The Widow Lerouge eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Widow Lerouge.

The Widow Lerouge eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about The Widow Lerouge.

“Not then,” he answered, “but you will see.  Eight days after, the postman brought a letter, asking her to go to Paris to fetch the child.  It arrived in the evening.  ‘Very well,’ said she, ’I will start to-morrow by the diligence.’  I didn’t say a word then; but next morning, when she was about to take her seat in the diligence, I declared that I was going with her.  She didn’t seem at all angry, on the contrary.  She kissed me, and I was delighted.  At Paris, she was to call for the little one at a Madame Gerdy’s, who lived on the Boulevard.  We arranged that she should go alone, while I awaited for her at our inn.  After she had gone, I grew uneasy.  I went out soon after, and prowled about near Madame Gerdy’s house, making inquiries of the servants and others; I soon discovered that she was the Count de Commarin’s mistress.  I felt so annoyed that, if I had been master, my wife should have come away without the little bastard.  I am only a poor sailor, and I know that a man sometimes forgets himself.  One takes too much to drink, for instance, or goes out on the loose with some friends; but that a man with a wife and children should live with another woman and give her what really belongs to his legitimate offspring, I think is bad—­very bad.  Is it not so, sir?”

The investigating magistrate moved impatiently in his chair.  “Will this man never come to the point,” he muttered.  “Yes, you are perfectly right,” he added aloud; “but never mind your thoughts.  Go on, go on!”

“Claudine, sir, was more obstinate than a mule.  After three days of violent discussion, she obtained from me a reluctant consent, between two kisses.  Then she told me that we were not going to return home by the diligence.  The lady, who feared the fatigue of the journey for her child, had arranged that we should travel back by short stages, in her carriage, and drawn by her horses.  For she was kept in grand style.  I was ass enough to be delighted, because it gave me a chance to see the country at my leisure.  We were, therefore, installed with the children, mine and the other, in an elegant carriage, drawn by magnificent animals, and driven by a coachman in livery.  My wife was mad with joy; she kissed me over and over again, and chinked handfuls of gold in my face.  I felt as foolish as an honest husband who finds money in his house which he didn’t earn himself.  Seeing how I felt, Claudine, hoping to pacify me, resolved to tell me the whole truth.  ‘See here,’ she said to me,—­”

Lerouge stopped, and, changing his tone, said, “You understand that it is my wife who is speaking?”

“Yes, yes.  Go on.”

“She said to me, shaking her pocket full of money, ’See here, my man, we shall always have as much of this as ever we may want, and this is why:  The count, who also had a legitimate child at the same time as this bastard, wishes that this one shall bear his name instead of the other; and this can be accomplished, thanks to me.  On the road, we shall meet at the inn, where we are to sleep, M. Germain and the nurse to whom they have entrusted the legitimate son.  We shall be put in the same room, and, during the night, I am to change the little ones, who have been purposely dressed alike.  For this the count gives me eight thousand francs down, and a life annuity of a thousand francs.’”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Widow Lerouge from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.