Scenes from a Courtesan's Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 719 pages of information about Scenes from a Courtesan's Life.

Scenes from a Courtesan's Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 719 pages of information about Scenes from a Courtesan's Life.

“To be sure; they live there all the year round.”

“It is now five o’clock.  We shall still find them up at nine.”

“Oh yes, till ten.  They have company every evening—­the cure, Monsieur Marron the doctor——­”

“Good folks then?” said Derville.

“Oh, the best of good souls,” replied the woman, “straight-forward, honest—­and not ambitious neither.  Monsieur Sechard, though he is very well off—­they say he might have made millions if he had not allowed himself to be robbed of an invention in the paper-making of which the brothers Cointet are getting the benefit——­”

“Ah, to be sure, the Brothers Cointet!” said Corentin.

“Hold your tongue,” said the innkeeper.  “What can it matter to these gentlemen whether Monsieur Sechard has a right or no to a patent for his inventions in paper-making?—­If you mean to spend the night here —­at the Belle Etoile——­” he went on, addressing the travelers, “here is the book, and please to put your names down.  We have an officer in this town who has nothing to do, and spends all his time in nagging at us——­”

“The devil!” said Corentin, while Derville entered their names and his profession as attorney to the lower Court in the department of the Seine, “I fancied the Sechards were very rich.”

“Some people say they are millionaires,” replied the innkeeper.  “But as to hindering tongues from wagging, you might as well try to stop the river from flowing.  Old Sechard left two hundred thousand francs’ worth of landed property, it is said; and that is not amiss for a man who began as a workman.  Well, and he may have had as much again in savings, for he made ten or twelve thousand francs out of his land at last.  So, supposing he were fool enough not to invest his money for ten years, that would be all told.  But even if he lent it at high interest, as he is suspected of doing there would be three hundred thousand francs perhaps, and that is all.  Five hundred thousand francs is a long way short of a million.  I should be quite content with the difference, and no more of the Belle Etoile for me!”

“Really!” said Corentin.  “Then Monsieur David Sechard and his wife have not a fortune of two or three millions?”

“Why,” exclaimed the innkeeper’s wife, “that is what the Cointets are supposed to have, who robbed him of his invention, and he does not get more than twenty thousand francs out of them.  Where do you suppose such honest folks would find millions?  They were very much pinched while the father was alive.  But for Kolb, their manager, and Madame Kolb, who is as much attached to them as her husband, they could scarcely have lived.  Why, how much had they with La Verberie!—­A thousand francs a year perhaps.”

Corentin drew Derville aside and said: 

“In vino veritas!  Truth lives under a cork.  For my part, I regard an inn as the real registry office of the countryside; the notary is not better informed than the innkeeper as to all that goes on in a small neighborhood.—­You see! we are supposed to know all about the Cointets and Kolb and the rest.

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Scenes from a Courtesan's Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.