The Flower Girl of The Chateau d'Eau - LightNovelsOnl.com
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You know her unlucky failing, which will lead her to perdition! and it isn't for lack of my trying to correct it by every means that I can think of."
Whereupon Hildegarde, who had her reasons for not stirring from her chair, made haste to reply:
"Oh, yes! the means you use are very nice! I advise you to boast of them; you ought to be ashamed of them! a man with an education, who has clerks under him, in an office, to raise his hand to his wife! Yes, Monsieur Malberg, I don't blush to confess that Monsieur Baudoin has the baseness to strike me! that's a nice thing to do, ain't it?"
But the man to whom these questions were addressed, observing that no one thought of giving him his light, pushed open the door of the lodge, took his candlestick, lighted the candle with a piece of paper, and went upstairs without another word to the concierge and his wife, who continued their conversation.
"Well, Hildegarde, do you see what you've done? Here's Monsieur Malberg had to light his candle himself! what will he think of us?"
"Oh! I don't care what he thinks! he's an agreeable man, that tenant! a fellow who never talks, who hardly answers when you speak to him, and always in a short, surly tone, as if he was always angry!"
"It is true that he seldom laughs; but still perhaps that's his nature; there are people who enjoy being dismal. However, he's a man who occupies an apartment at eleven hundred francs, and who pays on the dot, without having to be reminded that it is rent day, and who has very handsome furniture, and mirrors in every room, so that the proprietor has a very high regard for him."
"Oh! I don't say that he's a vagabond! but why doesn't he keep a maid, who'd come to our lodge in the evening and talk, as decent people always do, instead of that miserable blackamoor, that yellow negro, who doesn't know how to do anything but wax his floor and polish his boots? as if you could call that a servant! He ought to hire me to do his housework; that's my line!"
"You forget, Hildegarde, that the landlord doesn't want you to do housework. Of course, if you went away while I am at my office, there wouldn't be anybody but the cat to look after the lodge and answer questions!"
"A fine job this is, where the concierge's wife isn't allowed to do housework! That was my only ambition."
"Oh, yes! the fact is that you were the cause of our being discharged from the lodge we had before this, because you did housework for the men on the fourth floor and drank all their liquor."
"That isn't true, it's a slander!"
"Let's not go back to that. I am mortified that Monsieur Malberg had to light his candle himself; it's a stain upon our good name."
"Well then, you ought to have lighted it for him, if you have that on your conscience!"
"Hold your tongue, Hildegarde; you're very unreasonable to-night, you have something bad to say about everybody. You find fault because Monsieur Malberg has a yellow negro to work for him, and you don't seem to know that that is very distinguished. Swell people always have colored servants in their employ."
"It's a miserable fas.h.i.+on. But still, if that miserable Pingo or Ponceau--I never know what his name is--was only agreeable."
"Pongo!"
"Oh! what a dog of a name! Pongo! But he never talks, the blackamoor; or else he talks to himself, and says things that I don't understand; I believe that he talks Morocco!"
"Come, Hildegarde, it's almost twelve o'clock; go to bed, that's the best thing you can do."
"Everybody hasn't come in."
"Yes they have, everybody except little Georget, who lives up under the roof, with his mother.--By the way, how is the poor woman to-day?"
"Not very well; she's had more fainting fits this afternoon, and I thought she was going _to put out her gas_."
"And her son hasn't come home, at midnight! that's what I call a ne'er-do-well, a downright scamp! Hildegarde, heaven didn't give us any children, and I give thanks for it in my heart; because they aren't always honey for parents, and often absinthe rules the roost, as I see in the case of Mere Georget!"
"Absinthe--absinthe--I don't hate that! it helps the digestion!"
"Oh! bless my soul! you don't hate any liquid; but I know that absinthe is bad for the health; I've heard some of the clerks at the office talking about two talented actors who played at the theatre and who put an end to themselves with absinthe; without counting several others who are in a fair way to do the same thing!"
"Bah! that's all nonsense!"
"Come, Hildegarde, go to bed; I will come in a little while; and if little Georget isn't in at the quarter, I will leave him outside; I can't waste my oil for anyone who never makes it up to me. Well, you don't move; are you fastened to your chair to-night?"
"Go to bed first, Baudoin; I'll sit up for the young man, and put the lodge in order."
"You know very well that I am not in the habit of going to bed before you. I see your scheme: you will wait until I am asleep and then go to the cupboard to say a word or two to the bottle!"
"Oh! the idea of my going to the cupboard! It's much more likely to be you, for you like brandy too."
"I like it reasonably, like a man with some self-respect, who doesn't choose to make a brute of himself.--Hildegarde, go to bed."
"I don't feel sleepy."
"Hildegarde, we are going to have trouble! Will you go to bed at once?"
"You pester me----"
"Hildegarde, I shall be compelled to resort to severe means. Why, you certainly are glued to your chair; this isn't natural, I suspect some trick. Ah! I see! I'll bet that the bottle isn't in the cupboard."
And Baudoin rose to go to the cupboard, but as his wife was sitting in front of it and did not move, he pushed her roughly aside, whereupon she reeled, and almost instantly uttered a cry of distress so heartrending that her husband feared that he had hurt her. But it was not Hildegarde who was hurt, it was the bottle under her skirts, which she had involuntarily upset, and which had broken, overflowing the lodge with all the liquor which it contained.
"I say! what's all this?" cried Baudoin, when he found a stream flowing between his feet; but soon the odor which spread through the room left him in no doubt as to the ident.i.ty of the liquid.
"It is brandy; she had the bottle under her skirt; what a vile trick!"
"Yes, and you made me break it! that's the worst of it, you brute! Such splendid brandy!"
"Hildegarde, you persist in your debauchery; I am going to give you a taste of the broomstick."
"Touch me if you dare! I'll call the watch! I'll make a disturbance in the house!"
Meanwhile Baudoin, who was in the habit of keeping his promises, had gone to fetch the broomstick. At that moment, the bell at the street door rang, and this time the woman made haste to open, hoping that it was somebody who would protect her.
It was Georget, the young messenger of the flower market, who entered the house, and in another instant the porter's lodge, just as Baudoin raised his broomstick over the head of his wife, who ran behind the young man, crying:
"Oh! monsieur, save an unfortunate woman, whose husband is trying to murder her!"
"Sapristi! how strong it smells of brandy here!" said Georget, sniffing; then, leaping upon the broomstick which the concierge held, he seized it with both hands. But Baudoin held on, he would not let go, and a struggle began between him and the young messenger, remarkably like the battles around the flag, which we see in the war plays at the boulevard theatres; only in this case the flag was a broomstick and the combatants were not in uniform.
The struggle continued for some time, on nearly even terms; Baudoin was stronger and little Georget more active. The concierge's wife paid no heed to the contestants; she had taken a small sponge, and was using it to soak up the brandy from the floor; and when it was well saturated, she put it to her lips.
Suddenly the broomstick broke, each of the contestants fell backward, and the battle was at an end. Finding himself then on a level with Madame Baudoin, who was kneeling on the floor with her body bent forward, still soaking and sucking her sponge, Georget could not restrain a burst of laughter; and the concierge, who was inclined at first to belabor his wife with what remained of his broomstick, suddenly decided to lie down on the floor, and to lap up the brandy with his tongue as thirsty dogs lap up the water in the gutter.
VI
THE GENTLEMAN OF THE THIRD FLOOR