<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="f110"><b>ANGE PITOU.</b></p>
<p class="indent">Ange was too young to feel the whole extent of his
loss: but he divined that the angel of the hearth had vanished: and
when the body was taken to the churchyard and interred, he
sat down by the grave and replied to all pleadings for him to
come away by saying that Mamma Madeline was there, that he
never had left her and he would stay beside her now.</p>
<p class="indent">It was there that Dr. Gilbert, for Ange Pitou's
future guardian was a physician, found him when he hastened to
Haramont on receiving the dying mother's appeal.</p>
<p class="indent">Ange was very young when thus he saw the doctor
for the first time. But, we know, youth can feel deep impressions,
leaving everlasting memories. The previous passing of the
young man of mystery through the cottage had impressed its
trace. He had left welfare with the boy: every time Ange
heard his mother pronounce the benefactor's name, it had been
almost with worship. Finally, when he appeared, grown up,
adorned with the title of Physician, joining to the past boons
the future promises, Pitou had judged by his mother's gratitude
that he ought himself be grateful. The poor lad, without
clearly knowing what he was saying, faltered words of
eternal remembrance, and profound thanks such as he had
heard his mother use.</p>
<p class="indent">Therefore, as soon as he perceived the doctor
coming among the grassy graves and broken crosses, he understood
that he came at his mother's appeal and he could not say no to
him as to the others. He made him no resistance except to turn
his head to look backwards as Dr. Gilbert grasped his hand
and led him from the cemetery.</p>
<p class="indent">A stylish cab was at the gates, into which the
doctor made the poor boy step, and he was taken to the town tailor's,
where he was fitted with clothes: they were made too large so that
he would grow up to them. At the rate our hero grew this
would not take long.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">Thus equipped, Ange was walked in a quarter of the
town called Pleux, where Pitou's pace slacked. He recalled this as
being the abode of his Aunt Angelique, of whom he had preserved
an appalling memory.</p>
<p class="indent">Indeed the old maid had no attractions for a boy
who cherished true motherly affections: she was nearly sixty by
this period. The minute practice of religion had brutalized her,
and mistaken piety had twisted all sweet, merciful and humane
feelings, so that she cultivated in their stead a natural dose of
greedy intelligence, augmented daily by her association with
all the prudes. She did not precisely live on public charity
but besides the sale of linen thread hand-spun, and letting out
chairs in the church, she received from kindly souls ensnared
by her devout posturings, petty coin which she converted into
silver and that into gold. Nobody suspected she accumulated
them and she stuffed the gold in the cushion and frame
of an old armchair in which she sat at work.</p>
<p class="indent">It was to this venerable relative's dwelling that
Gilbert led little Pitou. We might say Big Pitou, for he was too
large for his age.</p>
<p class="indent">Miss Rose Angelique Pitou, as they came up, was
in a merry humor as she had just sent another gold piece to go and
keep company with the rest of her hoard. She was going around
her seat of revenue when the doctor and his ward appeared
at the door, and she had to welcome the relic of her family.</p>
<p class="indent">The interview would have been affecting if it
had not been so grotesque. The doctor, a man of keen observation,
and physiognomist, read the character of the hypocritical old maid
at a glance. With her long nose, thin lips and small bright
eyes, she collected in one person cupidity, selfishness and hypocrisy.</p>
<p class="indent">As soon as the stranger stated his little text on
the duty of aunts to take care of their nieces and nephews, she turned
sour and replied that, whatever her love for her poor sister,
and her interest in her dear little nephew, the slenderness of
her means did not permit her, though she was godmother as
well as aunt, to add to her expenses.</p>
<p class="indent">"It is this way, Master Gilbert; this would run me into six
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>
cents a day extra, for that lubberly boy would eat a pound of bread."</p>
<p class="indent">Ange screwed up his face, for he could tuck
away a pound and a half at breakfast alone.</p>
<p class="indent">"This is saying nothing for his washing,
for he is a dirty little chap."</p>
<p class="indent">Considering that Ange was a regular gipsy for
burrowing after moles and climbing trees, this was true enough;
but it is fair to say that he tore his clothes worse than he
soiled them.</p>
<p class="indent">"Fie!" said Doctor Gilbert; "do you who understand
the Christian virtues so well, make such close calculations about
a nephew and an orphan?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Then the keeping of his clothes in repair," went
on the miser, recalling the quantity of patches she had seen sewn by
her sister on the knees, and seat of Master Ange's pants.</p>
<p class="indent">"In short," said the doctor, "you refuse to shelter
your nephew in your house—the orphan boy who will have to beg for
alms at the doors of others."</p>
<p class="indent">Mean as she was, she felt the disgrace befalling
her as if she drove her next of kin to this step.</p>
<p class="indent">"No, I will take charge of him," she said.</p>
<p class="indent">"Good," said the doctor, delighted to find a
moist spot in this desert.</p>
<p class="indent">"I will recommend him to the Augustin Monastery
and have them take him as a boy of all work."</p>
<p class="indent">The doctor was a philosopher, we have mentioned;
which means that he was the opponent of all the churchmen. He
resolved to tear this recruit from the enemy with all the
warmth that the Augustines would have shown to deprive
him of a disciple.</p>
<p class="indent">"Well," he rejoined, sticking his hand in his deepest
pocket, "since you are in so hard a position, dear Miss Angelique, that
you are forced to send your nephew into beggary, I will find
somebody else to take him and the sum I am going to set aside
for his maintenance. I am obliged to return to America.
Meanwhile I must apprentice the boy to some craft, which he
can choose for himself. In my absence he will grow up and
then we will see what to make of him. Kiss your good aunt
good-bye, and let us try our luck elsewhere," concluded the doctor.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">He had barely finished before Pitou rushed into
his aunt's long, bony arms to exchange the hug which he wanted to
be in token of eternal separation. But the mention of a sum of
money and Gilbert's movements of putting his hand in his
pocket for cash, with the chink of silver, set the warmth of
greed up from her old heart.</p>
<p class="indent">"Lord, doctor, do not you know that nobody in
all the wide world can love this poor lone, lorn thing like his
own dear fond auntie?"</p>
<p class="indent">Entwining him with her long arms, she imprinted
on his cheeks a couple of kisses so sour that they made his hair
stand on end and then curl with a shriveling up.</p>
<p class="indent">"Just what I thought; but still you are too
poor to do the proper thing."</p>
<p class="indent">"Nay, good Master Gilbert," said the pious dame,
"forget not that we have the Father of the fatherless above and that
He has promised that a swallow shall not be sold for a penny
without its being spent for the orphan's share."</p>
<p class="indent">"The text may be so, but it nowhere says that the
orphan is to be bound out as a servant. I am afraid to do with Ange
as I suggested; it would be too dear for your slight resources."</p>
<p class="indent">"But with the sum you spoke of, in your pocket,"
said the old devotee, with her eyes rivetted on the place whence
the chink had sounded.</p>
<p class="indent">"I would give it, assuredly, but only on condition
that the boy should be brought up to some livelihood."</p>
<p class="indent">"I promise that," cried Aunt Angelique; "I vow
it, as true as the sheep are tempered for the storm-wind." And
she raised her skeleton hand to heaven.</p>
<p class="indent">"Well," replied Gilbert, drawing out a bag rounded
with coin; "I am ready to deposit the funds, but you must sign a
contract at Lawyer Niquet's."</p>
<p class="indent">Niquet was her own business man and she raised no objections.</p>
<p class="indent">A bargain was made for five years: Ange Pitou was
to be brought up to some trade and boarded, etc., for two hundred
livres to his aunt, a-year. The doctor paid down the money.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">Next day he quitted Villers, after arranging matters
with a farmer on some property of his, named Billet, whose acquaintance
we shall make in good time.</p>
<p class="indent">Miss Pitou, pouncing on the first payment in advance
of the maintenance fund, buried eight bright gold pieces in her
armchair bottom.</p>
<p class="indent">With eight livres over, she put the small change
waiting to make up the amount of a gold piece to be placed, when
converted, in the peculiar savings-bank.</p>
<p class="indent">We noticed the scant sympathy Ange felt for his
aunt; he had foreseen the sorrow, disappointment and tribulations
awaiting him under her roof.</p>
<p class="indent">In the first place, as soon as the doctor had turned
his back, there was no longer a question about his learning any trade.
When the good notary made a remark on this agreement, the
tender aunt rejoined that her nephew was too delicate to be
put out to work. The lawyer had admired his client's sensitive
heart and deferred the apprenticeship question for another
year. He was only twelve so that it would not waste
much valuable time.</p>
<p class="indent">While his aunt was ruminating how to evade the
contract, Ange resumed his truant life in the woods, as led at
Haramont: it was the same woods and hence the same life.</p>
<p class="indent">As soon as he had the best spots located for
bird-catching, he made some birdlime and having a four-pound loaf
under his arm, he went off into the forest for the whole day.</p>
<p class="indent">He had foreseen a storm when he came back at
nightfall, but he expected to parry it with the proceeds of his skill.</p>
<p class="indent">He had not presaged how the tempest would fall.
In fact, Aunt Angelique had ambushed herself behind the door to
deal him a cuff, as he crept in which he recognized as inflicted
by her hard hand. Happily he had a hard head, too, and
though the blow staggered him, he had the sense left to hold
out as a peace-offering and buckler the talisman he had prepared.
It was a bunch of two dozen small birds.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">"What is this?" challenged his aunt, continuing to grumble
for form's sake but opening her eyes more widely than her mouth.</p>
<p class="indent">"Birds, you see, good Aunt Angelique," replied
Pitou as she grabbed the lot.</p>
<p class="indent">"Good to eat?" questioned the old maid who was
greedy in all her senses of the word.</p>
<p class="indent">"Redbreasts and larks—I should bet they are
good to eat—but they are better to sell. They command a good
price in the market."</p>
<p class="indent">Where did you steal them, you little rogue?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Steal? they ain't stolen—I took 'em at
the pool in the woods. A fellow has only to set up limed twigs
anywhere round the water and the silly birds get tangled; then
you run up, wring their necks, and there you have them."</p>
<p class="indent">"Lime? do you catch birds with lime?" queried Angelique.</p>
<p class="indent">"Not mortar lime, bless your innocence, but birdlime;
it is made by boiling down holly sap."</p>
<p class="indent">"I understand, but where did you get the money
to buy holly sap?"</p>
<p class="indent">"I should be a saphead to buy that: one makes it."</p>
<p class="indent">"Ah, then these birds are to be had for the picking up?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Yes: any day; but not everyday, for, of course,
you cannot catch on Tuesday those you caught on Monday."</p>
<p class="indent">"Very true," returned the aunt, amazed at the
brightness her nephew was for once displaying: "you are right."</p>
<p class="indent">This unheard of approval delighted the boy.</p>
<p class="indent">"But, on the days when you ought not to go to
the pools, you go elsewhere. When you are not catching birds, you
snare hares. You can eat them, too, and sell the skins for two cents."</p>
<p class="indent">Angelique stared at her nephew who was coming
out as a financier.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, I can do the selling!"</p>
<p class="indent">"Of course, just as Mother Madeline did," for Pitou
had never supposed he was to enjoy the fruit of his hunting.</p>
<p class="indent">"When will you go snaring hares?" she asked eagerly.</p>
<p class="indent">"I will go snaring hares and rabbits when I have
wire for snares."</p>
<p class="indent">"All right, make it."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, I cannot do that," Pitou said, scratching his
head. "I must buy that at the store but I can weave the springes."</p>
<p class="indent">"What does it cost?"</p>
<p class="indent">"I can make a couple of dozen with four cents' worth,
and it ought to catch half a dozen bunnies—and the snares are
used over and over again—unless the gamekeepers seize them."</p>
<p class="indent">"Here are four cents," said Aunt Angelique,
"go and buy wire and get the rabbits to-morrow."</p>
<p class="indent">Wire was cheaper in the town than at the village so
that Ange got material for twenty-four snares for three cents; he
brought the odd copper to his aunt who was touched by this honesty.
For an instant she felt like giving him the cent but unfortunately
for Ange, it had been flattened by a hammer and might
be passed in the dusk for a twosous piece. She thought it
wicked to squander a piece that might bring a hundred per
cent, and she popped it into her pouch.</p>
<p class="indent">Pitou made the snares and in the morning asked
mysteriously for a bag. In it she put the bread and cheese for his
meals, and away he went to his hunting ground.</p>
<p class="indent">Meanwhile she plucked the robins intended for
their dinner; she took a brace of larks to Abbe Fortier, and two
brace to the Golden Ball innkeeper, who paid her three cents for
them and ordered as many as she could supply at that rate.</p>
<p class="indent">She went home beaming: the blessing of heaven
had entered the house with Ange Pitou.</p>
<p class="indent">"They are quite right who say a good action is
never thrown away," she observed as she munched the robins, as fat
as ortolans and delicate as beccaficoes.</p>
<p class="indent">At dark in walked Ange, with the rounded out
bag on his shoulders; Aunt Angelique received him on the threshold
but not with a slap.</p>
<p class="indent">"Here I am, with my bag," said he with the
calmness of having well spent his day.</p>
<p class="indent">"And what have you in the bag?" cried the aunt,
stretching out her hand in sharp curiosity.</p>
<p class="indent">"Beech-mast," replied Pitou. "It is this way.
If Daddy Lajeunesse, the gamekeeper, saw me rambling without the
bag he would want to know what I was lurking for and he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
would feel suspicion. But when he challenged me with the
bag, I just answered him: 'I am gathering beechmast, father—it
is not forbidden to gather mast, is it?' and not being forbidden,
he could not do anything. So he said nothing except:
'You have a good aunt, Pitou; give her my compliments.'"</p>
<p class="indent">"So you have been collecting mast instead of
catching rabbits," cried Aunt Angelique, angrily.</p>
<p class="indent">"No, no, I laid my snares under cover of
mast-gathering: the old donkey saw me doing that and thought it right."</p>
<p class="indent">"But the game?" said the woman, bent on the first principle.</p>
<p class="indent">"The moon will be up at twelve and I will go
and see how many I have snared."</p>
<p class="indent">"You will go into the woods at midnight?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Why, not? what is there to be afraid of?"</p>
<p class="indent">The woman was as amazed at Ange's courage as
at the breadth of his speculations. But brought up in the woods,
Ange was not to be scared at what terrifies the town boy.</p>
<p class="indent">So at midnight he set out, skirting the cemetery
wall, for the innocent lad, never in his ideas offending anybody,
had no more fear of the dead than of the living.</p>
<p class="indent">The only person he dreaded was Lajeunesse. So
he made a turn round his house and stopped to imitate the barking of
a dog so naturally that the gamekeeper's basset "Snorer," deceived
by the provocation, replied with a full throat and came
to the door to sniff the air.</p>
<p class="indent">Pitou ran on, chuckling, for if Snorer were home his
master was surely asleep there, as the man and the dog were inseparable.</p>
<p class="indent">In the snares two rabbits had been strangled,
Pitou stuffed them into the pockets of a coat made too long for
him and now too small.</p>
<p class="indent">Greed kept the aunt awake, though she had lain down.
She had reckoned on two brace of game.</p>
<p class="indent">"Only a pair," said Pitou. "It is not my fault that
I have not done better but these are the cunningest rabbits for miles round."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">Next day Pitou renewed his enterprises and had the
luck to catch three rabbits. Two went to the tavern and one to Abbe
Fortier, who recommended Aunt Angelique to the benevolent
of the town.</p>
<p class="indent">Thus things went on for three or four months, the
woman enchanted and Ange thinking life endurable. Except for his
mother's loss, matters were such as at Haramont: he passed
his time in rural pleasures.</p>
<p class="indent">But an unexpected circumstance broke the jar of
illusion of the prude and stopped the nephew's trapping.</p>
<p class="indent">A letter from Dr. Gilbert arrived from New York.
He had not forgotten his little ward on landing, but asked Master
Niquet if his instructions had been followed and if young Pitou
were learning the means to make his own living.</p>
<p class="indent">It was a pinch, for there was no denying that Ange was
in first-rate health. He was tall and lank but so are hickory saplings,
and nobody doubts their strength and elasticity.</p>
<p class="indent">The aunt asked a week to put in her reply; it was
miserable for both. Pitou asked no better career than he was leading,
but it was quiet at the time; not only did the cold weather
drive the birds away but the snow fell and as it would retain
footprints, he dared not go into the woods to lay traps and snares.</p>
<p class="indent">During the week the old maid's claws grew; she
made the stripling so wretched that he was ready to take up any
trade rather than be her butt any longer.</p>
<p class="indent">Suddenly a sublime idea sprouted in her cruelly
tormented brain, where peace reigned again.</p>
<p class="indent">Father Fortier had two purses for poor students
attached to his school, out of the bounty of the Duke of Orleans.</p>
<p class="indent">Angelique resolved to beg him to enter Ange for one
of them. This would cost the teacher nothing, and to say nothing of the
game on which the woman had been nourishing the doctor for
half a year, he owed something to the church-seat letter.</p>
<p class="indent">Indeed, Ange was received without fee by the schoolmaster.</p>
<p class="indent">The old girl was delighted for it was the school of
the district where Dr. Gilbert's son was educated. He paid fifty livres
and Ange got in for nothing, but nobody was to let Sebastian
Gilbert or any others know that.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">Whether they guessed this or not, Ange was received
by his school fellows with that sweet spirit of brotherhood born
among children and perpetuated among "the grown ups," in
other words with hooting and teasing. But when three or four
of the budding tyrants made the acquaintance of Pitou's
enormous fist and were trodden under his even more enormous
foot, respect began to be diffused. He would have had a life
a shade less worried than when under Angelique's wing; but
Father Fortier in soliciting little children to come unto him,
forgot to warn them that the hands he held out were armed
with the Latin Rudiments and birch rods.</p>
<p class="indent">Little did the aunt care whether the information
was flogged or insinuated mentally into her nephew. She basked in
the golden ray from dreamland that in three years Ange would
pass the examination and be sent to college with the Orleans Purse.</p>
<p class="indent">Then would he become a priest, when he would,
of course, make his aunt his housekeeper.</p>
<p class="indent">One day a rough awakening came to this delusion.
Ange crawled into the house as if shod in lead.</p>
<p class="indent">"What is the matter?" cried Aunt 'Gelique,
who had never seen a more piteous mien. "Are you hungry?"</p>
<p class="indent">"No," replied Pitou dolefully.</p>
<p class="indent">The hearer was uneasy, for illness is a cause of
alarm to good mothers and bad godmothers, as it forces expenses.</p>
<p class="indent">"It is a great misfortune," Pitou blubbered: "Father
Fortier sends me home from school—so no more studies, no examination,
no purse, no college——"</p>
<p class="indent">His sobs changed into howls while the woman stared
at him to try to read in his soul the reason for this expulsion.</p>
<p class="indent">"I suppose you have been playing truant again,"
she said. "I hear that you are always roaming round Farmer Billet's
place to catch a sight of his daughter Catherine. Fie, fie! very
pretty conduct in a future priest!"</p>
<p class="indent">Ange shook his head.</p>
<p class="indent">"You lie," shrieked the old maid, with her anger
rising with the growing certainty that it was a serious scrape. "Last
Sunday you were again seen rambling in Lovers-Walk with Kate Billet."
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="indent">It was she who fibbed but she was one who believed
the end justified the means, and a whale-truth might be caught by
throwing out a tub-lie.</p>
<p class="indent">"Oh, no, they could not have seen me there,"
cried Ange; "for we were out by the Orange-gardens."</p>
<p class="indent">"There, you wretch, you see you were with her."</p>
<p class="indent">"But this is not a matter that Miss Billet is concerned
in," ventured Ange, blushing like the overgrown boy of sixteen
that he was.</p>
<p class="indent">"Yes, call her 'Miss' to pretend you have any respect
for her, the flirt, the jilt, the mincing minx! I will tell her father
confessor how she is carrying on."</p>
<p class="indent">"But I take my Bible oath that she is not a flirt."</p>
<p class="indent">"You defend her, when you need all the excuses
you can rake up for yourself. This is going on fine. What is the
world coming to, when children of sixteen are walking arm in
arm under the shade trees."</p>
<p class="indent">"But, aunt, you are away out—Catherine will
not let me 'arm' her—she keeps me off at arms-length."</p>
<p class="indent">"You see how you break down your own denials.
You are calling her Catherine, plain, now. Oh, why not Kate, or
Kitty, or some such silly nickname which you use in your iniquitous
familiarity? She drives you away to have you come
nearer, they all do."</p>
<p class="indent">"Do they? there, I never thought of that,"
exclaimed the swain, suddenly enlightened.</p>
<p class="indent">"Ah, you will have something else to think of! And
she," said the old prude, "I will manage all this. I will ask Father
Fortier to lock you up on bread and water for a fortnight and
have her put in a nunnery if she cannot moderate her fancy for you."</p>
<p class="indent">She spoke so emphatically that Pitou was frightened.</p>
<p class="indent">"You are altogether wrong, my good aunt," pleaded
he, clasping his hands: "Miss Catherine has nothing to do with
my misfortune."</p>
<p class="indent">"Impurity is the mother of all the vices,"
returned Angelique sententiously.</p>
<p class="indent">"But Impurity has nothing to do with my being turned
out of school," objected the youth: "the teacher put me out
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
because I made too many barbarisms and solecisms which prevent
me of having any chance to win that purse."</p>
<p class="indent">"What will become of you, then?"</p>
<p class="indent">"Blest if I know," wailed Pitou, who had never
looked upon priesthood, with Aunt 'Gelique as housekeeper as Paradise
on earth. "Let come what Providence pleases," he sighed,
lamentably raising his eyes.</p>
<p class="indent">"Providence, do you call it? I see you have
got hold of these newfangled ideas about philosophy."</p>
<p class="indent">"That cannot be, aunt, for I cannot go into Philosophy
till I have passed Rhetoric, and I am only in the third course."</p>
<p class="indent">"Joke away," sneered the old maid to whom the
school-jargon was Greek. "I speak of the philosophy of these
philosophers, not what a pious man like the priest would allow
in his holy house. You are a serpent and you have been
gnawing a file of the newspapers in which these dreadful
writers insult King and Queen and the Church! He is lost!"</p>
<p class="indent">When Aunt Angelique said her ward was lost,
she meant that she was ruined. The danger was imminent. She took
the sublime resolution to run to Father Fortier's for explanation
and above all to try to patch up the breach.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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