CONCERNING THE MEDIOCRACY
"Well, Michaud, what's the news?" asked the general as soon as his wife had left the room.
"General, if you will permit me to say so, it would be better not to talk over matters in this room.Walls have ears, and I should like to be certain that what we say reaches none but our own."
"Very good," said the general, "then let us walk towards the steward's lodge by the path through the fields; no one can overhear us there."
A few moments later the general, with Michaud and Sibilet, was crossing the meadows, while Madame de Montcornet, with the abbe and Blondet, was on her way to the gate of the Avonne.
Michaud related the scene that had just taken place at the Grand-I-
Vert.
"Vatel did wrong," said Sibilet.
"They made that plain to him at once," replied Michaud, "by blinding him; but that's nothing.General, you remember the plan we agreed upon,--to seize the cattle of those depredators against whom judgment was given? Well, we can't do it.Brunet, like his colleague Plissoud, is not loyal in his support.They both warn the delinquents when they are about to make a seizure.Vermichel, Brunet's assistant, went to the Grand-I-Vert this morning, ostensibly after Pere Fourchon; and Marie Tonsard, who is intimate with Bonnebault, ran off at once to give the alarm at Conches.The depredations have begun again."
"A strong show of authority is becoming daily more and more necessary," said Sibilet.
"What did I tell you?" cried the general."We must demand the enforcement of the judgment of the court, which carried with it imprisonment; we must arrest for debt all those who do not pay the damages I have won and the costs of the suits."
"These fellows imagine the law is powerless, and tell each other that you dare not arrest them," said Sibilet."They think they frighten you! They have confederates at Ville-aux-Fayes; for even the prosecuting attorney seems to have ignored the verdicts against them."
"I think," said Michaud, seeing that the general looked thoughtful, "that if you are willing to spend a good deal of money you can still protect the property."
"It is better to spend money than to act harshly," remarked Sibilet.
"What is your plan?" asked the general of his bailiff.
"It is very ******," said Michaud."Inclose the whole forest with walls, like those of the park, and you will be safe; the slightest depredation then becomes a criminal offence and is taken to the assizes."
"At a franc and a half the square foot for the material only, Monsieur le comte would find his wall would cost him a third of the whole value of Les Aigues," said Sibilet, with a laugh.
"Well, well," said Montcornet, "I shall go and see the attorney-
general at once."
"The attorney-general," remarked Sibilet, gently, "may perhaps share the opinion of his subordinate; for the negligence shown by the latter is probably the result of an agreement between them."
"Then I wish to know it!" cried Montcornet."If I have to get the whole of them turned out, judges, civil authorities, and the attorney-
general to boot, I'll do it; I'll go the Keeper of the Seals, or to the king himself."
At a vehement sign made by Michaud the general stopped short and said to Sibilet, as he turned to retrace his steps, "Good day, my dear fellow,"--words which the steward understood.
"Does Monsieur le comte intend, as mayor, to enforce the necessary measures to repress the abuse of gleaning?" he said, respectfully.
"The harvest is coming on, and if we are to publish the statutes about certificates of pauperism and the prevention of paupers from other districts gleaning our land, there is no time to be lost."
"Do it at once, and arrange with Groison," said the count."With such a class of people," he added, "we must follow out the law."
So, without a moment's reflection, Montcornet gave in to a measure that Sibilet had been proposing to him for more than a fortnight, to which he had hitherto refused to consent; but now, in the violence of anger caused by Vatel's mishap, he instantly adopted it as the right thing to do.
When Sibilet was at some distance the general said in a low voice to his bailiff:--
"Well, my dear Michaud, what is it; why did you make me that sign?"
"You have an enemy within the walls, general, yet you tell him plans which you ought not to confide even to the secret police."
"I share your suspicions, my dear friend," replied Montcornet, "but I don't intend to commit the same fault twice over.I shall not part with another steward till I'm sure of a better.I am waiting to get rid of Sibilet, till you understand the business of steward well enough to take his place, and till Vatel is fit to succeed you.And yet, I have no ground of complaint against Sibilet.He is honest and punctual in all his dealings; he hasn't kept back a hundred francs in all these five years.He has a perfectly detestable nature, and that's all one can say against him.If it were otherwise, what would be his plan in acting as he does?"
"General," said Michaud, gravely, "I will find out, for undoubtedly he has one; and if you would only allow it, a good bribe to that old scoundrel Fourchon will enable me to get at the truth; though after what he said just now I suspect the old fellow of having more secrets than one in his pouch.That swindling old cordwainer told me himself they want to drive you from Les Aigues.And let me tell you, for you ought to know it, that from Conches to Ville-aux-Fayes there is not a peasant, a petty tradesman, a farmer, a tavern-keeper who isn't laying by his money to buy a bit of the estate.Fourchon confided to me that Tonsard has already put in his claim.The idea that you can be forced to sell Les Aigues has gone from end to end of the valley like an infection in the air.It may be that the steward's present house, with some adjoining land, will be the price paid for Sibilet's spying.
Nothing is ever said among us that is not immediately known at Ville-