<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">which treats of a painful domestic scene</span></p>
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<p>O long as Maurice confined his
selection of mistresses to respectable
women, his conduct had called
forth no reproach. It was a different
matter when he took up with
Bouchotte. His mother, who had closed her eyes
to liaisons which, though guilty, were elegant and
discreet, was scandalised when it came to her
ears that her son was openly parading about with
a music-hall singer. By dint of much prying and
probing, Berthe, Maurice's younger sister, had got
to know of her brother's adventures, and she narrated
them, without any indignation, to her young
girl friends. His little brother Léon declared to
his mother one day, in the presence of several ladies,
that when he was big he, too, would go on the spree,
like Maurice. This was a sore wound to the maternal
heart of Madame d'Esparvieu.</p>
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<p>About the same time there occurred a family
event of a very grave nature which occasioned much
alarm to Monsieur René d'Esparvieu. Drafts were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
presented to him signed in his name by his son.
His writing had not been forged, but there was no
doubt that it had been the son's intention to pass
off the signature as his father's. It showed a
perverted moral sense; whence it appeared that
Maurice was living a life of profligacy, that he was
running into debt and on the point of outraging the
decencies. The paterfamilias talked the matter over
with his wife. It was arranged that he should give
his son a very severe lecture, hint at vigorous corrective
measures, and that in due course the mother
should appear with gentle and sorrowing mien
and endeavour to soothe the righteous indignation
of the father. This plan being agreed upon,
Monsieur René d'Esparvieu sent for his son to
come to him in his study. To add to the solemnity
of the occasion, he had arrayed himself in his
frock-coat. As soon as Maurice saw it he knew
there was something serious in the wind. The
head of the family was pale, and his voice shook
a little (for he was a nervous man), as he declared
that he would no longer put up with his son's irregular
behaviour, and insisted on an immediate
and absolute reform. No more wild courses, no
more running into debt, no more undesirable companions,
but work, steadiness, and reputable connexions.</p>
<p>Maurice was quite willing to give a respectful
reply to his father, whose complaints, after all,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
were perfectly justified; but, unfortunately,
Maurice, like his father, was shy, and the frock-coat
which Monsieur d'Esparvieu had donned in order
to discharge his magisterial duty with greater
dignity seemed to preclude the possibility of any
open and unconstrained intercourse. Maurice
maintained an awkward silence, which looked very
much like insolence, and this silence compelled
Monsieur d'Esparvieu to reiterate his complaints,
this time with additional severity. He opened one
of the drawers in his historic bureau (the bureau
on which Alexandre d'Esparvieu had written his
"Essay on the Civil and Religious Institutions of
the World"), and produced the bills which Maurice
had signed.</p>
<p>"Do you know, my boy," said he, "that this is
nothing more nor less than forgery? To make up
for such grave misconduct as that——"</p>
<p>At this moment Madame d'Esparvieu, as arranged,
entered the room attired in her walking-dress.
She was supposed to play the angel of
forgiveness, but neither her appearance nor her
disposition was suitable to the part. She was
harsh and unsympathetic. Maurice harboured within
him the seeds of all the ordinary and necessary
virtues. He loved his mother and respected
her. His love, however, was more a matter of
duty than of inclination, and his respect arose
from habit rather than from feeling. Madame<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span>
René d'Esparvieu's complexion was blotchy, and
having powdered herself in order to appear to
advantage at the domestic tribunal, the colour of
her face suggested raspberries sprinkled over with
sugar. Maurice, being possessed of some taste,
could not help realising that she was ugly and rather
repulsively so. He was out of tune with her, and
when she began to go through all the accusations
his father had brought against him, making them
out to be blacker than ever, the prodigal turned
away his head to conceal his irritation.</p>
<p>"Your Aunt de Saint-Fain," she went on, "met
you in the street in such disgraceful company that
she was really thankful that you forbore to greet
her."</p>
<p>"Aunt de Saint-Fain!" Maurice broke out. "I
like to hear her talking about scandals! Everyone
knows the sort of life she has led, and now the
old hypocrite wants to——"</p>
<p>He stopped. He had caught sight of his father,
whose face was even more eloquent of sorrow than
of anger. Maurice began to feel as though he had
committed murder, and could not imagine how he
had allowed such words to escape him. He was on
the point of bursting into tears, falling on his knees,
and imploring his father to forgive him, when
his mother, looking up at the ceiling, said with a
sigh:</p>
<p>"What offence can I have committed against<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span>
God, to have brought such a wicked son into the
world?"</p>
<p>This speech struck Maurice as a piece of ridiculous
affectation, and it pulled him up with a jerk. The
bitterness of contrition suddenly gave place to the
delicious arrogance of wrong-doing. He plunged
wildly into a torrent of insolence and revolt, and
breathlessly delivered himself of utterances quite
unfit for a mother's ear.</p>
<p>"If you will have it, mamma, rather than forbid
me to continue my friendship with a talented
lyrical artist, you would be better employed in
preventing my elder sister, Madame de Margy,
from appearing, night after night, in society and
at the theatres with a contemptible and disgusting
individual that everybody knows is her lover.
You should also keep an eye on my little sister
Jeanne, who writes objectionable letters to herself
in a disguised hand, and then, pretending
she has found them in her prayer-book, shows
them to you with assumed innocence, to worry
and alarm you. It would be just as well, too,
if you prevented my little brother Léon, a child
of seven, from being quite so much with Mademoiselle
Caporal, and you might tell your maid...."</p>
<p>"Get out, sir, I will not have you in the house!"
cried Monsieur René d'Esparvieu, white with
anger, pointing a trembling finger at the door.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span></p>
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