<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0049" id="link2HCH0049"></SPAN> Chapter XLIX. Monsieur Colbert’s Rough Draft.</h2>
<p>Vanel, who entered at this stage of the conversation, was nothing less for
Aramis and Fouquet than the full stop which completes a phrase. But, for Vanel,
Aramis’s presence in Fouquet’s cabinet had quite another
signification; and, therefore, at his first step into the room, he paused as he
looked at the delicate yet firm features of the bishop of Vannes, and his look
of astonishment soon became one of scrutinizing attention. As for Fouquet, a
perfect politician, that is to say, complete master of himself, he had already,
by the energy of his own resolute will, contrived to remove from his face all
traces of the emotion which Aramis’s revelation had occasioned. He was no
longer, therefore, a man overwhelmed by misfortune and reduced to resort to
expedients; he held his head proudly erect, and indicated by a gesture that
Vanel could enter. He was now the first minister of the state, and in his own
palace. Aramis knew the superintendent well; the delicacy of the feelings of
his heart and the exalted nature of his mind no longer surprised him. He
confined himself, then, for the moment—intending to resume later an
active part in the conversation—to the performance of the difficult part
of a man who looks on and listens, in order to learn and understand. Vanel was
visibly overcome, and advanced into the middle of the cabinet, bowing to
everything and everybody. “I am here,” he said.</p>
<p>“You are punctual, Monsieur Vanel,” returned Fouquet.</p>
<p>“In matters of business, monseigneur,” replied Vanel, “I look
upon exactitude as a virtue.”</p>
<p>“No doubt, monsieur.”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” interrupted Aramis, indicating Vanel with his
finger, but addressing himself to Fouquet; “this is the gentleman, I
believe, who has come about the purchase of your appointment?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I am,” replied Vanel, astonished at the extremely haughty
tone in which Aramis had put the question; “but in what way am I to
address you, who do me the honor—”</p>
<p>“Call me monseigneur,” replied Aramis, dryly. Vanel bowed.</p>
<p>“Come, gentlemen, a truce to these ceremonies; let us proceed to the
matter itself.”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur sees,” said Vanel, “that I am waiting your
pleasure.”</p>
<p>“On the contrary, I am waiting,” replied Fouquet.</p>
<p>“What for, may I be permitted to ask, monseigneur?”</p>
<p>“I thought that you had perhaps something to say.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” said Vanel to himself, “he has reflected on the matter
and I am lost.” But resuming his courage, he continued, “No,
monseigneur, nothing, absolutely nothing more than what I said to you
yesterday, and which I am again ready to repeat to you now.”</p>
<p>“Come, now, tell me frankly, Monsieur Vanel, is not the affair rather a
burdensome one for you?”</p>
<p>“Certainly, monseigneur; fourteen hundred thousand francs is an important
sum.”</p>
<p>“So important, indeed,” said Fouquet, “that I have
reflected—”</p>
<p>“You have been reflecting, do you say, monseigneur?” exclaimed
Vanel, anxiously.</p>
<p>“Yes; that you might not yet be in a position to purchase.”</p>
<p>“Oh, monseigneur!”</p>
<p>“Do not make yourself uneasy on that score, Monsieur Vanel; I shall not
blame you for a failure in your word, which evidently may arise from inability
on your part.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, monseigneur, you would blame me, and you would be right in
doing so,” said Vanel; “for a man must either be very imprudent, or
a fool, to undertake engagements which he cannot keep; and I, at least, have
always regarded a thing agreed on as a thing actually carried out.”</p>
<p>Fouquet colored, while Aramis uttered a “Hum!” of impatience.</p>
<p>“You would be wrong to exaggerate such notions as those, monsieur,”
said the superintendent; “for a man’s mind is variable, and full of
these very excusable caprices, which are, however, sometimes estimable enough;
and a man may have wished for something yesterday of which he repents
to-day.”</p>
<p>Vanel felt a cold sweat trickle down his face. “Monseigneur!” he
muttered.</p>
<p>Aramis, who was delighted to find the superintendent carry on the debate with
such clearness and precision, stood leaning his arm upon the marble top of a
console table and began to play with a small gold knife, with a malachite
handle. Fouquet did not hasten to reply; but after a moment’s pause,
“Come, my dear Monsieur Vanel,” he said, “I will explain to
you how I am situated.” Vanel began to tremble.</p>
<p>“Yesterday I wished to sell—”</p>
<p>“Monseigneur did more than wish to sell, he actually sold.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, that may be so; but to-day I ask you the favor to restore me
my word which I pledged you.”</p>
<p>“I received your <i>word</i> as a satisfactory assurance that it would be
kept.”</p>
<p>“I know that, and that is the reason why I now entreat you; do you
understand me? I entreat you to restore it to me.”</p>
<p>Fouquet suddenly paused. The words “I entreat you,” the effect of
which he did not immediately perceive, seemed almost to choke him as he uttered
it. Aramis, still playing with his knife, fixed a look upon Vanel which seemed
as if he wished to penetrate the recesses of his heart. Vanel simply bowed, as
he said, “I am overcome, monseigneur, at the honor you do me to consult
me upon a matter of business which is already completed; but—”</p>
<p>“Nay, do not say <i>but</i>, dear Monsieur Vanel.”</p>
<p>“Alas! monseigneur, you see,” he said, as he opened a large
pocket-book, “I have brought the money with me,—the whole sum, I
mean. And here, monseigneur, is the contract of sale which I have just effected
of a property belonging to my wife. The order is authentic in every particular,
the necessary signatures have been attached to it, and it is made payable at
sight; it is ready money, in fact, and, in one word, the whole affair is
complete.”</p>
<p>“My dear Monsieur Vanel, there is not a matter of business in this world,
however important it may be, which cannot be postponed in order to oblige a
man, who, by that means, might and would be made a devoted friend.”</p>
<p>“Certainly,” said Vanel, awkwardly.</p>
<p>“And much more justly acquired would that friend become, Monsieur Vanel,
since the value of the service he had received would have been so considerable.
Well, what do you say? what do you decide?”</p>
<p>Vanel preserved a perfect silence. In the meantime, Aramis had continued his
close observation of the man. Vanel’s narrow face, his deeply sunken
eyes, his arched eyebrows, had revealed to the bishop of Vannes the type of an
avaricious and ambitious character. Aramis’s method was to oppose one
passion by another. He saw that M. Fouquet was defeated—morally
subdued—and so he came to his rescue with fresh weapons in his hands.
“Excuse me, monseigneur,” he said; “you forgot to show M.
Vanel that his own interests are diametrically opposed to this renunciation of
the sale.”</p>
<p>Vanel looked at the bishop with astonishment; he had hardly expected to find an
auxiliary in him. Fouquet also paused to listen to the bishop.</p>
<p>“Do you not see,” continued Aramis, “that M. Vanel, in order
to purchase your appointment, has been obliged to sell a property belonging to
his wife; well, that is no slight matter; for one cannot displace, as he has
done, fourteen or fifteen hundred thousand francs without some considerable
loss, and very serious inconvenience.”</p>
<p>“Perfectly true,” said Vanel, whose secret Aramis had, with
keen-sighted gaze, wrung from the bottom of his heart.</p>
<p>“Inconveniences such as these are matters of great expense and
calculation, and whenever a man has money matters to deal with, the expenses
are generally the very first thing thought of.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” said Fouquet, who began to understand Aramis’s
meaning.</p>
<p>Vanel remained perfectly silent; he, too, had understood him. Aramis observed
his coldness of manner and his silence. “Very good,” he said to
himself, “you are waiting, I see, until you know the amount; but do not
fear, I shall send you such a flight of crowns that you cannot but capitulate
on the spot.”</p>
<p>“We must offer M. Vanel a hundred thousand crowns at once,” said
Fouquet, carried away by his generous feelings.</p>
<p>The sum was a good one. A prince, even, would have been satisfied with such a
bonus. A hundred thousand crowns at that period was the dowry of a king’s
daughter. Vanel, however, did not move.</p>
<p>“He is a perfect rascal!” thought the bishop, “well, we must
offer the five hundred thousand francs at once,” and he made a sign to
Fouquet accordingly.</p>
<p>“You seem to have spent more than that, dear Monsieur Vanel,” said
the superintendent. “The price of ready money is enormous. You must have
made a great sacrifice in selling your wife’s property. Well, what can I
have been thinking of? I ought to have offered to sign you an order for five
hundred thousand francs; and even in that case I shall feel that I am greatly
indebted to you.”</p>
<p>There was not a gleam of delight or desire on Vanel’s face, which
remained perfectly impassible; not a muscle of it changed in the slightest
degree. Aramis cast a look almost of despair at Fouquet, and then, going
straight up to Vanel and taking hold of him by the coat, in a familiar manner,
he said, “Monsieur Vanel, it is neither the inconvenience, nor the
displacement of your money, nor the sale of your wife’s property even,
that you are thinking of at this moment; it is something more important still.
I can well understand it; so pay particular attention to what I am going to
say.”</p>
<p>“Yes, monseigneur,” Vanel replied, beginning to tremble in every
limb, as the prelate’s eyes seemed almost ready to devour him.</p>
<p>“I offer you, therefore, in the superintendent’s name, not three
hundred thousand livres, nor five hundred thousand, but a million. A
million—do you understand me?” he added, as he shook him nervously.</p>
<p>“A million!” repeated Vanel, as pale as death.</p>
<p>“A million; in other words, at the present rate of interest, an income of
seventy thousand francs.”</p>
<p>“Come, monsieur,” said Fouquet, “you can hardly refuse that.
Answer—do you accept?”</p>
<p>“Impossible,” murmured Vanel.</p>
<p>Aramis bit his lips, and something like a cloud seemed to pass over his face.
The thunder behind this cloud could easily be imagined. He still kept his hold
on Vanel. “You have purchased the appointment for fifteen hundred
thousand francs, I think. Well, you will receive these fifteen hundred thousand
francs back again; by paying M. Fouquet a visit, and shaking hands with him on
the bargain, you will have become a gainer of a million and a half. You get
honor and profit at the same time, Monsieur Vanel.”</p>
<p>“I cannot do it,” said Vanel, hoarsely.</p>
<p>“Very well,” replied Aramis, who had grasped Vanel so tightly by
the coat that, when he let go his hold, Vanel staggered back a few paces,
“very well; one can now see clearly enough your object in coming
here.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Fouquet, “one can easily see that.”</p>
<p>“But—” said Vanel, attempting to stand erect before the
weakness of these two men of honor.</p>
<p>“Does the fellow presume to speak?” said Aramis, with the tone of
an emperor.</p>
<p>“Fellow!” repeated Vanel.</p>
<p>“The scoundrel, I meant to say,” added Aramis, who had now resumed
his usual self-possession. “Come, monsieur, produce your deed of
sale,—you have it about you, I suppose, in one of your pockets, already
prepared, as an assassin holds his pistol or his dagger concealed under his
cloak.”</p>
<p>Vanel began to mutter something.</p>
<p>“Enough!” cried Fouquet. “Where is this deed?”</p>
<p>Vanel tremblingly searched in his pockets, and as he drew out his pocket-book,
a paper fell out of it, while Vanel offered the other to Fouquet. Aramis
pounced upon the paper which had fallen out, as soon as he recognized the
handwriting. “I beg your pardon,” said Vanel, “that is a
rough draft of the deed.”</p>
<p>“I see that very clearly,” retorted Aramis, with a smile more
cutting than a lash of a whip; “and what I admire most is, that this
draft is in M. Colbert’s handwriting. Look, monseigneur, look.”</p>
<p>And he handed the draft to Fouquet, who recognized the truth of the fact; for,
covered with erasures, with inserted words, the margins filled with additions,
this deed—a living proof of Colbert’s plot—had just revealed
everything to its unhappy victim. “Well!” murmured Fouquet.</p>
<p>Vanel, completely humiliated, seemed as if he were looking for some hole
wherein to hide himself.</p>
<p>“Well!” said Aramis, “if your name were not Fouquet, and if
your enemy’s name were not Colbert—if you had not this mean thief
before you, I should say to you, ‘Repudiate it;’ such a proof as
this absolves you from your word; but these fellows would think you were
afraid; they would fear you less than they do; therefore sign the deed at
once.” And he held out a pen towards him.</p>
<p>Fouquet pressed Aramis’s hand; but, instead of the deed which Vanel
handed to him, he took the rough draft of it.</p>
<p>“No, not that paper,” said Aramis, hastily; “this is the one.
The other is too precious a document for you to part with.”</p>
<p>“No, no!” replied Fouquet; “I will sign under M.
Colbert’s own handwriting even; and I write, ‘The handwriting is
approved of.’” He then signed, and said, “Here it is,
Monsieur Vanel.” And the latter seized the paper, dashed down the money,
and was about to make his escape.</p>
<p>“One moment,” said Aramis. “Are you quite sure the exact
amount is there? It ought to be counted over, Monsieur Vanel; particularly
since M. Colbert makes presents of money to ladies, I see. Ah, that worthy M.
Colbert is not so generous as M. Fouquet.” And Aramis, spelling every
word, every letter of the order to pay, distilled his wrath and his contempt,
drop by drop, upon the miserable wretch, who had to submit to this torture for
a quarter of an hour. He was then dismissed, not in words, but by a gesture, as
one dismisses or discharges a beggar or a menial.</p>
<p>As soon as Vanel had gone, the minister and the prelate, their eyes fixed on
each other, remained silent for a few moments.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Aramis, the first to break the silence; “to what
can that man be compared, who, at the very moment he is on the point of
entering into a conflict with an enemy armed from head to foot, panting for his
life, presents himself for the contest utterly defenseless, throws down his
arms, and smiles and kisses his hands to his adversary in the most gracious
manner? Good faith, M. Fouquet, is a weapon which scoundrels frequently make
use of against men of honor, and it answers their purpose. Men of honor, ought,
in their turn, also, to make use of dishonest means against such scoundrels.
You would soon see how strong they would become, without ceasing to be men of
honor.”</p>
<p>“What they did would be termed the acts of a scoundrel,” replied
Fouquet.</p>
<p>“Far from that; it would be merely coquetting or playing with the truth.
At all events, since you have finished with this Vanel; since you have deprived
yourself of the happiness of confounding him by repudiating your word; and
since you have given up, for the purpose of being used against yourself, the
only weapon which can ruin you—”</p>
<p>“My dear friend,” said Fouquet, mournfully, “you are like the
teacher of philosophy whom La Fontaine was telling us about the other day; he
saw a child drowning, and began to read him a lecture divided into three
heads.”</p>
<p>Aramis smiled as he said, “Philosophy—yes; teacher—yes; a
drowning child—yes; but a child can be saved—you shall see. But
first of all let us talk about business. Did you not some time ago,” he
continued, as Fouquet looked at him with a bewildered air, “speak to me
about an idea you had of giving a <i>fete</i> at Vaux?”</p>
<p>“Oh!” said Fouquet, “that was when affairs were
flourishing.”</p>
<p>“A <i>fete</i>, I believe, to which the king invited himself of his own
accord?”</p>
<p>“No, no, my dear prelate; a <i>fete</i> to which M. Colbert advised the
king to invite himself.”</p>
<p>“Ah—exactly; as it would be a <i>fete</i> of so costly a character
that you would be ruined in giving it.”</p>
<p>“Precisely so. In happier days, as I said just now, I had a kind of pride
in showing my enemies how inexhaustible my resources were; I felt it a point of
honor to strike them with amazement, by creating millions under circumstances
where they imagined nothing but bankruptcies and failures would follow. But, at
present, I am arranging my accounts with the state, with the king, with myself;
and I must now become a mean, stingy man; I shall be able to prove to the world
that I can act or operate with my deniers as I used to do with my bags of
pistoles, and from to-morrow my equipages shall be sold, my mansions mortgaged,
my expenses curtailed.”</p>
<p>“From to-morrow,” interrupted Aramis, quietly, “you will
occupy yourself, without the slightest delay, with your <i>fete</i> at Vaux,
which must hereafter be spoken of as one of the most magnificent productions of
your most prosperous days.”</p>
<p>“Are you mad, Chevalier d’Herblay?”</p>
<p>“I! do you think so?”</p>
<p>“What do you mean, then? Do you not know that a <i>fete</i> at Vaux, one
of the very simplest possible character, would cost four or five
millions?”</p>
<p>“I do not speak of a <i>fete</i> of the very simplest possible character,
my dear superintendent.”</p>
<p>“But, since the <i>fete</i> is to be given to the king,” replied
Fouquet, who misunderstood Aramis’s idea, “it cannot be
simple.”</p>
<p>“Just so: it ought to be on a scale of the most unbounded
magnificence.”</p>
<p>“In that case, I shall have to spend ten or twelve millions.”</p>
<p>“You shall spend twenty, if you require it,” said Aramis, in a
perfectly calm voice.</p>
<p>“Where shall I get them?” exclaimed Fouquet.</p>
<p>“That is my affair, monsieur le surintendant; and do not be uneasy for a
moment about it. The money shall be placed at once at your disposal, the moment
you have arranged the plans of your <i>fete</i>.”</p>
<p>“Chevalier! chevalier!” said Fouquet, giddy with amazement,
“whither are you hurrying me?”</p>
<p>“Across the gulf into which you were about to fall,” replied the
bishop of Vannes. “Take hold of my cloak, and throw fear aside.”</p>
<p>“Why did you not tell me that sooner, Aramis? There was a day when, with
one million only, you could have saved me; whilst to-day—”</p>
<p>“Whilst to-day I can give you twenty,” said the prelate.
“Such is the case, however—the reason is very simple. On the day
you speak of, I had not the million which you had need of at my disposal,
whilst now I can easily procure the twenty millions we require.”</p>
<p>“May Heaven hear you, and save me!”</p>
<p>Aramis resumed his usual smile, the expression of which was so singular.
“Heaven never fails to hear me,” he said.</p>
<p>“I abandon myself to you unreservedly,” Fouquet murmured.</p>
<p>“No, no; I do not understand it in that manner. I am unreservedly devoted
to you. Therefore, as you have the clearest, the most delicate, and the most
ingenious mind of the two, you shall have entire control over the <i>fete</i>,
even to the very smallest details. Only—”</p>
<p>“Only?” said Fouquet, as a man accustomed to understand and
appreciate the value of a parenthesis.</p>
<p>“Well, then, leaving the entire invention of the details to you, I shall
reserve to myself a general superintendence over the execution.”</p>
<p>“In what way?”</p>
<p>“I mean, that you will make of me, on that day, a major-domo, a sort of
inspector-general, or factotum—something between a captain of the guard
and manager or steward. I will look after the people, and will keep the keys of
the doors. You will give your orders, of course: but will give them to no one
but me. They will pass through my lips, to reach those for whom they are
intended—you understand?”</p>
<p>“No, I am very far from understanding.”</p>
<p>“But you agree?”</p>
<p>“Of course, of course, my friend.”</p>
<p>“That is all I care about, then. Thanks; and now go and prepare your list
of invitations.”</p>
<p>“Whom shall I invite?”</p>
<p>“Everybody you know.”</p>
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