His Masterpiece eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 520 pages of information about His Masterpiece.

His Masterpiece eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 520 pages of information about His Masterpiece.

They left the restaurant, roamed about the streets, and foundered again in the depths of a cafe, where they philosophised.  They had come by degrees to raking up the memories of their childhood, and this ended by filling their hearts with sadness.  One o’clock in the morning struck when they decided to go home.

However, Sandoz talked of seeing Claude as far as the Rue Tourlaque.  That August night was a superb one, the air was warm, the sky studded with stars.  And as they went the round by way of the Quartier de l’Europe, they passed before the old Cafe Baudequin on the Boulevard des Batignolles.  It had changed hands three times.  It was no longer arranged inside in the same manner as formerly; there were now a couple of billiard tables on the right hand; and several strata of customers had followed each other thither, one covering the other, so that the old frequenters had disappeared like buried nations.  However, curiosity, the emotion they had derived from all the past things they had been raking up together, induced them to cross the boulevard and to glance into the cafe through the open doorway.  They wanted to see their table of yore, on the left hand, right at the back of the room.

‘Oh, look!’ said Sandoz, stupefied.

‘Gagniere!’ muttered Claude.

It was indeed Gagniere, seated all alone at that table at the end of the empty cafe.  He must have come from Melun for one of the Sunday concerts to which he treated himself; and then, in the evening, while astray in Paris, an old habit of his legs had led him to the Cafe Baudequin.  Not one of the comrades ever set foot there now, and he, who had beheld another age, obstinately remained there alone.  He had not yet touched his glass of beer; he was looking at it, so absorbed in thought that he did not even stir when the waiters began piling the chairs on the tables, in order that everything might be ready for the morrow’s sweeping.

The two friends hurried off, upset by the sight of that dim figure, seized as it were with a childish fear of ghosts.  They parted in the Rue Tourlaque.

‘Ah! that poor devil Dubuche!’ said Sandoz as he pressed Claude’s hand, ‘he spoilt our day for us.’

As soon as November had come round, and when all the old friends were back in Paris again, Sandoz thought of gathering them together at one of those Thursday dinners which had remained a habit with him.  They were always his greatest delight.  The sale of his books was increasing, and he was growing rich; the flat in the Rue de Londres was becoming quite luxurious compared with the little house at Batignolles; but he himself remained immutable.  On this occasion, he was anxious, in his good nature, to procure real enjoyment for Claude by organising one of the dear evenings of their youth.  So he saw to the invitations; Claude and Christine naturally must come; next Jory and his wife, the latter of whom it had been necessary to receive since her marriage, then Dubuche, who always came alone, with Fagerolles, Mahoudeau, and finally Gagniere.  There would be ten of them—­all the men comrades of the old band, without a single outsider, in order that the good understanding and jollity might be complete.

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Project Gutenberg
His Masterpiece from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.