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A Start in Life [52]

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down without noticing anything. Little Husson, who was present,

slipped into a corner, out of sight, so much did the livid face of his

mother's friend alarm him.



"Eh! my friend!" said Estelle, coming into the room, somewhat tired

with what she had been doing. "What is the matter?"



"My dear, we are lost,--lost beyond recovery. I am no longer steward

of Presles, no longer in the count's confidence."



"Why not?"



"Pere Leger, who was in Pierrotin's coach, told the count all about

the affair of Les Moulineaux. But that is not the thing that has cost

me his favor."



"What then?"



"Oscar spoke ill of the countess, and he told about the count's

diseases."



"Oscar!" cried Madame Moreau. "Ah! my dear, your sin has found you

out. It was well worth while to warm that young serpent in your bosom.

How often I have told you--"




"Enough!" said Moreau, in a strained voice.



At this moment Estelle and her husband discovered Oscar cowering in

his corner. Moreau swooped down on the luckless lad like a hawk on its

prey, took him by the collar of the coat and dragged him to the light

of a window. "Speak! what did you say to monseigneur in that coach?

What demon let loose your tongue, you who keep a doltish silence

whenever I speak to you? What did you do it for?" cried the steward,

with frightful violence.



Too bewildered to weep, Oscar was dumb and motionless as a statue.



"Come with me and beg his Excellency's pardon," said Moreau.



"As if his Excellency cares for a little toad like that!" cried the

furious Estelle.



"Come, I say, to the chateau," repeated Moreau.



Oscar dropped like an inert mass to the ground.



"Come!" cried Moreau, his anger increasing at every instant.



"No! no! mercy!" cried Oscar, who could not bring himself to submit to

a torture that seemed to him worse than death.



Moreau then took the lad by his coat, and dragged him, as he might a

dead body, through the yards, which rang with the boy's outcries and

sobs. He pulled him up the portico, and, with an arm that fury made

powerful, he flung him, bellowing, and rigid as a pole, into the

salon, at the very feet of the count, who, having completed the

purchase of Les Moulineaux, was about to leave the salon for the

dining-room with his guests.



"On your knees, wretched boy! and ask pardon of him who gave food to

your mind by obtaining your scholarship."



Oscar, his face to the ground, was foaming with rage, and did not say

a word. The spectators of the scene were shocked. Moreau seemed no

longer in his senses; his face was crimson with injected blood.



"This young man is a mere lump of vanity," said the count, after

waiting a moment for Oscar's excuses. "A proud man humiliates himself

because he sees there is grandeur in a certain self-abasement. I am

afraid that you will never make much of that lad."



So saying, his Excellency passed on. Moreau took Oscar home with him;

and on the way gave orders that the horses should immediately be put

to Madame Moreau's caleche.







CHAPTER VII



A MOTHER'S TRIALS



While the horses were being harnessed, Moreau wrote the following

letter to Madame Clapart:--



My dear,--Oscar has ruined me. During his journey in Pierrotin's

coach, he spoke of Madame de Serizy's behavior to his Excellency,

who was travelling incognito, and actually told, to himself, the

secret of his terrible malady. After dismissing me from my

stewardship, the count told me not to let Oscar sleep at Presles,

but to send him away immediately. Therefore, to obey his orders,

the horses are being harnessed at this moment to my wife's

carriage, and Brochon, my stable-man, will take the miserable

child to you to-night.



We are, my wife and I, in a distress of mind which you may perhaps

imagine, though I cannot describe it to you. I will see you in a

few days, for I
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