indicated in what manner the eggs were to be eaten.
When her tenant entered the room, the short, stout dame flashed a glance at him in which there was vexation and anger; but in an instant she resumed her sprightly manner and went on eating her soup.
The chevalier bowed to the widow and walked toward the place where the keys were hanging.
"Well, well!" he cried; "what does this mean, cadedis! my key is not on its nail! Have you it in your possession, Madame Cadichard?"
"I! On my word! Why should I have the key to your room, I should like to know? Do I go to your room? Do I have any occasion to go there?"
"Then it must be Popelinette, the servant, who has it?"
"Apparently!"
"So she is doing my housework, is she? That happens very conveniently, for I will ask her to sew two b.u.t.tons on my doublet. I suppose that she is supplied with needles and thread, as every good servant should be."
"I don't know whether Popelinette has needles and thread with her; but what I can tell you is this--that she isn't in your room now."
"Then she must be here; do me the favor to call her, Dame Cadichard; I am in haste to go up and make a bit of a toilet."
"I am distressed to be unable to gratify you, monsieur le chevalier, but Popelinette is not in the house; she has gone out; she has gone to do an errand for the new tenant who came a week ago, and who occupies my fine apartment on the first floor."
"Ah! your first floor is let, is it? I am very glad for you, my respected hostess, although I might be justified in complaining of the rather harsh manner in which you have behaved toward me! Capedebious!
every quarter day, you make me move--go up one flight--on the pretext that my last lodging is let; whereas only the mice take my place. Do you know, Widow Cadichard, that I should be fully justified in complaining of such treatment?"
"You would be justified also in paying me your rent each quarter, and that is what you haven't done, monsieur le chevalier; for I don't know the color of your money, and you have been living in my house more than a year!"
"It is true, my family is very dilatory; I haven't received my allowance for a long time; but they will send it all to me in a lump!--After all, how have I injured you? You never have a cat in your Hotel du Sanglier!
You ought to thank me for brightening up this old house a bit!"
"Thank you! yes, if you had been agreeable, gallant, attentive to me, I might not have made you go up so high, perhaps; but you never pa.s.sed an evening here chatting with me! Monsieur always has to go running about the city! Monsieur has so many intrigues!"
Pa.s.sedix turned his face away, biting his lips, and hastened to change the subject.
"Sandioux! how good that soup smells!" he cried. "I don't know what it's made of, but, judging from the odor, it must be a most delicious compound!"
The stout hostess refused to be melted by this exclamation; she continued to eat and talk:
"But luckily all my tenants do not resemble Monsieur de Pa.s.sedix! There are some who pay, and who are very amiable with me besides. For instance, this new-comer, this foreigner who has been here a week--he paid a fortnight in advance, he didn't haggle at all over the price, and yet he pays me forty crowns a month for my first floor!"
"Bigre! that's rather good!"
"But I am sure that that man is a grand seigneur--but that doesn't prevent him from often talking with me; he isn't a bit proud!--Yesterday I dined alone--well! he sat down here and kept me company. He's a very good-looking fellow, and quite young still--thirty at most!"
"What do you call this fascinating cavalier?"
"The Comte de Carvajal; he's a Spaniard."
"The deuce! the Comte de Carvajal!--Yes, I believe that is a great Spanish family.--Sandis! but I must confess, lovely hostess, that it seems to me rather strange that this grand seigneur, instead of occupying a handsome mansion in the neighborhood of the Palais-Cardinal or the a.r.s.enal, comes to Place aux Chats to nest--with the Cemetery of the Innocents opposite! It is not absolutely cheerful--and a hotel where his horses and carriages cannot be accommodated!"
"What does this mean, Monsieur Pa.s.sedix? you are crying down my hotel now! You call this a bad quarter--then why did you come here to lodge?
And why have you lodged more than a year on this Place aux Chats, which you despise?"
"I, despise Place aux Chats! G.o.d forbid, dear Madame Cadichard! On the contrary, I consider it most romantic; and then I, being afraid of nothing, not even of ghosts and phantoms, am not at all sorry to live just opposite a cemetery; for if it should happen to occur to some dead man to come to say a word to me at night, I swear to you that I should be overjoyed to have news from the other world."
"Hush--impious man!--He makes me shudder over my soup!--You know perfectly well that the dead don't return!"
"I know that there are a great many things that don't return, unhappily; and you know it, too, plump Cadichard!"
"What do you mean by that, monsieur le chevalier?"
"Mon Dieu! how time flies with us all!--But let us return to your Spanish grandee, who has chosen the Hotel du Sanglier for his abode; he must have a numerous suite of servants and horses and carriages?"
"Not at all; he has none of those things. He is alone; it seems that he is at Paris incognito!"
"What! not an esquire, not a valet, not even a single little mule to prance along the Fosses Jaunes?"
"Nothing, I tell you; for he doesn't go to court, so that the grands seigneurs of his acquaintance need not know that he is in Paris."
Pa.s.sedix shook his head and muttered:
"Hum! a Spanish grandee who hasn't one poor lackey in his service--that seems suspicious to me! Where does this n.o.ble cavalier pa.s.s his time, pray, if he doesn't frequent good society, the agreeable rakes of the court, and dandies like myself."
"Monsieur de Carvajal doesn't often go out during the day. In the first place, he rises very late; but, to tell the truth, he comes home very late, too. As he doesn't want to disturb anyone, he has told Popelinette not to sit up for him; he asked me to give him a duplicate key to the street door, so that he can come in at whatever hour of the night he pleases; and he takes pains not to make any noise, for we never hear him coming and going; it seems that in Spain people are in the habit of walking about at night."
"In Spain, perhaps, because it's warm there and the nights are fine; but here, where it still freezes in the morning--for our spring is devilishly behindhand! I believe that your gallant stranger is a blade who does his work under the rose. There must be some love intrigue on the carpet--some husband to be deceived.--Sandioux! I don't blame your Spaniard for that. Love is such a delicious thing--and when it attacks us--ah!"
Here Pa.s.sedix heaved a sigh which lasted so long that his hostess dropped her spoon and stared at him, as if trying to make out whether she had anything to do with that prolonged groan. But the Gascon, instead of responding to the Widow Cadichard's alluring glance, turned away abruptly and began to pace the floor, crying:
"Cadedis! Popelinette does not return! it is insufferable! I want to dress!"
"Dress? I didn't know that you had any other doublet than that."
"Possibly not; but there are different ways of wearing it; besides, I want to put on a clean ruff, and I need to have two b.u.t.tons sewn on."
"Mon Dieu! have you an a.s.signation for this afternoon?"