A colleague of Mr£®Carré-Lamadon in the General Council£¬Count Hubert represented the Orléans party in the Department£®
The story of his marriage with the daughter of a little captain of a privateer had always remained a mystery£®But as the Countess had a grand air£¬ received better than anyone£¬and passed for having been loved by the son of Louis Philippe£¬all the nobility did her honor£¬and her salon remained the first in the country£¬the only one which preserved the old gallantry£¬and to which the entrée was difficult£®The fortune of the Brevilles amounted£¬it was said£¬to five hundred thousand francs in income£¬all in good securities£®
These six persons formed the foundation of the carriage company£¬the society side£¬serene and strong£¬honest£¬established people£¬who had both religion and principles£®
By a strange chance£¬all the women were upon the same seat£»and the Countess had for neighbors two sisters who picked at long strings of beads and muttered some paters and Aves£®One was old and as pitted with smallpox as if she had received a broadside of grapeshot full in the face£®The other£¬very sad£¬had a pretty face and a disease of the lungs£¬which£¬added to their devoted faith£¬illumined them and made them appear like martyrs£®
Opposite these two devotees were a man and a woman who attracted the notice of all£®The man£¬well known£¬was Cornudet the democrat£¬the terror of respectable people£®For twenty years he had soaked his great red beard in the books of all the democratic cafés£®He had consumed with his friends and confrères a rather pretty fortune left him by his father£¬all old confectioner£¬and he awaited the establishing of the Republic with impatience£¬that he might have the position he merited by his great expenditures£®On the fourth of September£¬by some joke perhaps£¬he believed himself elected prefect£¬but when he went to assume the duties£¬the clerks of the office were masters of the place and re£fused to recognize him£¬obliging him to retreat£®Rather a good bachelor£¬on the whole£¬inoffensive and service£able£¬he had busied himself£¬with incomparable ardor£¬in organizing the defense against the Prussians£®He had dug holes in all the plains£¬cut down young trees from the neighboring forests£¬sown snares over all routes and£¬at the approach of the enemy£¬took himself quickly back to the town£®He now thought he could be of more use in Havre where more entrenchments would be necessary£®
The woman£¬one of those called a coquette£¬was celebrated for her embonpoint£¬which had given her the nickname of“Ball-of-Fat£®”Small£¬round£¬and fat as lard£¬with puffy fingers choked at the phalanges£¬like chaplets of short sausages£»with a stretched and shining skin£¬an enormous bosom which shook under her dress£¬she was£¬nevertheless£¬pleasing and sought after£¬on ac-count of a certain freshness and breeziness of disposition£®Her face was a round apple£¬a peony bud ready to pop into bloom£¬and inside that opened two great black eyes£¬shaded with thick brows that cast a shadow with-in£»and below£¬a charming mouth£¬humid for kissing£¬furnished with shining£¬microscopic baby teeth£® She was£¬it was said£¬full of admirable qualities £®
As soon as she was recognized£¬a whisper went around among the honest women£¬and the words“prostitute”and“public shame”were whispered so loud that she raised her head£®Then she threw at her neighbors such a provoking£¬courageous look that a great silence reigned£¬and everybody looked down except Loiseau£¬who watched her with an exhilarated air£®
And immediately conversation began among the three ladies£¬whom the presence of this girl had suddenly rendered friendly£¬almost intimate£®It seemed to them they should bring their married dignity into union in opposition to that sold without shame£»for legal love always takes on a tone of contempt for its free confrère£®
The three men£¬also drawn together by an instinct of preservation at the sight of Cornudet£¬talked money with a certain high tone of disdain for the poor£®Count Hubert talked of the havoc which the Prussians had caused£¬the losses which resulted from being robbed of cattle and from destroyed crops£¬with the assurance of a great lord£¬ten times millionaire whom these ravages would scarcely cramp for a year£®Mr£®Carré-Lamadon£¬largely experienced in the cotton industry£¬had had need of sending six hundred thousand francs to England£¬as a trifle in reserve if it should be needed£®As for Loiseau£¬he had arranged with the French administration to sell them all the wines that remained in his cellars£¬on ac-count of which the State owed him a formidable sum£¬which he counted on collecting at Havre£®
And all three threw toward each other swift and amicable glances£®
Although in different conditions£¬they felt them£selves to be brothers through money£¬that grand free£masonry of those who possess it£¬and make the gold rattle by putting their hands in their trousers'pockets£®
The carriage went so slowly that at ten o'clock in the morning they had not gone four leagues£®The men had got down three times to climb hills on foot£®They began to be disturbed because they should be now taking breakfast at
begun to watch for an inn along the route£¬when the carriage foundered in a snowdrift£¬and it took two hours to extricate it£®