The Count of Monte Cristo (The Wild and Wanton Edition) Read online

Page 2


  “Ah, M. Morrel,” exclaimed the young seaman, with tears in his eyes, and grasping the owner’s hand, “M. Morrel, I thank you in the name of my father and of Mercedes.”

  “That’s all right, Edmond. There’s a providence that watches over the deserving. Go to your father: go and see Mercedes, and afterwards come to me.”

  “Shall I row you ashore?”

  “No, thank you; I shall remain and look over the accounts with Danglars. Have you been satisfied with him this voyage?”

  “That is according to the sense you attach to the question, sir. Do you mean is he a good comrade? No, for I think he never liked me since the day when I was silly enough, after a little quarrel we had, to propose to him to stop for ten minutes at the island of Monte Cristo to settle the dispute — a proposition which I was wrong to suggest, and he quite right to refuse. If you mean as responsible agent when you ask me the question, I believe there is nothing to say against him, and that you will be content with the way in which he has performed his duty.”

  “But tell me, Dantes, if you had command of the Pharaon should you be glad to see Danglars remain?”

  “Captain or mate, M. Morrel, I shall always have the greatest respect for those who possess the owners’ confidence.”

  “That’s right, that’s right, Dantes! I see you are a thoroughly good fellow, and will detain you no longer. Go, for I see how impatient you are.”

  “Then I have leave?”

  “Go, I tell you.”

  “May I have the use of your skiff?”

  “Certainly.”

  “Then, for the present, M. Morrel, farewell, and a thousand thanks!”

  “I hope soon to see you again, my dear Edmond. Good luck to you.”

  The young sailor jumped into the skiff, and sat down in the stern sheets, with the order that he be put ashore at La Canebiere. The two oarsmen bent to their work, and the little boat glided away as rapidly as possible in the midst of the thousand vessels which choke up the narrow way which leads between the two rows of ships from the mouth of the harbor to the Quai d’Orleans.

  The ship-owner, smiling, followed him with his eyes until he saw him spring out on the quay and disappear in the midst of the throng, which from five o’clock in the morning until nine o’clock at night, swarms in the famous street of La Canebiere, — a street of which the modern Phocaeans are so proud that they say with all the gravity in the world, and with that accent which gives so much character to what is said, “If Paris had La Canebiere, Paris would be a second Marseilles.” On turning round the owner saw Danglars behind him, apparently awaiting orders, but in reality also watching the young sailor, — but there was a great difference in the expression of the two men who thus followed the movements of Edmond Dantes.

  Chapter 2. Father and Son.

  We will leave Danglars struggling with the demon of hatred, and endeavoring to insinuate in the ear of the ship-owner some evil suspicions against his comrade, and follow Dantes, who, after having traversed La Canebiere, took the Rue de Noailles, and entering a small house, on the left of the Allees de Meillan, rapidly ascended four flights of a dark staircase, holding the baluster with one hand, while with the other he repressed the beatings of his heart, and paused before a half-open door, from which he could see the whole of a small room.

  This room was occupied by Dantes’ father. The news of the arrival of the Pharaon had not yet reached the old man, who, mounted on a chair, was amusing himself by training with trembling hand the nasturtiums and sprays of clematis that clambered over the trellis at his window. Suddenly, he felt an arm thrown around his body, and a well-known voice behind him exclaimed, “Father — dear father!”

  The old man uttered a cry, and turned round; then, seeing his son, he fell into his arms, pale and trembling.

  “What ails you, my dearest father? Are you ill?” inquired the young man, much alarmed.

  “No, no, my dear Edmond — my boy — my son! — no; but I did not expect you; and joy, the surprise of seeing you so suddenly — Ah, I feel as if I were going to die.”

  “Come, come, cheer up, my dear father! ’Tis I — really I! They say joy never hurts, and so I came to you without any warning. Come now, do smile, instead of looking at me so solemnly. Here I am back again, and we are going to be happy.”

  “Yes, yes, my boy, so we will — so we will,” replied the old man; “but how shall we be happy? Shall you never leave me again? Come, tell me all the good fortune that has befallen you.”

  “God forgive me,” said the young man, “for rejoicing at happiness derived from the misery of others, but, Heaven knows, I did not seek this good fortune; it has happened, and I really cannot pretend to lament it. The good Captain Leclere is dead, father, and it is probable that, with the aid of M. Morrel, I shall have his place. Do you understand, Father? Only imagine me a captain at twenty, with a hundred louis pay, and a share in the profits! Is this not more than a poor sailor like me could have hoped for?”

  “Yes, my dear boy,” replied the old man, “it is very fortunate.”

  “Well, then, with the first money I touch, I mean you to have a small house, with a garden in which to plant clematis, nasturtiums, and honeysuckle. But what ails you, Father? Are you not well?”

  “’Tis nothing, nothing; it will soon pass away” — and as he said so the old man’s strength failed him, and he fell backwards.

  “Come, come,” said the young man, “a glass of wine, Father, will revive you. Where do you keep your wine?”

  “No, no; thanks. You need not look for it; I do not want it,” said the old man.

  “Yes, yes, Father, tell me where it is,” and he opened two or three cupboards.

  “It is no use,” said the old man, “there is no wine.”

  “What, no wine?” said Dantes, turning pale, and looking alternately at the hollow cheeks of the old man and the empty cupboards. “What, no wine? Have you wanted money, Father?”

  “I want nothing now that I have you,” said the old man.

  “Yet,” stammered Dantes, wiping the perspiration from his brow, — “yet I gave you two hundred francs when I left, three months ago.”

  “Yes, yes, Edmond, that is true, but you forgot at that time a little debt to our neighbor, Caderousse. He reminded me of it, telling me if I did not pay for you, he would be paid by M. Morrel; and so, you see, lest he might do you an injury” —

  “Well?”

  “Why, I paid him.”

  “But,” cried Dantes, “it was a hundred and forty francs I owed Caderousse.”

  “Yes,” stammered the old man.

  “And you paid him out of the two hundred francs I left you?”

  The old man nodded.

  “So that you have lived for three months on sixty francs,” muttered Edmond.

  “You know how little I require,” said the old man.

  “Heaven pardon me,” cried Edmond, falling on his knees before his father.

  “What are you doing?”

  “You have wounded me to the heart.”

  “Never mind it, for I see you once more,” said the old man; “and now it’s all over — everything is all right again.”

  “Yes, here I am,” said the young man, “with a promising future and a little money. Here, Father, here!” he said, “take this — take it, and send for something immediately.” And he emptied his pockets on the table, the contents consisting of a dozen gold pieces, five or six five-franc pieces, and some smaller coin. The countenance of old Dantes brightened.

  “Whom does this belong to?” he inquired.

  “To me, to you, to us! Take it; buy some provisions; be happy, and to-morrow we shall have more.”

  “Gently, gently,” said the old man, with a smile; “and by your leave I will use your purse moderately, for they would say, if they saw me buy too many things at a time, that I had been obliged to await your return, in order to be able to purchase them.”

  “Do as you please; but, first of all, pray have
a servant, Father. I will not have you left alone so long. I have some smuggled coffee and most capital tobacco, in a small chest in the hold, which you shall have to-morrow. But, hush, here comes somebody.”

  “’Tis Caderousse, who has heard of your arrival and no doubt, comes to congratulate you on your fortunate return.”

  “Ah, lips that say one thing, while the heart thinks another,” murmured Edmond. “But, never mind, he is a neighbor who has done us a service on a time, so he’s welcome.”

  As Edmond paused, the black and bearded head of Caderousse appeared at the door. He was a man of twenty-five or -six, and held a piece of cloth, which, being a tailor, he was about to make into a coat-lining.

  “What, is it you, Edmond, back again?” said he, with a broad Marseillaise accent, and a grin that displayed his ivory-white teeth.

  “Yes, as you see, neighbor Caderousse; and ready to be agreeable to you in any and every way,” replied Dantes, but ill-concealing his coldness under this cloak of civility.

  “Thanks — thanks; but, fortunately, I do not want for anything; and it chances that at times there are others who have need of me.” Dantes made a gesture. “I do not allude to you, my boy. No! — no! I lent you money, and you returned it; that’s like good neighbors, and we are quits.”

  “We are never quits with those who oblige us,” was Dantes’ reply; “for when we do not owe them money, we owe them gratitude.”

  “What’s the use of mentioning that? What is done is done. Let us talk of your happy return, my boy. I had gone on the quay to match a piece of mulberry cloth, when I met friend Danglars. ‘You at Marseilles?’ — ‘Yes,’ says he.

  “‘I thought you were at Smyrna.’ — ‘I was; but am now back again.’

  “‘And where is the dear boy, our little Edmond?’

  “‘Why, with his father, no doubt,’ replied Danglars. And so I came,” added Caderousse, “as fast as I could to have the pleasure of shaking hands with a friend.”

  “Worthy Caderousse!” said the old man, “he is so much attached to us.”

  “Yes, to be sure I am. I love and esteem you, because honest folks are so rare. But it seems you have come back rich, my boy,” continued the tailor, looking askance at the handful of gold and silver which Dantes had thrown on the table.

  The young man remarked the greedy glance which shone in the dark eyes of his neighbor. “Eh,” he said, negligently, “this money is not mine. I was expressing to my father my fears that he had wanted many things in my absence, and to convince me he emptied his purse on the table. Come, Father,” added Dantes, “put this money back in your box — unless neighbor Caderousse wants anything, and in that case it is at his service.”

  “No, my boy, no,” said Caderousse. “I am not in any want, thank God, my living is suited to my means. Keep your money — keep it, I say; — one never has too much; — but, at the same time, my boy, I am as much obliged by your offer as if I took advantage of it.”

  “It was offered with good will,” said Dantes.

  “No doubt, my boy; no doubt. Well, you stand well with M. Morrel I hear, — you insinuating dog, you!”

  “M. Morrel has always been exceedingly kind to me,” replied Dantes.

  “Then you were wrong to refuse to dine with him.”

  “What, did you refuse to dine with him?” said old Dantes; “and did he invite you to dine?”

  “Yes, my dear father,” replied Edmond, smiling at his father’s astonishment at the excessive honor paid to his son.

  “And why did you refuse, my son?” inquired the old man.

  “That I might the sooner see you again, my dear father,” replied the young man. “I was most anxious to see you.”

  “But it must have vexed M. Morrel, good, worthy man,” said Caderousse.

  “And when you are looking forward to be captain, it was wrong to annoy the owner.”

  “But I explained to him the cause of my refusal,” replied Dantes, “and I hope he fully understood it.”

  “Yes, but to be captain one must do a little flattery to one’s patrons.”

  “I hope to be captain without that,” said Dantes.

  “So much the better — so much the better! Nothing will give greater pleasure to all your old friends; and I know one down there behind the Saint Nicolas citadel who will not be sorry to hear it.”

  “Mercedes?” said the old man.

  “Yes, my dear father, and with your permission, now I have seen you, and know you are well and have all you require, I will ask your consent to go and pay a visit to the Catalans.”

  “Go, my dear boy,” said old Dantes: “and heaven bless you in your wife, as it has blessed me in my son!”

  “His wife!” said Caderousse; “why, how fast you go on, father Dantes; she is not his wife yet, as it seems to me.”

  “So, but according to all probability she soon will be,” replied Edmond.

  “Yes — yes,” said Caderousse; “but you were right to return as soon as possible, my boy.”

  “And why?”

  “Because Mercedes is a very fine girl, and fine girls never lack followers; she particularly has them by dozens.”

  “Really?” answered Edmond, with a smile which had in it traces of slight uneasiness.

  “Ah, yes,” continued Caderousse, “and capital offers, too; but you know, you will be captain, and who could refuse you then?”

  “Meaning to say,” replied Dantes, with a smile which but ill-concealed his trouble, “that if I were not a captain” —

  “Eh — eh!” said Caderousse, shaking his head.

  “Come, come,” said the sailor, “I have a better opinion than you of women in general, and of Mercedes in particular; and I am certain that, captain or not, she will remain ever faithful to me.”

  “So much the better — so much the better,” said Caderousse. “When one is going to be married, there is nothing like implicit confidence; but never mind that, my boy, — go and announce your arrival, and let her know all your hopes and prospects.”

  “I will go directly,” was Edmond’s reply; and, embracing his father, and nodding to Caderousse, he left the apartment.

  Caderousse lingered for a moment, then taking leave of old Dantes, he went downstairs to rejoin Danglars, who awaited him at the corner of the Rue Senac.

  “Well,” said Danglars, “did you see him?”

  “I have just left him,” answered Caderousse.

  “Did he allude to his hope of being captain?”

  “He spoke of it as a thing already decided.”

  “Indeed!” said Danglars, “he is in too much hurry, it appears to me.”

  “Why, it seems M. Morrel has promised him the thing.”

  “So that he is quite elated about it?”

  “Why, yes, he is actually insolent over the matter — has already offered me his patronage, as if he were a grand personage, and proffered me a loan of money, as though he were a banker.”

  “Which you refused?”

  “Most assuredly; although I might easily have accepted it, for it was I who put into his hands the first silver he ever earned; but now M. Dantes has no longer any occasion for assistance — he is about to become a captain.”

  “Pooh!” said Danglars, “he is not one yet.”

  “Ma foi, it will be as well if he is not,” answered Caderousse; “for if he should be, there will be really no speaking to him.”

  “If we choose,” replied Danglars, “he will remain what he is; and perhaps become even less than he is.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Nothing — I was speaking to myself. And is he still in love with the Catalane?”

  “Over head and ears; but, unless I am much mistaken, there will be a storm in that quarter.”

  “Explain yourself.”

  “Why should I?”

  “It is more important than you think, perhaps. You do not like Dantes?”

  “I never like upstarts.”

  “Then tell me
all you know about the Catalane.”

  “I know nothing for certain; only I have seen things which induce me to believe, as I told you, that the future captain will find some annoyance in the vicinity of the Vieilles Infirmeries.”

  “What have you seen? — come, tell me!”

  “Well, every time I have seen Mercedes come into the city she has been accompanied by a tall, strapping, black-eyed Catalan, with a red complexion, brown skin, and fierce air, whom she calls cousin.”

  “Really; and you think this cousin pays her attentions?”

  “I only suppose so. What else can a strapping chap of twenty-one mean with a fine wench of seventeen?”

  “And you say that Dantes has gone to the Catalans?”

  “He went before I came down.”

  “Let us go the same way; we will stop at La Reserve, and we can drink a glass of La Malgue, whilst we wait for news.”

  “Come along,” said Caderousse; “but you pay the score.”

  “Of course,” replied Danglars; and going quickly to the designated place, they called for a bottle of wine, and two glasses.

  Pere Pamphile had seen Dantes pass not ten minutes before; and assured that he was at the Catalans, they sat down under the budding foliage of the planes and sycamores, in the branches of which the birds were singing their welcome to one of the first days of spring.

  Chapter 3. The Catalans.

  Beyond a bare, weather-worn wall, about a hundred paces from the spot where the two friends sat looking and listening as they drank their wine, was the village of the Catalans. Long ago this mysterious colony quitted Spain, and settled on the tongue of land on which it is to this day. Whence it came no one knew, and it spoke an unknown tongue. One of its chiefs, who understood Provençal, begged the commune of Marseilles to give them this bare and barren promontory, where, like the sailors of old, they had run their boats ashore. The request was granted; and three months afterwards, around the twelve or fifteen small vessels which had brought these gypsies of the sea, a small village sprang up. This village, constructed in a singular and picturesque manner, half Moorish, half Spanish, still remains, and is inhabited by descendants of the first comers, who speak the language of their fathers. For three or four centuries they have remained upon this small promontory, on which they had settled like a flight of seabirds, without mixing with the Marseillaise population, intermarrying, and preserving their original customs and the costume of their mother-country as they have preserved its language.