登陆注册
15491300000074

第74章 CHAPTER XV THE DIFFICULTIES THAT CROP UP IN THE EA

"Upon my word!" cried the usurer, "is this the way you keep your watch?""I had to go out and buy him wine," replied the Cardinal; "he is howling like a soul in hell that he wants to be at peace, and to be let alone, and get his wine! It is his one idea that Roussillon is good for his disease. Well, when he has drunk it, I dare say he will be quieter.""You are right," said Cerizet, sententiously; "never contradict a sick man. But this wine, you know, ought to be improved; by infusing these"(and lifting one of the covers of the basket he slipped in the poppies) "you'll procure the poor man a good, long sleep,--five or six hours at least. This evening I'll come and see you, and nothing, Ithink, need prevent us from examining a little closer those matters of inheritance.""I see," said Madame Cardinal, winking.

"To-night, then," said Cerizet, not wishing to prolong the conversation.

He had a strong sense of the difficulty and danger of the affair, and was very reluctant to be seen in the street conversing with his accomplice.

Returning to her uncle's garret, Madame Cardinal found him still in a state of semi-torpor; she relieved Madame Perrache, and bade her good-bye, going to the door to receive a supply of wood, all sawed, which she had ordered from the Auvergnat in the rue Ferou.

Into an earthen pot, which she had bought of the right size to fit upon the hole in the stoves of the poor where they put their soup-kettles, she now threw the poppies, pouring over them two-thirds of the wine she had brought back with her. Then she lighted a fire beneath the pot, intending to obtain the decoction agreed upon as quickly as possible. The crackling of the wood and the heat, which soon spread about the room, brought Toupillier out of his stupor.

Seeing the stove lighted he called out:--"Who is making a fire here? Do you want to burn the house down?""Why, uncle," said the Cardinal, "it is wood I bought with my own money, to warm your wine. The doctor doesn't want you to drink it cold.""Where is it, that wine?" demanded Toupillier, calming down a little at the thought that the fire was not burning at his expense.

"It must come to a boil," said his nurse; "the doctor insisted upon that. Still, if you'll be good I'll give you half a glass of it cold, just to wet your whistle. I'll take that upon myself, but don't you tell the doctor.""Doctor! I won't have a doctor; they are all scoundrels, invented to kill people," cried Toupillier, whom the idea of drink had revived.

"Come, give me the wine!" he said, in the tone of a man whose patience had come to an end.

Convinced that though this compliance would do no harm it could do no good, Madame Cardinal poured out half a glass, and while she gave it with one hand to the sick man, with the other she raised him to a sitting posture that he might drink it.

With his fleshless, eager fingers Toupillier clutched the glass, emptied it at a gulp, and exclaimed:--"Ah! that's a fine drop, that is! though you've watered it.""You mustn't say that, uncle; I went and bought it myself of Pere Legrelu, and I've given it you quite pure. But you let me simmer the rest; the doctor said I might then give you all you wanted."Toupillier resigned himself with a shrug of the shoulders. At the end of fifteen minutes, the infusion being in condition to serve, Madame Cardinal brought him, without further appeal, a full cup of it.

The avidity with which the old pauper drank it down prevented him from noticing at first that the wine was drugged; but as he swallowed the last drops he tasted the sickly and nauseating flavor, and flinging the cup on the bed he cried out that some one was trying to poison him.

"Poison! nonsense!" said the fishwife, pouring into her own mouth a few drops of that which remained in the bottle, declaring to the old man that if the wine did not seem to him the same as usual, it was because his mouth had a "bad taste to it."Before the end of the dispute, which lasted some time, the narcotic began to take effect, and at the end of an hour the sick man was sound asleep.

While idly waiting for Cerizet, an idea took possession of the Cardinal's mind. She thought that in view of their comings and goings with the treasure, it would be well if the vigilance of the Perrache husband and wife could be dulled in some manner. Consequently, after carefully flinging the refuse poppy-heads into the privy, she called to the portress:--"Madame Perrache, come up and taste his wine. Wouldn't you have thought to hear him talk he was ready to drink a cask of it? Well, a cupful satisfied him.""Your health!" said the portress, touching glasses with the Cardinal, who was careful to have hers filled with the unboiled wine. Less accomplished as a gourmet than the old beggar, Madame Perrache perceived nothing in the insidious liquid (cold by the time she drank it) to make her suspect its narcotic character; on the contrary, she declared it was "velvet," and wished that her husband were there to have a share in the treat. After a rather long gossip, the two women separated. Then, with the cooked meat she had provided for herself, and the remains of the Roussillon, Madame Cardinal made a repast which she finished off with a siesta. Without mentioning the emotions of the day, the influence of one of the most heady wines of the country would have sufficed to explain the soundness of her sleep; when she woke darkness was coming on.

Her first care was to give a glance at her patient; his sleep was restless, and he was dreaming aloud.

"Diamonds," he said; "those diamonds? At my death, but not before.""Gracious!" thought Madame Cardinal, "that was the one thing lacking, --diamonds! that he should have diamonds!"Then, as Toupillier seemed to be in the grasp of a violent nightmare, she leaned over him so as not to lose a word of his speech, hoping to gather from it some important revelation. At this moment a slight rap given to the door, from which the careful nurse had removed the key, announced the arrival of Cerizet.

"Well?" he said, on entering.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 午夜控妖师

    午夜控妖师

    被遗弃的天才报名参加妖灵高校,因为没有人发现他的天资,所以在高校饱受非人般的折磨,在这段期间里认识了一个又一个的朋友兄弟,你们应该听说过道士、高僧、阴阳人、灵探、风水师、算命先生、招魂师、相师、赶尸人、守陵人等职业,可我哪个都不是,我是一个控妖师!
  • 护美保镖

    护美保镖

    往日特种兵陈羽被关押华夏最严监狱数年,由于接到神秘任务又重现都市,刚着路的他就备受瞩目,为保护美女大小姐,他站在世界之巅,彰显无敌狂龙之名。
  • 特许经营案例集

    特许经营案例集

    本书精选了取具代表性、经营非常成功的、零售、餐饮、服务三大行业的中外十大特许体系进行分析,解析其结构、发展模式、成功所在等。
  • 神奇宝贝之我是妖精只梦琪

    神奇宝贝之我是妖精只梦琪

    我千紫妖精,生于一个有5000年历史的古老世家,我很排斥这个充满神奇宝贝的世界,我性格很孤僻,唯一喜欢的事就是探索与发现,这一次我在研究我身上唯一只神奇宝贝时,不幸被封印与画中,灵魂突然脱离肉体,尝试了几次也无法回去,因是灵魂状态,我无法在继续研究。于是我脑海里酝酿出一个胆大的想法,那就是穿越。我梦琪。出生时被父母抛弃,在孤儿院长大成人,充满仇恨与不甘的我,踏上了艰苦的旅途。10年后我成功了,我现在所坐的地方,是人人都想要得到的位子,天空深蓝一片,犹豫污染,那里已经很多年没有星星的出现了,叹了口气“这个虚情假意的世界我已经受够了!!”“我用神奇宝贝的世界来换你此时厌恶的时空,这个交易你看如何!”“真的!那真是太好了,帮了大忙了!”“从现在开始你就是千紫妖精。。你不在是梦琪。祝你好运,妖精。。”
  • 高达之尘埃

    高达之尘埃

    他不属于这个时代,他是高达的设计人之一,他有一架高达,叫尘埃。
  • 风在海底哭

    风在海底哭

    “妈妈,为什么会有海啸呢?”“因为风在海底哭啊。”“那为什么风要在海底哭呀?”“因为风也有很难过的时候,它只想偷偷地表达出来。”“可是它明明会伤害那么多的人。”“它只是一个任性的孩子而已,并不知道自己会伤害他人。就像你难过的时候一样。所以,茶茶一定要做一个快乐的人好吗?”“好。”她说,但也要很久很久以后,久到她伤害了别人,久到别人伤害了她,才会明白,风在海底哭,海不懂风的难过,却伤害了无辜。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • tfboys之爱恋法则

    tfboys之爱恋法则

    一次在机场的相遇,在最好的时间遇见,在最好的地方表白,克服了重重阻碍和时间的考验,终于有情人终成眷属。
  • 绝世神枪

    绝世神枪

    这是一个充满玄气的世界,从一纸金书开始,主角叶星从废材慢慢变成万众瞩目的强者!强者之路如披荆斩棘,遇神杀神,遇佛杀佛,叶星必然踏上逆天之路!这天再也遮不住他眼,这地再也埋不了他心,就让这九天十地为他独尊!叶星傲然道:“兄弟,女人,实力,老子一样不缺!”
  • 异界亚索传

    异界亚索传

    在他从冰封监狱出来之时,他已经找不到了七十年前世界的任何踪影,他所有熟悉的一切都已经消逝。在这个全民游戏的新世界里,他流着泪改造七十年前的老游戏英雄联盟,想要重振七十年之前的辉煌,可是,无法进行身份辨识的他,却在机器的爆炸声中来到了新世界中盛行的异界游戏世界。只属于一个玩家的英雄联盟,可以买下所有装备与所有符文天赋的亚索,在一步一步的杀戮之中,彻彻底底的变成了那个流荡的剑客,疾风剑豪。在杀戮之中获得经验与金币,一步一步走向最高神坛,亚索说道:“我也觉得杀戮是个恶习,可是我似乎再也戒不掉了.....”
  • 我的老婆是美女杀手

    我的老婆是美女杀手

    一次仇杀黑帮老大中,作为职业杀手的我,意外救得另一名美女杀手,从此,我的爱恨情仇的生活开始了。