"Ah! thanks, bourgeois. _Credie!_ it"s a pleasure to work for you; you"re very free with your cash. I am always at your service--day or night--no matter what time; whenever you need me, I"ll be ready. And if you should be short of the needful, I"d work for you all the same; because, you see, when I once get attached to people, it isn"t just selfishness that makes me work for them--it"s the heart--it"s----"
"All right, my good fellow, thanks! Some day, perhaps, I shall put your zeal to the proof. Go and enjoy yourself. I must return to my friends."
"Oh! yes, we are going to have rather a choice little spree!" cried Sans-Cravate, as he went downstairs four at a time. "Bastringuette will have a chance to let herself go; she"s so fond of good things to eat!
Three cart-wheels to spend: a tricycle! nothing less, by G.o.d!"
While Sans-Cravate left the restaurant, singing at the top of his voice, Albert returned to his place at the table.
"Give me something to drink!" he cried; "champagne! let us play cards and get drunk! I am in the mood now to do whatever you choose."
"It seems that all the replies are favorable," said Mouillot.
"Oh! very favorable!" rejoined Albert; "I make no secret of the fact that there was a woman who was inclined to play the prude with me, and with whom, of course, I was more in love than ever. But I have obtained an a.s.signation--a tete-a-tete, at last."
"Oho! it"s all settled, then."
"An a.s.signation for this evening?" queried Celestin, with an indifferent air.
"No, not until to-morrow. So I can pa.s.s the evening, and the night too, with you. I am entirely at your service."
"So much the better; we will have a hot game."
"I shall win, for I am in a lucky vein."
"That"s not certain; lucky in love doesn"t mean lucky at cards; the proverb says just the opposite."
"For my part, I believe that luck in one brings luck in the other. So look out for yourselves to-night."
"Messieurs," said Dupetrain, with his elbows on the table, and glaring at each of his companions in turn, in order to attract their attention, "I think that the time has come----"
"To put us to sleep?" cried Balivan.
"No; but to tell you about that extraordinary occurrence that I started to tell you a moment ago."
"I say, messieurs," said Mouillot; "we may as well let him tell his story; if we don"t, he won"t give us a moment"s peace this evening.--Go on, Dupetrain; but if it lasts too long, you won"t be allowed to finish it."
"Oh! messieurs, I am sure that the anecdote won"t seem long to you; it"s too interesting for that.--A young woman had a husband, who was travelling----"
"You have already told us that three times."
"This young woman was very desirous to know whether her husband, while he was away from her----"
"A messenger wants to speak to Monsieur Pigeonnier," said the waiter, at the door.
All the young men roared with laughter at the expression of Dupetrain"s face when he was interrupted for the third time at the beginning of his story. But Tobie left the table, saying:
"Excuse me a moment. Don"t go on without me. I am coming right back."
Paul was waiting for Tobie; he seemed very tired, and the perspiration was still streaming from his face. But Monsieur Pigeonnier began by saying to him:
"It has taken you a very long time; you are very late; if I was a messenger, I would move quicker than this."
"It"s not my fault, monsieur," Paul replied. "I went first to the Marche du Temple, to see Madame Agar Abraham."
"Speak lower, messenger, lower! Come to the foot of the stairs; there are too many people pa.s.sing here."
They went downstairs, and Tobie led Paul into the farthest corner of the courtyard.
"Now, go on," he said; "I am listening."
"I handed monsieur"s letter to Madame Abraham."
"Very good; where"s the money she gave you?"
"She gave me no money for monsieur; but after reading the letter, she cried: "My nephew is trying to make a fool of me! does he suppose that I am going to support him in his extravagance? I won"t lend him another sou! not another liard! and if he don"t pay what he owes me---- ""
"All right! all right! that"s enough! Madame Agar was jesting; in the first place, I am not her nephew, but that"s a favorite term of hers that she applies to everybody; she even calls some of her lady customers her nephews. I"ll go and give her a lecture, to teach her not to be so familiar.--Then you went to my concierge, Madame Pluchonneau, who made haste to do what I wanted?"
"She didn"t make any too much haste, monsieur. In the first place, she cried: "If monsieur thinks I like doing such errands as this--carrying his coat to the Mont-de-Piete---- ""
"Hush! hush! not so loud! Those concierges are so infernally insolent.
It"s very warm in my room, the sun shines into it all day; I don"t need to keep my winter clothes through the summer, for the moths to eat; and then, I have so many clothes, I really don"t know where to keep them.
Well?"
"Well, monsieur, your concierge went on with her dinner and didn"t show the slightest zeal."
"I"ll have my landlord discharge her."
"When she had finished her dinner, she went up to your room.--"If monsieur sends to the Mont-de-Piete so often," she said, "I don"t know what he"ll have left to cover his backside.""
"Backside! she didn"t use that word, I trust?"
"I beg your pardon, monsieur; I have repeated exactly what she said."
"She"ll pay dear for that. She shall not do my chamber work any more--I mean, she shan"t help my valet with my cooking. But let us skip these details; they are eating the dessert without me."
"At last, monsieur, your concierge did your errand. She was gone a very long time; that"s why I could not return any sooner, as you told me to wait."
"True."
"She came back in a very ill humor, and gave me this for monsieur."
And Paul handed Tobie two five-franc pieces and one of two francs.
"Twelve francs!" he cried. "What does this mean? twelve francs for a superb silk-lined paletot, with a velvet collar! Messenger, she must have given you more than this."
Paul repressed with difficulty an angry retort, and handed Tobie a slip of paper, saying: