<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</SPAN><br/> <span class="chapterhead">MASTER JACQUES.</span></h2>
<p><span class="firstwords">Before</span> the day was over the pair could enter the capital.
The young man's heart beat as he perceived Notre Dame
Cathedral towers and the ocean of housetops.</p>
<p>"Oh, Paris!" he cried with rapture.</p>
<p>"Yes, Paris, a mass of buildings, a gulf of evils," said the
old gentleman. "On each stone yonder you would see a
drop of blood or a tear, if the miseries within those abodes
could show themselves without."</p>
<p>Gilbert repressed his enthusiasm, which cooled of itself.</p>
<p>They entered by a poor district and the sights were hideous.</p>
<p>"It is going on eight," said the conductor, "let us be quick,
young man, for goodness' sake."</p>
<p>Gilbert hurried on.</p>
<p>"I forget to say that I am a married man," said the
stranger, after a cold silence which began to worry the youth.
"And my wife, who is a genuine Parisian, will probably
grumble at our coming home late. Besides, she does not like
strangers. Still, I have invited you; so, come along. Or,
rather, here we are."</p>
<p>By the last sunbeams, Gilbert, looking up, saw the name-plate
of Plastrière Street at a corner.</p>
<SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN>
<p>The other paused before an alley door with iron bars to the
upper portion. He pulled a leather thong hanging out of a
hole, and this opened the door.</p>
<p>"Come quickly," he called to the youth, who hesitated on
the threshold, and he closed the alley door after them.</p>
<p>At the end of a few steps up the dark passage, Gilbert
stumbled on the lower step of a black, steep flight of stairs.
Used to the locality, the old <SPAN name="tn_png_122"></SPAN><!--TN: "gentlemen" changed to "gentleman" on Page 120-->gentleman had gone up a dozen
steps. Gilbert rejoined him and stopped only when he did, on a
landing worn by feet, on which opened two doors. The
stranger pulled a hare's foot hanging at one, and a shrill bell
tinkled inside the room.</p>
<p>A woman some fifty years of age appeared, and she and the
man spoke together:</p>
<p>"Is it very late, Therese?" asked the latter <SPAN name="tn_png_122a"></SPAN><!--TN: Comma changed to a period added after "timidly" on Page 120-->timidly.</p>
<p>"A nice hour to come to supper, Jacques!" snarled the
woman.</p>
<p>"Come, come, we will make up for the delay," said the one
called Jacques, shutting the door and taking the collecting
case from Gilbert's hands.</p>
<p>"Have we a messenger boy here?" exclaimed the old
woman: "We only wanted him to complete the merry company.
So you can no longer do so much as carry your heap
of weeds and grass? Master Jacques does the grand with a
boy to carry his trash—I beg his pardon, he is becoming quite
a great nobleman."</p>
<p>"Be a little quiet, Therese."</p>
<p>"Pay the boy and get rid of him; we want no spies here."</p>
<p>Pale as death, Gilbert sprang toward the door, but Jacques
stopped him, saying with some firmness:</p>
<p>"This is not a messenger-boy or a spy. He is a guest whom
I bring home."</p>
<p>"A guest?" and the hag let her hands drop along her hips.
"This is the last straw."</p>
<p>"Light <SPAN name="tn_png_122b"></SPAN><!--TN: Quote removed after "up," and placed after "Therese," on Page 120-->up, Therese," said the host, still kindly, but showing
more will; "I am warm, and we are hungry."</p>
<p>The vixen's grumbling diminished in loudness. She drew
fire with flint and steel, while Gilbert stood still by the sill
which he regretted he had crossed. Jacques perceived what
he suffered, and begged him to come forward.</p>
<p>Gilbert saw the hag's yellow and morose face by the first
glimmer of the thin candle stuck in a brass candlestick. It
inspired him with dislike. On her part the virago was far
from liking the pale, fine countenance, circumspect silence
and rigidity of the youth.</p>
<p>"I do not wonder at your being heated and hungry," she
growled. "It must be tiresome to go browsing in the woods,
and it is awful hard work to stoop from time to time to pick
up a root. For I suppose this person gathers leaves and buds,<SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN>
too, for herb-collecting is the trade for those who do not any
work."</p>
<p>"This is a good and honest young man," said Jacques, in a
still firmer voice, "who has honored me with his company
all day, and whom my good Therese will greet as a friend, I
am sure."</p>
<p>"Enough for two is scant for three," she grumbled.</p>
<p>"We are both frugal."</p>
<p>"I know your kind of frugality. I declare that there is not
enough bread in the house for such abstemiousness, and that I
am not going down three flights of stairs for more. Anyway,
the baker's is shut up."</p>
<p>"Then, I will go," said Jacques, frowning. "Open the
door, for I mean it."</p>
<p>"Oh, in that case, I suppose I must do it," said the scold.</p>
<p>"What am I for but to carry out your freaks? Come and
have supper."</p>
<p>A table was set in the next room, small and square, with
cherry wood chairs, having straw bottoms, and a bureau full
of darned hose.</p>
<p>Gilbert took a chair; the old woman placed a plate and the
appurtenances, all worn with hard use, before him, with a
pewter goblet.</p>
<p>"I thought you were going after bread?" said Jacques.</p>
<p>"Never mind; I found a roll in the cupboard, and you
ought to manage on a pound and a half of bread, eh?"</p>
<p>So saying, she put the soup on the board. All three had
good appetites, but Gilbert held in his, but he was the first to
get through.</p>
<p>"Who has called to-day?" inquired the host, to change the
termagant's ideas.</p>
<p>"The whole world, as usual. You promised Lady Boufflers
four quires of music, Lady Escars two arias, and Lady Penthievre
a quartet with accompaniment. They came or sent.
But the ladies must go without their music because our lord
was out plucking dandelions."</p>
<p>Jacques did not show anger, though Gilbert expected him to
do so, for he was used to this manner. The soup was followed
by a chunk of boiled beef, on a delft plate grooved with knife
points. The host served Gilbert scantily, as Therese was
watching, took the same sized piece and passed the plate to his
Xantippe.</p>
<p>She handed a slice of bread to the guest. It was so small
that Jacques blushed, but he waited until she had helped him
and herself, when he took the loaf from her. He handed it
to Gilbert and bade him cut off according to his wants.</p>
<p>"Thank you," said Gilbert, as some beans in butter were
served, "but I have no longer any hunger. I never eat but
one dish. And I drink only water."</p>
<SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN>
<p>Jacques had a little wine for himself.</p>
<p>"You must see about the young man's bed," said the latter,
putting down the bottle. "He must be tired."</p>
<p>Therese dropped her fork and stared at the speaker.</p>
<p>"Sleep here? you must be mad. Bring people home to sleep—I
expect you want to give up your own bed to them. You
must be off your head. Is it keeping a lodging-house you are
about? If this is so, don't look to me! get a cook and servants.
It is bad enough to be yours, without waiting on Tom, Dick
and Harry."</p>
<p>"Therese, listen to me," replied Jacques, with his grave,
even voice; "it is for one night only. This young man has
never set foot in Paris, and comes under my safe-conduct. I
am not going to have him go to an inn, though he has to
have my own bed, look you."</p>
<p>Therese understood that struggle was out of the question for
the present and she changed her tactics by fighting for Gilbert,
but as an ally who would stab him in the back at the
first chance.</p>
<p>"I daresay you know all about him, or you would not
have brought him home, and he ought to stay here. I will
shake up some kind of a bed in your study among the papers."</p>
<p>"No, no, a study is not fit for a sleeping-room; a light
might set fire to the writings."</p>
<p>"Which would be no loss," sneered Therese.</p>
<p>"There is the garret; the room with a fine outlook over
such gardens as are scarce in Paris. Have no anxiety, Therese;
the young man will not be a burden; he will earn his own
living. Take a candle and follow me."</p>
<p>Therese sighed, but she was mastered. Gilbert gravely rose
and followed his benefactor. On the landing Gilbert saw
drinking water in a tank.</p>
<p>"Is water dear in town?" he inquired.</p>
<p>"They charge for it; but any way, bread and water are
two things which man has no right to refuse to his fellow-man."</p>
<p>"But at Taverney, water ran freely, and the luxury of the
poor is cleanliness."</p>
<p>"Take as much as you like, my friend," said Master
Jacques.</p>
<p>Gilbert filled a crock and followed the host, who was astonished
at so young a man allying the firmness of the people
with the instinct of the aristocratic.</p>
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