Part 17 (2/2)
Morin returned to his shoes, grieving over his long separation from Adele.
”All that was our own affair,” he said. ”What business was it of the judge's?”
And many shared his opinion. A lot of noise about a ”joke!” Adele was too good hearted a girl to have aroused any deep hatreds. As long as Morin defended her, why should others hurl obloquy? Husbands looking at their wives, and wives at their husbands, mostly refrained from comment.
Morin, furthermore, sure, now, of his wife's fidelity for at least two years, poured himself out in eulogies of the great Adele, and declared that he had often been in the wrong.
”To whom did she ever do any harm?” he would ask everyone that came along.
”Not to me!” ”Not to me!” all would answer.
The man had received the gift of a lofty philosophy or rather, he had a dim feeling that from all this ”fuss” a great good might result from his wife and for himself.
”When she comes back,” he would say, ”it will not be as it was before.”
”Surely,” replied the others, ”a little bad luck gives one a lot of sense!”
”Two years, that is not so much,” answered Morin, who was counting the days.
Meanwhile Adele was silently sewing s.h.i.+rts, and vaguely dreaming. It would never have occurred to her to complain. She even found a certain contentment in this quiet after the agitations of her youth. She tranquilly awaited the release which would take her back to her friendly village, and to that good Morin who loved her, and whom she loved, too, in spite of all ”the judges had done to cross them,” as she said after her trial. From the very first day, Morin placed to the account of the prisoner all the money permitted by the regulations. But she rarely touched it, and when, on his visits, he urged her to spend it:
”I need nothing,” she would say. ”Keep it for yourself, my man. You must not be ailing when I come out of jail.”
And this allusion to the past made them both laugh in great good humour.
Finally the day of liberation came. Morin, as you would know, was on the spot to fetch his wife. They flew to each other's arms, laughing aloud, for lack of words to express their joy. It was Sunday. Adele and her husband reached home just as ma.s.s was over. In a twinkling they were surrounded by the crowd, and acclaimed like conquerors. There was mutual embracing and shedding of happy tears, and asking of a thousand absurd questions from sheer need to talk and show how glad they were to see one another again. Upon arrival at her house Adele found the table spread; at this, twenty guests sat down to celebrate her return with proper ceremony. A grand feast, which lasted until daylight. At dessert, friends came in, and merest acquaintances, too, swept along by the current of universal sympathy. Bottle after bottle was emptied. There was a great clinking of gla.s.ses. The women kissed Morin, and the men Adele. Never in their lives was there a more wonderful day.
And yet, from that time forward, good days followed one another without break. Adele remained gay, easy, and approachable, quick in the uptake of broad jests, but Morin had her heart, and never was word or deed charged to her account which could have given umbrage to the most suspicious husband. Her spouse, proud of his conquest, tasted the joys of a well-earned happiness.
They were during forty years the model of a perfect match. How many of the people around them, with an irreproachable past, could boast an advantage so rare?
XXII
A WELL-a.s.sORTED COUPLE
They were not good. They were not bad. They had neither virtues nor faults of their own from never having done or said anything except in conformity with what others were doing or saying. Never had it entered their minds to desire anything on their own initiative. Nothing had ever made them reflect upon themselves, and take a decision according to an idea, whether good or bad, that was the result of their own individuality rather than ”established opinions.”
He had been born into the cork business. She had seen the light of day in the Elbeuf cloth trade. The arrest of a lawyer, unable to return several millions to the people whom he had deprived of them, united their parents in a common expression of indignation against impecunious embezzlers. In court, under the eyes of the Christ who bids us forgive, and amidst the encouragements of avenging law, cork and wool came together to destroy the unfortunate lawyer whose activities were proclaimed criminal because lacking the success which would have made his reputation for integrity. The cork merchant and the cloth merchant, both of them noisy about their small losses, conceived a ”high” mutual ”esteem,” which subsequent acquaintance converted into ”friends.h.i.+p.”
The heir to corks was twenty-three years old.
”A good sort of boy,” said his father.
He was, as a matter of fact, soft, flabby, and spiritless.
The cloth heiress had just completed her twentieth year.
”The sweetest child!” bleated her mother.
<script>