|
III
The head of the Guillaume family was
a notable upholder of ancient
practices; he might be heard to
regret the Provost of Merchants, and
never did he mention a decision of
the Tribunal of Commerce without
calling it the /Sentence of the
Consuls/. Up and dressed the first of
the household, in obedience, no
doubt, to these old customs, he stood
sternly awaiting the appearance of
his three assistants, ready to
scold them in case they were late.
These young disciples of Mercury
knew nothing more terrible than the
wordless assiduity with which the
master scrutinized their faces and
their movements on Monday in search
of evidence or traces of their
pranks. But at this moment the old
clothier paid no heed to his
apprentices; he was absorbed in trying to
divine the motive of the anxious
looks which the young man in silk
stockings and a cloak cast alternately
at his signboard and into the
depths of his shop. The daylight was
now brighter, and enabled the
stranger to discern the cashier's
corner enclosed by a railing and
screened by old green silk curtains,
where were kept the immense
ledgers, the silent oracles of the
house. The too inquisitive gazer
seemed to covet this little nook,
and to be taking the plan of a
dining-room at one side, lighted by
a skylight, whence the family at
meals could easily see the smallest
incident that might occur at the
shop-door. So much affection for his
dwelling seemed suspicious to a
trader who had lived long enough to
remember the law of maximum
prices; Monsieur Guillaume naturally
thought that this sinister
personage had an eye to the till of
the Cat and Racket. After quietly
observing the mute duel which was
going on between his master and the
stranger, the eldest of the
apprentices, having seen that the young
man was stealthily watching the
windows of the third floor, ventured
to place himself on the stone flag
where Monsieur Guillaume was
standing. He took two steps out into
the street, raised his head, and
fancied that he caught sight of
Mademoiselle Augustine Guillaume in
hasty retreat. The draper, annoyed
by his assistant's perspicacity,
shot a side glance at him; but the
draper and his amorous apprentice
were suddenly relieved from the
fears which the young man's presence
had excited in their minds. He
hailed a hackney cab on its way to a
neighboring stand, and jumped into
it with an air of affected
indifference. This departure was a
balm to the hearts of the other two
lads, who had been somewhat uneasy
as to meeting the victim of their
practical joke.
"Well, gentlemen, what ails you
that you are standing there with your
arms folded?" said Monsieur
Guillaume to his three neophytes. "In
former days, bless you, when I was
in Master Chevrel's service, I
should have overhauled more than two
pieces of cloth by this time."
"Then it was daylight
earlier," said the second assistant, whose duty
this was.
The old shopkeeper could not help
smiling. Though two of these young
fellows, who were confided to his
care by their fathers, rich
manufacturers at Louviers and at Sedan, had only to ask
and to have a
hundred thousand francs the day when
they were old enough to settle in
life, Guillaume regarded it as his
duty to keep them under the rod of
an old-world despotism, unknown
nowadays in the showy modern shops,
where the apprentices expect to be
rich men at thirty. He made them
work like Negroes. These three assistants
were equal to a business
which would harry ten such clerks as
those whose sybaritical tastes
now swell the columns of the budget.
Not a sound disturbed the peace
of this solemn house, where the
hinges were always oiled, and where
the meanest article of furniture
showed the respectable cleanliness
which reveals strict order and
economy. The most waggish of the three
youths often amused himself by
writing the date of its first
appearance on the Gruyere cheese
which was left to their tender
mercies at breakfast, and which it
was their pleasure to leave
untouched. This bit of mischief, and
a few others of the same stamp,
would sometimes bring a smile on the
face of the younger of
Guillaume's daughters, the pretty
maiden who has just now appeared to
the bewitched man in the street.
Though each of these apprentices,
even the eldest, paid a round sum
for his board, not one of them would
have been bold enough to remain
at the master's table when dessert
was served. When Madame Guillaume
talked of dressing the salad, the
hapless youths trembled as they
thought of the thrift with which her
prudent hand dispensed the oil.
They could never think of spending a
night away from the house without
having given, long before, a
plausible reason for such an
irregularity. Every Sunday, each in
his turn, two of them accompanied
the Guillaume family to Mass at
Saint-Leu, and to vespers.
Mesdemoiselles Virginie and
Augustine, simply attired in cotton print,
each took the arm of an apprentice
and walked in front, under the
piercing eye of their mother, who
closed the little family procession
with her husband, accustomed by her
to carry two large prayer-books,
bound in black morocco. The second
apprentice received no salary. As
for the eldest, whose twelve years
of perseverance and discretion had
initiated him into the secrets of
the house, he was paid eight hundred
francs a year as the reward of his
labors. On certain family festivals
he received as a gratuity some
little gift, to which Madame
Guillaume's dry and wrinkled hand
alone gave value--netted purses,
which she took care to stuff with
cotton wool, to show off the fancy
stitches, braces of the strongest
make, or heavy silk stockings.
Sometimes, but rarely, this prime
minister was admitted to share the
pleasures of the family when they
went into the country, or when,
after waiting for months, they made
up their mind to exert the right
acquired by taking a box at the
theatre to command a piece which Paris
had already forgotten.
|