登陆注册
14815400000004

第4章

"/We hope/," Godeschal began again, after reading all through the document, "/that my lords on the Bench will not be less magnanimous than the august author of the decree, and that they will do justice against the miserable claims of the acting committee of the chief Board of the Legion of Honor by interpreting the law in the wide sense we have here set forth/----"

"Monsieur Godeschal, wouldn't you like a glass of water?" said the little messenger.

"That imp of a boy!" said Boucard. "Here, get on your double-soled shanks-mare, take this packet, and spin off to the Invalides."

"/Here set forth/," Godeschal went on. "Add /in the interest of Madame la Vicomtesse/ (at full length) /de Grandlieu/."

"What!" cried the chief, "are you thinking of drawing up an appeal in the case of Vicomtesse de Grandlieu against the Legion of Honor--a case for the office to stand or fall by? You are something like an ass! Have the goodness to put aside your copies and your notes; you may keep all that for the case of Navarreins against the Hospitals. It is late. I will draw up a little petition myself, with a due allowance of 'inasmuch,' and go to the Courts myself."

This scene is typical of the thousand delights which, when we look back on our youth, make us say, "Those were good times."

At about one in the morning Colonel Chabert, self-styled, knocked at the door of Maitre Derville, attorney to the Court of First Instance in the Department of the Seine. The porter told him that Monsieur Derville had not yet come in. The old man said he had an appointment, and was shown upstairs to the rooms occupied by the famous lawyer, who, notwithstanding his youth, was considered to have one of the longest heads in Paris.

Having rung, the distrustful applicant was not a little astonished at finding the head clerk busily arranging in a convenient order on his master's dining-room table the papers relating to the cases to be tried on the morrow. The clerk, not less astonished, bowed to the Colonel and begged him to take a seat, which the client did.

"On my word, monsieur, I thought you were joking yesterday when you named such an hour for an interview," said the old man, with the forced mirth of a ruined man, who does his best to smile.

"The clerks were joking, but they were speaking the truth too," replied the man, going on with his work. "M. Derville chooses this hour for studying his cases, taking stock of their possibilities, arranging how to conduct them, deciding on the line of defence. His prodigious intellect is freer at this hour--the only time when he can have the silence and quiet needed for the conception of good ideas.

Since he entered the profession, you are the third person to come to him for a consultation at this midnight hour. After coming in the chief will discuss each case, read everything, spend four or five hours perhaps over the business, then he will ring for me and explain to me his intentions. In the morning from ten to two he hears what his clients have to say, then he spends the rest of his day in appointments. In the evening he goes into society to keep up his connections. So he has only the night for undermining his cases, ransacking the arsenal of the code, and laying his plan of battle. He is determined never to lose a case; he loves his art. He will not undertake every case, as his brethren do. That is his life, an exceptionally active one. And he makes a great deal of money."

As he listened to this explanation, the old man sat silent, and his strange face assumed an expression so bereft of intelligence, that the clerk, after looking at him, thought no more about him.

A few minutes later Derville came in, in evening dress; his head clerk opened the door to him, and went back to finish arranging the papers.

The young lawyer paused for a moment in amazement on seeing in the dim light the strange client who awaited him. Colonel Chabert was as absolutely immovable as one of the wax figures in Curtius' collection to which Godeschal had proposed to treat his fellow-clerks. This quiescence would not have been a subject for astonishment if it had not completed the supernatural aspect of the man's whole person. The old soldier was dry and lean. His forehead, intentionally hidden under a smoothly combed wig, gave him a look of mystery. His eyes seemed shrouded in a transparent film; you would have compared them to dingy mother-of-pearl with a blue iridescence changing in the gleam of the wax lights. His face, pale, livid, and as thin as a knife, if I may use such a vulgar expression, was as the face of the dead. Round his neck was a tight black silk stock.

Below the dark line of this rag the body was so completely hidden in shadow that a man of imagination might have supposed the old head was due to some chance play of light and shade, or have taken it for a portrait by Rembrandt, without a frame. The brim of the hat which covered the old man's brow cast a black line of shadow on the upper part of the face. This grotesque effect, though natural, threw into relief by contrast the white furrows, the cold wrinkles, the colorless tone of the corpse-like countenance. And the absence of all movement in the figure, of all fire in the eye, were in harmony with a certain look of melancholy madness, and the deteriorating symptoms characteristic of senility, giving the face an indescribably ill-starred look which no human words could render.

But an observer, especially a lawyer, could also have read in this stricken man the signs of deep sorrow, the traces of grief which had worn into this face, as drops of water from the sky falling on fine marble at last destroy its beauty. A physician, an author, or a judge might have discerned a whole drama at the sight of its sublime horror, while the least charm was its resemblance to the grotesques which artists amuse themselves by sketching on a corner of the lithographic stone while chatting with a friend.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 停留一光年的纯白

    停留一光年的纯白

    林夏,记得苏年送我的白玫瑰吗?记得。他说,这代表最纯白的爱情。顾末,其实白玫瑰的花语是——死去的爱人。
  • 若悔

    若悔

    “我到现在还一直宁愿你当年开枪打死我”她对着这个应该称之为父亲的人“女儿,你说得对,是我的错,如果我当年开枪打死你,你就不会再经受那么多的苦,可是,你让我怎么能狠得下心把枪口对准你这个我这世上唯一的亲人啊”“您说得对,所以我早就不再怨恨你了,可是事实已然如此,我只有选择跟随他走下去,因为他说过我是他这个世上唯一的亲人,也许从我被当做人质留在岛上的那一刻起,我就没得选择了,所以请您成全我吧,爸”他猛地一怔,眼里闪烁着惊喜和痛楚,这声迟到了十五年的称呼,在此时此景被女儿叫出来,他不知该喜还是忧。结束了吗?还是这只是个开始?
  • 宇宙保护队

    宇宙保护队

    本小说为科幻类玄幻小说,新人请多关照,求多收藏多推荐,各位路过的客观们小弟跪谢啦
  • 腹黑首席:唯爱契约前妻

    腹黑首席:唯爱契约前妻

    林暖认为,十个月的婚姻,说长不长,说短也挺短。她只做他十个月的妻子,直到为他生下孩子为止。当她躺在病床上,听到他说:“无论如何,都要保住孩子,至于母亲,无所谓了。”再见面,他眼里有着激动,而她:对不起江先生,我想我并不认识你。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 星辰之主

    星辰之主

    绝世修炼圣体,十几年来却被误以为是不能修炼的废物。酝酿已久的阴谋,让他成为九死一生的试验品。被逼换上一颗几万年前的心脏,却意外的觉醒圣体。从天而降的神庙,莫名消失的强者,消声匿迹的神兽,荒古的神秘面纱被他缓缓解开。
  • 寞道

    寞道

    祈神衍生作品————————————我想有一座山,一座属于我的山,我想要一个人,一个懂我的人。少年在青山之巅说了一段话,没人听见,受尽挫折,感受过世态炎凉,如果有机会,找到前世的记忆,他会干嘛?一张铜片,一段记忆,一个本该是他却不属于他的他。————恒阳无渡版简介(本书一开始的内容是另外本书的,后来修改了内容,分组应该选玄幻,仙侠来的朋友抱歉了。)
  • 泪忆彼岸

    泪忆彼岸

    千年轮回,当她与他再次相遇,那莫名的熟悉感是否会唤起封存千年的回忆?
  • 修真美少女

    修真美少女

    两位女主修真过程、经历,来看看她们的故事吧!
  • 末世新元年

    末世新元年

    世界又一次毁灭于天灾,人类再次经历洗牌,在这末世新元年,人类再次面临着各种挑战,最终人类将灭亡于地心恶魔,还是天外异族……还是人类自己?每个时代人类都不缺乏英雄,人族灭亡之际,拯救人族的英雄即将横空出世,他并不是一个人,他并不寂寞!这里有新科技,有古武学,这里有飞剑,这里有冒险,这里是新世界!
  • 巾帼杀手

    巾帼杀手

    落魄的少女如何在孤苦中艰难成长,无根浮萍怎样在杀戮中不断前行,物欲横流的年代在黑暗中不断前行的她是否能够坚守本心,是放弃,还是抉择,冷艳的外表下究竟隐藏着一颗怎样的内心......