“Ewans,” said Jean, as he pushed a pebble along one of the lines drawn in charcoal on the stone coping, “Ewans, you must find it tiresome to be a boarder?”
“Mother cannot have me with her at home,” replied the boy.
Servien asked why.
“Oh! Because——” stammered Ewans.
He stared a long time at the white pebble he held in his hand ready to play, before he added:
“My mother goes travelling.”
“And your father?”
“He is in America. I have never seen him. You’ve lost. Let’s begin again.”
Servien, who felt interested in Madame Ewans because of the superb boxes of chocolates she used to bring to school for her boy, put another question:
“You love her very much, your mother I mean?”
“Of course I do!” cried the other, adding presently:
“You must come and see me one day in the holidays at home. You’ll find our house is very pretty, there’s sofas and cushions no end. But you must not put off, for we shall be off to the seaside soon.”
At this moment a servant, a tall, thin man, appeared in the playground and called out something which the shrill cries of their companions at play prevented the two seated on the wall from hearing. A fat boy, standing by himself with his face to the wall with the unconcern born of long familiarity with this form of punishment, clapped his two hands to his mouth trumpetwise and shrieked:
“Ewans, you’re wanted in the parlour.”
The usher marched up:
“Garneret,” he ordered, “you will stand half an hour this evening at preparation speaking when you were forbidden to. Ewans, go to the parlour.”
The latter clapped his hands and danced for joy, telling his friend:
“It’s my mother! I’ll tell her you are coming to our house.”
Servien reddened with pleasure, and stammered out that he would ask his father’s leave. But Ewans had already scampered across the yard, leaving a dusty furrow behind him.
Leave was readily granted by Monsieur Servien, who was fully persuaded that all boys admitted to so expensive a school born of well-to-do parents, whose society could not but prove advantageous to his son’s manners and morals and to his future success in life.
Such information as Jean could give him about Madame Ewans was extremely vague, but the bookbinder was well used to contemplating the ways of rich folks through a veil of impenetrable mystery.
Aunt Servien indulged in sundry observations on the occasion of a very general kind touching people who ride in carriages. Then she repeated a story about a great lady who, just like Madame Ewans, had put her son to boarding-school, and who was mixed up in a case of illicit commissions, in the time of Louis-Philippe.
She added, to clinch the matter, that the cowl does not make the monk, that she thought herself, for all she did not wear flowers in her hat, a more honest woman than your society ladies, false jades everyone, concluding with her pet proverb: Better a good name than a gilt girdle!