登陆注册
38611000000024

第24章 CHAPTER IV(3)

Gloomy silence reigned for a short time. The day went by with cruel alternations of hope and fear; all three ran to the window at the least sound, and gave way to every sort of conjecture. While the family were thus grieving, Philippe was quietly getting matters in order at his office. He had the audacity to give in his accounts with a statement that, fearing some accident, he had retained eleven hundred francs at his own house for safe keeping. The scoundrel left the office at five o'clock, taking five hundred francs more from the desk, and coolly went to a gambling-house, which he had not entered since his connection with the paper, for he knew very well that a cashier must not be seen to frequent such a place. The fellow was not wanting in acumen. His past conduct proved that he derived more from his grandfather Rouget than from his virtuous sire, Bridau. Perhaps he might have made a good general; but in private life, he was one of those utter scoundrels who shelter their schemes and their evil actions behind a screen of strict legality, and the privacy of the family roof.

At this conjuncture Philippe maintained his coolness. He won at first, and gained as much as six thousand francs; but he let himself be dazzled by the idea of getting out of his difficulties at one stroke.

He left the trente-et-quarante, hearing that the black had come up sixteen times at the roulette table, and was about to put five thousand francs on the red, when the black came up for the seventeenth time. The colonel then put a thousand francs on the black and won. In spite of this remarkable piece of luck, his head grew weary; he felt it, though he continued to play. But that divining sense which leads a gambler, and which comes in flashes, was already failing him.

Intermittent perceptions, so fatal to all gamblers, set in. Lucidity of mind, like the rays of the sun, can have no effect except by the continuity of a direct line; it can divine only on condition of not breaking that line; the curvettings of chance bemuddle it. Philippe lost all. After such a strain, the careless mind as well as the bravest weakens. When Philippe went home that night he was not thinking of suicide, for he had never really meant to kill himself; he no longer thought of his lost place, nor of the sacrificed security, nor of his mother, nor of Mariette, the cause of his ruin; he walked along mechanically. When he got home, his mother in tears, Madame Descoings, and Joseph, all fell on his neck and kissed him and brought him joyfully to a seat by the fire.

"Bless me!" thought he, "the threat has worked."

The brute at once assumed an air suitable to the occasion; all the more easily, because his ill-luck at cards had deeply depressed him.

Seeing her atrocious Benjamin so pale and woe-begone, the poor mother knelt beside him, kissed his hands, pressed them to her heart, and gazed at him for a long time with eyes swimming in tears.

"Philippe," she said, in a choking voice, "promise not to kill yourself, and all shall be forgotten."

Philippe looked at his sorrowing brother and at Madame Descoings, whose eyes were full of tears, and thought to himself, "They are good creatures." Then he took his mother in his arms, raised her and put her on his knee, pressed her to his heart and whispered as he kissed her, "For the second time, you give me life."

The Descoings managed to serve an excellent dinner, and to add two bottles of old wine with a little "liqueur des iles," a treasure left over from her former business.

"Agathe," she said at dessert, "we must let him smoke his cigars," and she offered some to Philippe.

These two poor creatures fancied that if they let the fellow take his ease, he would like his home and stay in it; both, therefore, tried to endure his tobacco-smoke, though each loathed it. That sacrifice was not so much as noticed by Philippe.

On the morrow, Agathe looked ten years older. Her terrors calmed, reflection came back to her, and the poor woman had not closed an eye throughout that horrible night. She was now reduced to six hundred francs a year. Madame Descoings, like all fat women fond of good eating, was growing heavy; her step on the staircase sounded like the chopping of logs; she might die at any moment; with her life, four thousand francs would disappear. What folly to rely on that resource!

What should she do? What would become of them? With her mind made up to become a sick-nurse rather than be supported by her children, Agathe did not think of herself. But Philippe? what would he do if reduced to live on the five hundred francs of an officer of the Legion of honor? During the past eleven years, Madame Descoings, by giving up three thousand francs a year, had paid her debt twice over, but she still continued to sacrifice her grandson's interests to those of the Bridau family. Though all Agathe's honorable and upright feelings were shocked by this terrible disaster, she said to herself: "Poor boy! is it his fault? He is faithful to his oath. I have done wrong not to marry him. If I had found him a wife, he would not have got entangled with this danseuse. He has such a vigorous constitution--"

Madame Descoings had likewise reflected during the night as to the best way of saving the honor of the family. At daybreak, she got out of bed and went to her friend's room.

"Neither you nor Philippe should manage this delicate matter," she urged. "Our two old friends Du Bruel and Claparon are dead, but we still have Desroches, who is very sagacious. I'll go and see him this morning. He can tell the newspaper people that Philippe trusted a friend and has been made a victim; that his weakness in such respects makes him unfit to be a cashier; what has now happened may happen again, and that Philippe prefers to resign. That will prevent his being turned off."

Agathe, seeing that this business lie would save the honor of her son, at any rate in the eyes of strangers, kissed Madame Descoings, who went out early to make an end of the dreadful affair.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 那年花开六月天

    那年花开六月天

    她是世界赛车冠军,我是农家赤脚医生!那年花开月正圆,我和她相遇!
  • 穿越农女忙开荒

    穿越农女忙开荒

    一觉醒来,魂穿古代一孤女,还没弄清情况就被算计着,被迫上演一场密室逃脱。某书灵:“不就是开个锁吗?有聪明可爱无所不知的惜少白在,小菜一碟。”然后的然后……某书灵脸憋的通红,说好的变钥匙开锁呢!怎么就成卡锁眼里出不来了?刚出来,天上掉下一怪男,威胁她不让走,宁看木头不瞅她这个俏佳人一眼。百般搭讪视若无睹。直到某一天她发现,这个男子怎么赶也赶不走呢!亡父留下一价值千金,名曰南山的地契,说好的千亩良田呢?什么叫南山那座荒山?一座荒山,一个不靠谱的书灵,一个甩不掉的男子……看她如何逆风翻盘。——————————入坑请放心,完本有保证。
  • 温咖啡的青青

    温咖啡的青青

    冷纪跟云颜研的两个时代的人,之间摩擦火花,演绎的爱恋,到最后她走了,留下我一个人独自尝寂寞。男主的回忆在他心里那个一直直默默忘不掉的她,他们在一起的时间虽然不久,男主已经被她灵魂勾引,没有了她的生活简直就是行尸走肉。
  • 豪门通缉令:帝少强宠妻

    豪门通缉令:帝少强宠妻

    一场婚礼把他们绑在了一起,他恨她,却偏偏把她宠得无法无天。三年的婚姻她早已沦陷,却不曾想到头来这只是一场骗局……“少爷,少奶奶把您送的戒指扔了……”“再买新的给她送去。”容少爷不为所动,不就是戒指吗?她想扔就扔!“少爷,少奶奶打伤了表小姐……”“她高兴就行。”“少爷,少奶奶…逃了……”“…追!”有人说,许艺笙是容锦的劫。他淡笑,许艺笙是他的命啊。
  • 时空之空间崛起

    时空之空间崛起

    日月从不曾因迷茫而停下轮转,时空从不曾为悔恨而驻足不前,爱恨情仇酸甜苦辣,好一句求而不得。只待他停下脚步,蓦然回首,唯有那沧海桑田,梦幻空花。
  • 青春异能轨迹

    青春异能轨迹

    本文非小白,纯爱文。本是饱受冷眼的吊车尾的平凡少年,在这个学历与金钱至上的物质社会无疑预示了惨淡命运,却在一次机缘巧合下,发掘了自身潜能,在这个物欲横流的世界里,他又能划出怎样的轨迹呢?这是一个吊车尾少年,在风雨中洗礼,与残酷的现实和命运拼搏的励志故事!
  • 我不是渣渣斌

    我不是渣渣斌

    大家好,我叫渣渣斌,我是一名程序员!
  • 未来网游之飚战江湖

    未来网游之飚战江湖

    一个酒店的服务员,第一次进入网游世界,什么都不懂的他却结交了许多朋友,并且赚到人生的第一桶金。登上顶峰的他,却要面临艰难的感情抉择......
  • 不想醒的梦

    不想醒的梦

    青春,生命里最美好的东西,初恋,青春里最美好的东西,小说,纪念青春和初恋最美好的东西。
  • 神霄九天

    神霄九天

    道可道,非常道。名可名,非常名。无名天地之始﹔有名万物之母。故常无,欲以观其妙﹔常有,欲以观其徼。此两者,同出而异名,同谓之玄。玄之又玄,众妙之门。天地孕育三千大道,给予万灵一线长生不死之契机。可是千万亿年以来,得道之人却都无故失踪,这其中难道有什么玄机。且看叶寒怎么一步一步的解开这千古之谜。