San-Cravate; or, The Messengers; Little Streams - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Perhaps you didn't look closely."
"Oh! yes, I did; it ain't hard to do. There's n.o.body there except the proprietor, and an old woman who wants carrots, I fancy, for she was hauling 'em all over."
"I want to see for myself."
And Sans-Cravate walked toward the fruit stall, in his turn. Jean Ficelle followed him, still whistling. When they had pa.s.sed the shop, Sans-Cravate stopped, and muttered with a distressed expression:
"She ain't there!"
"Pardieu! I knew it. I've got eyes like a falcon, I have. But I don't see what made you think Bastringuette was there. Your wench wouldn't have rigged herself out in her prettiest togs to go to a paltry shop where they sell burned onions and old Brie cheese. When a woman dresses up, it means that she's going to meet a man she wants to catch; you don't need to be a chemist to see that."
"Yes, yes, you are right."
"Oh! I know the world, my boy. Sometimes I don't say nothing, but I think a lot. But what's to hinder your going into the shop and asking if Bastringuette's been there to-day?"
"No; she'd find out that I'd been looking for her; she'd think that I care what she does. I won't do it."
"It seems to me, she wouldn't be far out of the way if she thought that."
"I tell you, I don't love her any more--I hate her; but I'd like to catch her with the other one, just so's to say: 'You're a pair of curs, and I despise you!'--and that's all. I tell you, Jean Ficelle, no woman will ever be anything to me after this; they're too treacherous; I won't have any more mistresses, I swear!"
"Don't swear--that's nonsense! Look you, I'll give you another comparison: when a woman has a pretty cat, she always says when she's patting him and kissing him: 'If I lose this one, I swear I'll never have another.'--But what happens? her cat dies or gets lost, and in a little while she's sure to get another one, and says just the same about him that she did about the first one. Now, you see, women say just the same thing about their lovers that they do about their cats. 'If this one leaves me, I'll never have another.'--And when their lover leaves 'em, they always take another, just as they do a cat. Well! when a man says: 'I won't have any more mistresses, because mine has played tricks on me,' it's just the same story."
"But I have some character, some strength of will!" cried Sans-Cravate; "and to prove that I don't mean to think of Bastringuette any more, I'm going to drink and gamble and enjoy myself--go on a spree with my friends."
"Well, well! good enough! that's what I call talking! Come along, I'll take you to the rendezvous of the _Francs-Lapins_. You'll find some friends there you can depend on. Have you got any cash?"
"Yes, I still have six or seven francs left of what Monsieur Albert gave me last night."
"We must spend 'em! Anyway, we can't do any more work to-day; it's too late, and you need amus.e.m.e.nt, and so do I. Forward--and as we go along, I'll teach you a drinking song that goes to the tune of _Partant pour la Syrie_, with an accompaniment of tongs beating a kettle; it has a fine effect at dessert."
Sans-Cravate took his companion's arm. It was evident that he was doing his utmost to overcome his chagrin and to appear hilarious. Jean Ficelle, who believed himself to be an excellent singer, had already begun the song with which he proposed to entertain his friend, when, as they turned out of Rue Barbette into Vieille Rue du Temple, a young man, who wore a round hat, and whose dress, while not fas.h.i.+onable, was that of a respectable bourgeois, walked rapidly by them. He seemed much preoccupied, and did not notice the two messengers. But they looked at him and recognized him, and Jean Ficelle triumphantly exclaimed:
"Well! what did I tell you? Was I mistaken? You've seen him yourself.
That was Paul, dressed like a swell."
"Yes, it was him, that's sure! I can't get over it!"
"And do you see how proud he is when he's dressed up like that? he pa.s.sed close to us, and pretended not to know us. What does it all mean?
is that a messenger's dress? Anyone would swear he was a drummer. You see yourself that there's something crooked, some mystery."
Sans-Cravate was not listening, for he had run after Paul; although the younger man walked very rapidly, Sans-Cravate soon overtook and pa.s.sed him; then, planting himself in front of him, he barred his pa.s.sage, saying in a bantering tone which ill concealed his anger:
"Where are you going so fast? _Bigre!_ seems to me, you're dressed mighty fine for a messenger who stands on the street corner to do errands."
Paul was thunderstruck when he recognized Sans-Cravate; but he strove to overcome his annoyance, and replied:
"I am not doing errands to-day, and when a man isn't working he is free to dress as he pleases."
"That may be! but, still, n.o.body ever meets us in such a rig, not even on Sunday."
"No," said Jean Ficelle, who had overtaken his two confreres, and joined in the conversation with a bantering leer; "no! we ain't so stylish as that! Gad! what a swell! Paul must have some other trade that pays better than ours, to wear such togs! And think how stingy he is with us, never willing to treat his friends to a gla.s.s!"
"I do what I choose! I am not accountable to anyone for my actions,"
retorted Paul, with an angry glance at Jean Ficelle; "I don't play the spy on other people, and I care mighty little what is thought of me by people who had better learn to behave themselves, first of all!"
With that, Paul hurried away, while the two messengers looked at each other with a disappointed expression.
"What an insolent brat he is, the little foundling!" cried Jean Ficelle; "don't that deserve a hiding--when a puppy without any father or mother puts on airs like that? He insulted you again."
"Me?" said Sans-Cravate, in surprise; "how did he insult me, I'd like to know?"
"Didn't you hear what he said: 'There are people who had better learn how to behave themselves before they spy on other people?'--He looked at you when he said that."
"I thought you was the one he was looking at."
"Oh, no! He spotted you."
"Well, one thing's certain, and that is that Paul isn't with Bastringuette, and that I was wrong to think they were together."
Sans-Cravate seemed less distressed; it was evident that his jealousy had partly disappeared. But Jean Ficelle rejoined, with a shrug:
"They ain't together now--that's true. But what is there to prove that they didn't separate just now? Perhaps Bastringuette ain't so far away.
I have my ideas. See, I'll give you a comparison: it's like the way a cat insists on staying in a garret because he smells mice there; it's no use to try to drive him out----"
"_Sacredie!_ Jean Ficelle, you tire me with your comparisons! Come, let's go and see the _Francs-Lapins_; we are going to spree it a bit, you know. I'm all ready."
Instead of complying, Jean Ficelle pointed to a house with a pa.s.sage, on the left, and said:
"That's where our fine gentleman came from; and perhaps we might be able to find out where he'd been."
"You think Paul came out of that house, you say?" said Sans-Cravate, walking in that direction.
"Yes, yes, I'm sure of it. I was looking straight ahead, and there was no one coming. And all of a sudden someone came out of that pa.s.sage, and it was him."
Sans-Cravate stopped in front of the house, and finally decided to enter the pa.s.sageway, which was rather dark, with no sign of a concierge's quarters. Jean Ficelle followed his comrade, and, after examining the pa.s.sage for a moment, they walked toward a dark, winding staircase at the rear.
"Shall we go up?" said Jean Ficelle.
"Where shall we go? Who shall we ask for?"
"_Dame!_ I don't know. But we can act as if we'd made a mistake. We'll ask for a midwife for a woman who's in a great hurry for one. How's that for a game! Or we can ask if Monsieur Paul, ex-messenger, lives in the house."
"No, no!" cried Sans-Cravate, going back into the street. "After all, Paul was right when he said we ought not to play the spy on him, that he's free to do what he pleases. I have a feeling that it's a mean business to try to find out people's secrets. I don't like the job at all. Let's go."
Jean Ficelle said no more, but followed his comrade, in evident ill humor, turning his head every minute to look at the house they had just left. Suddenly he seized Sans-Cravate, who was a little ahead of him, by the arm, and exclaimed in a shrill voice:
"Look! there you have Paul's secret--coming out of that pa.s.sageway. Ah!