In 1827, Charles returned to Bordeaux with 1,900,000 francs in gold dust. On board the ship he became very intimate with the d’Aubrions, an old aristocratic but impoverished family. Mme. d’Aubrion was anxious to secure Charles Grandet for her only daughter, and they all travelled to Paris together. Mme. d’Aubrion pointed out to Grandet that her influence would get him a court appointment, with title of Comte d’Aubrion; and Annette, with whom Grandet took counsel, approved the alliance.
Des Grassins, hearing of the wanderer’s return, called, and, anxious to get some remuneration for all the trouble he had taken, explained that 300,000 francs were still owing to his father’s creditors. But Charles Grandet answered coolly that he had nothing to do with his father’s debts.
Des Grassins, however, wrote to his wife that he would yet make the dead Guillaume Grandet a bankrupt, and that would stop the marriage, and Mme. des Grassins showed the letter to Eugenie.
Eugenie had already heard from her cousin. Charles Grandet sent a cheque for 8,000 francs, asked for the return of his dressing-case, and casually mentioned that he was going to make a brilliant marriage with Mlle. d’Aubrion, for whom he admitted he had not the slightest affection.
This was the shipwreck of all Eugenie’s hopes—the utter and complete ruin.
“My mother was right,” she said, weeping. “To suffer, and then die—that is our lot!”
That same evening when M. Cruchot de Bonfons, the magistrate, called on Eugenie, she promised to marry him on condition that he claimed none of the rights of marriage over her, and that he would immediately go and settle all her uncle’s creditors in full.
M. de Bonfons, only too thankful to win the heiress of the Grandet millions on any terms, agreed, and set off at once for Paris with a cheque for 1,500,000 francs. He carried a letter from Eugenie to Charles Grandet, a letter that contained no word of reproach, but announced the full discharge of his father’s debts.
Charles was astonished to hear from M. de Bonfons of his forthcoming marriage with Eugenie, and he was dumfounded when the president told him that Mlle. Grandet possessed 17,000,000 francs.
Mme. d’Aubrion interrupted the interview; her husband’s objection to Grandet’s marriage with his daughter was removed with the payment of the long-standing creditors and the restoration of the family honour of the Grandets.
M. de Bonfons, who now dropped the name of Cruchot, married Eugenie, and shortly afterwards was made Councillor to the Court Royal at Angers. His loyalty to the government was rewarded with further office. M. de Bonfons became deputy of Saumur; and then, dreaming of higher honours, perhaps a peerage, he died.
M. de Bonfons always respected his wife’s request that they should live apart; with remarkable cunning he had drafted the marriage contract, in which, “In case there was no issue of the marriage, husband and wife bequeathed to each other all their property, without exception or reservation.” Death disappointed his schemes. Mme. de Bonfons was left a widow three years after marriage, with an income of 800,000 livres.