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雙語·邦斯舅舅 五十三、買賣的條件

所屬教程:譯林版·邦斯舅舅

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2022年07月09日

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LIII

The Presidente had folded her arms, and for the last minute or two sat like a person compelled to listen to a sermon. Now she unfolded her arms, and looked at Fraisier as she said, "Monsieur, all that you say concerning your interests has the merit of clearness; but my own interests in the matter are by no means so clear—"

A word or two will explain everything, madame. M. le President is M. Pons' first cousin once removed, and his sole heir. M. Pons is very ill; he is about to make his will, if it is not already made, in favor of a German, a friend of his named Schmucke; and he has more than seven hundred thousand francs to leave. I hope to have an accurate valuation made in two or three days—

If this is so, said the Presidente, "I made a great mistake in quarreling with him and throwing the blame—" she thought aloud, amazed by the possibility of such a sum.

No, madame. If there had been no rupture, he would be as blithe as a lark at this moment, and might outlive you and M. le President and me.... The ways of Providence are mysterious, let us not seek to fathom them, he added to palliate to some extent the hideous idea. "It cannot be helped. We men of business look at the practical aspects of things. Now you see clearly, madame, that M. de Marville in his public position would do nothing, and could do nothing, as things are. He has broken off all relations with his cousin. You see nothing now of Pons; you have forbidden him the house; you had excellent reasons, no doubt, for doing as you did, but the old man is ill, and he is leaving his property to the only friend left to him. A President of the Court of Appeal in Paris could say nothing under such circumstances if the will was made out in due form. But between ourselves, madame, when one has a right to expect seven or eight hundred thousand francs—or a million, it may be (how should I know?)—it is very unpleasant to have it slip through one's fingers, especially if one happens to be the heir-at-law.... But, on the other hand, to prevent this, one is obliged to stoop to dirty work; work so difficult, so ticklish, bringing you cheek by jowl with such low people, servants and subordinates; and into such close contact with them too, that no barrister, no attorney in Paris could take up such a case. What you want is a briefless barrister like me, a man who should have real and solid ability, who has learned to be devoted, and yet, being in a precarious position, is brought temporarily to a level with such people. In my arrondissement I undertake business for small tradespeople and working folk. Yes, madame, you see the straits to which I have been brought by the enmity of an attorney for the crown, now a deputy-public prosecutor in Paris, who could not forgive me my superiority.—I know you, madame, I know that your influence means a solid certainty; and in such a service rendered to you, I saw the end of my troubles and success for my friend Dr. Poulain."

The lady sat pensive during a moment of unspeakable torture for Fraisier. Vinet, an orator of the Centre, attorney-general (procureur-general) for the past sixteen years, nominated half-a-score of times for the chancellorship, the father, moreover, of the attorney for the crown at Mantes who had been appointed to a post in Paris within the last year—Vinet was an enemy and a rival for the malignant Presidente. The haughty attorney-general did not hide his contempt for President Camusot. This fact Fraisier did not know, and could not know.

Have you nothing on your conscience but the fact that you were concerned for both parties? asked she, looking steadily at Fraisier.

Mme. la Presidente can see M. Leboeuf; M. Leboeuf was favorable to me.

Do you feel sure that M. Leboeuf will give M. de Marville and M. le Comte Popinot a good account of you?

I will answer for it, especially now that M. Olivier Vinet has left Mantes; for between ourselves, good M. Leboeuf was afraid of that crabbed little official. If you will permit me, Madame La Presidente, I will go to Mantes and see M. Leboeuf. No time will be lost, for I cannot be certain of the precise value of the property for two or three days. I do not wish that you should know all the ins and outs of this affair; you ought not to know them, Mme. la Presidente, but is not the reward that I expect for my complete devotion a pledge of my success?

Very well. If M. Leboeuf will speak in your favor, and if the property is worth as much as you think (I doubt it myself), you shall have both appointments, if you succeed, mind you—

I will answer for it, madame. Only, you must be so good as to have your notary and your attorney here when I shall need them; you must give me a power of attorney to act for M. le President, and tell those gentlemen to follow my instructions, and to do nothing on their own responsibility.

The responsibility rests with you, the Presidente answered solemnly, "so you ought to have full powers.—But is M. Pons very ill?" she asked, smiling.

Upon my word, madame, he might pull through, especially with so conscientious a doctor as Poulain in attendance; for this friend of mine, madame, is simply an unconscious spy directed by me in your interests. Left to himself, he would save the old man's life; but there is some one else by the sickbed, a portress, who would push him into the grave for thirty thousand francs. Not that she would kill him outright; she will not give him arsenic, she is not so merciful; she will do worse, she will kill him by inches; she will worry him to death day by day. If the poor old man were kept quiet and left in peace; if he were taken into the country and cared for and made much of by friends, he would get well again; but he is harassed by a sort of Mme. Evrard. When the woman was young she was one of thirty Belles Ecailleres, famous in Paris, she is a rough, greedy, gossiping woman; she torments him to make a will and to leave her something handsome, and the end of it will be induration of the liver, calculi are possibly forming at this moment, and he has not enough strength to bear an operation. The doctor, noble soul, is in a horrible predicament. He really ought to send the woman away—

Why, then, this vixen is a monster! cried the lady in thin flute-like tones.

Fraisier smiled inwardly at the likeness between himself and the terrible Presidente; he knew all about those suave modulations of a naturally sharp voice. He thought of another president, the hero of an anecdote related by Louis XI, stamped by that monarch's final praise. Blessed with a wife after the pattern of Socrates' spouse, and ungifted with the sage's philosophy, he mingled salt with the corn in the mangers and forbad the grooms to give water to the horses. As his wife rode along the Seine towards their country-house, the animals bolted into the river with the lady, and the magistrate returned thanks to Providence for ridding him of his wife "in so natural a manner." At this present moment Mme. de Marville thanked Heaven for placing at Pons' bedside a woman so likely to get him "decently" out of the way.

Aloud she said, "I would not take a million at the price of a single scruple.—Your friend ought to speak to M. Pons and have the woman sent away."

In the first place, madame, Messrs. Schmucke and Pons think the woman an angel; they would send my friend away. And secondly, the doctor lies under an obligation to this horrid oyster-woman; she called him in to attend M. Pillerault. When he tells her to be as gentle as possible with the patient, he simply shows the creature how to make matters worse.

What does your friend think of my cousin's condition?

This man's clear, business-like way of putting the facts of the case frightened Mme. de Marville; she felt that his keen gaze read the thoughts of a heart as greedy as La Cibot's own.

In six weeks the property will change hands.

The Presidente dropped her eyes.

Poor man! she sighed, vainly striving after a dolorous expression.

Have you any message, madame, for M. Leboeuf? I am taking the train to Mantes.

Yes. Wait a moment, and I will write to ask him to dine with us to-morrow. I want to see him, so that he may act in concert to repair the injustice to which you have fallen a victim.

The Presidente left the room. Fraisier saw himself a justice of the peace. He felt transformed at the thought; he grew stouter; his lungs were filled with the breath of success, the breeze of prosperity. He dipped into the mysterious reservoirs of volition for fresh and strong doses of the divine essence. To reach success, he felt, as Remonencq half felt, that he was ready for anything, for crime itself, provided that no proofs of it remained. He had faced the Presidente boldly; he had transmuted conjecture into reality; he had made assertions right and left, all to the end that she might authorize him to protect her interests and win her influence. As he stood there, he represented the infinite misery of two lives, and the no less boundless desires of two men. He spurned the squalid horrors of the Rue de la Perle. He saw the glitter of a thousand crowns in fees from La Cibot, and five thousand francs from the Presidente. This meant an abode such as befitted his future prospects. Finally, he was repaying Dr. Poulain. There are hard, ill-natured beings, goaded by distress or disease into active malignity, that yet entertain diametrically opposed sentiments with a like degree of vehemence. If Richelieu was a good hater, he was no less a good friend. Fraisier, in his gratitude, would have let himself be cut in two for Poulain. So absorbed was he in these visions of a comfortable and prosperous life, that he did not see the Presidente come in with the letter in her hand, and she, looking at him, thought him less ugly now than at first. He was about to be useful to her, and as soon as a tool belongs to us we look upon it with other eyes.

M. Fraisier, said she, "you have convinced me of your intelligence, and I think that you can speak frankly."

Fraisier replied by an eloquent gesture.

Very well, continued the lady, "I must ask you to give a candid reply to this question: Are we, either of us, M. de Marville or I, likely to be compromised, directly or indirectly, by your action in this matter?"

I would not have come to you, madame, if I thought that some day I should have to reproach myself for bringing so much as a splash of mud upon you, for in your position a speck the size of a pin's head is seen by all the world. You forget, madame, that I must satisfy you if I am to be a justice of the peace in Paris. I have received one lesson at the outset of my life; it was so sharp that I do not care to lay myself open to a second thrashing. To sum it up in a last word, madame, I will not take a step in which you are indirectly involved without previously consulting you—

Very good. Here is the letter. And now I shall expect to be informed of the exact value of the estate.

There is the whole matter, said Fraisier shrewdly, making his bow to the Presidente with as much graciousness as his countenance could exhibit.

What a providence! thought Mme. Camusot de Marville. "So I am to be rich! Camusot will be sure of his election if we let loose this Fraisier upon the Bolbec constituency. What a tool!"

What a providence! Fraisier said to himself as he descended the staircase; "and what a sharp woman Mme. Camusot is! I should want a woman in these circumstances. Now to work!"

And he departed for Mantes to gain the good graces of a man he scarcely knew; but he counted upon Mme. Vatinelle, to whom, unfortunately, he owed all his troubles—and some troubles are of a kind that resemble a protested bill while the defaulter is yet solvent, in that they bear interest.

五十三、買賣的條件

庭長太太抱著手臂聽著,好像一個人不得不聽一番說教似的;這時她放下手臂,瞅著弗萊齊埃,說道:“先生,關(guān)于你自己的事,你說得一明一白了;可是我覺得你對正文還是一篇糊涂賬……”

“太太,再加一兩句,事情就揭穿了。庭長先生是邦斯先生獨一無二的三等親屬繼承人。邦斯先生病得很重,要立遺囑了,也許已經(jīng)立了。他把遺產(chǎn)送給一個叫作許??说牡聡笥选_z產(chǎn)值到七十萬以上,三天之內(nèi),我可以知道準(zhǔn)確的數(shù)目……”

庭長太太聽了這個數(shù)字大吃一驚,不由得自言自語地說:“要是真的話,我跟他翻臉簡直是大錯特錯了,我不該責(zé)備他……”

“不,太太,要沒有那一場,他會像小鳥一樣的開心,比您,比庭長,比我,都活得久呢……上帝自有他的主意,咱們不必多推敲!”他因為說得太露骨了,特意來這么兩句遮蓋一下,“那是沒有辦法的!咱們吃法律飯的,看事情只看實際。太太,現(xiàn)在您可明白了,以庭長這樣高的地位,他對這件事決不會也決不能有所行動。他跟舅舅變了死冤家,你們不見他的面了,把他從社會上攆出去了;你們這樣做想必有充分的理由;可是事實是那家伙病了,把財產(chǎn)送給了他唯一的朋友。在這種情形之下立的一張合乎法定方式的遺囑,一個巴黎高等法院的庭長能有什么話說呢?可是,太太,我們在私底下看,這究竟是極不愉快的事,明明有權(quán)承繼七八十萬的遺產(chǎn)……誰知道,也許上一百萬呢,我們以法定的唯一的繼承人資格,竟沒有能把這筆遺產(chǎn)抓回來!……要抓回來,就得把自己牽入卑鄙齷齪的陰謀,又疙瘩,又無聊,要跟那些下等人打交道,跟仆役、下屬發(fā)生關(guān)系,緊緊地盯著他們:這樣的事,巴黎沒有一個訴訟代理人,沒有一個公證人辦得了。那需要一個沒有案子的律師,像我這樣的,一方面要真有能力,要赤膽忠心;一方面又潦倒不堪,跟那些人的地位不相上下……我在我一區(qū)里替中下階級、工人、平民辦事……唉,太太,我落到這個田地,就因為如今在巴黎署理的那位檢察官對我起了惡感,不能原諒我本領(lǐng)高人一等……太太,我久仰您大名,知道有了您做靠山是多么穩(wěn)固的,我覺得替您效勞,干了這件事,就有苦盡甘來的希望,而我的朋友波冷醫(yī)生也能夠揚(yáng)眉吐氣了……”

庭長太太有了心事。那一忽兒工夫,弗萊齊??烧婕眽牧恕C⒌碌臋z察官,一年以前被調(diào)到巴黎來署理;他的父親維奈是中間黨派的一個領(lǐng)袖,當(dāng)了十六年檢察署長,早已有資格當(dāng)司法部長,他是陰險的庭長太太的對頭……傲慢的檢察署長公然表示瞧不起加繆索庭長。這些情形是弗萊齊埃不知道,也不應(yīng)該知道的。

“除了在一件案子中接受兩造的委托以外,你良心上沒有別的疙瘩嗎?”她把眼睛瞪著弗萊齊埃問。

“太太可以問勒勃夫先生,他對我是不錯的?!?/p>

“你可有把握,勒勃夫先生替你在庭長跟包比諾伯爵面前說好話嗎?”

“那我可以保證,尤其維奈先生已經(jīng)離開芒德;因為,我可以私下說一句,勒勃夫先生很怕那個干巴巴的檢察官。并且,庭長太太,要是您允許,我可以到芒德去見一見勒勃夫先生。那也不會耽誤事情,因為遺產(chǎn)的準(zhǔn)確數(shù)目要過兩三天才能知道。為這樁事所用的手段,我不愿也不能告訴太太,可是我對自己的盡心盡力所期望的報酬,不就等于保證您成功嗎?”

“行,那么你去想法請勒勃夫先生替你說句好話;要是遺產(chǎn)真像你說的那么可觀,我還不大相信呢,那我答應(yīng)你要求的兩個位置,當(dāng)然是以事情成功為條件啰……”

“我可以擔(dān)保,太太。可是將來我需要的時候,請把您的公證人、訴訟代理人都邀來,以庭長的名義給我一份委托書,同時請您要那幾位聽我調(diào)度,不能自作主張地行動?!?/p>

“你負(fù)了責(zé)任,我當(dāng)然給你全權(quán),”庭長太太的口氣很鄭重,“可是邦斯先生真的病得很重嗎?”她又帶著點笑容問。

“我相信,太太,他是醫(yī)得好的,尤其他找的是個很認(rèn)真的醫(yī)生;我的朋友波冷并沒起什么壞心,他是聽了我的指揮,為您的利益去刺探情形的;他有能力把老音樂家救過來;可是病人身邊有個看門女人,為了三萬法郎會送他進(jìn)墳?zāi)埂2皇侵\殺他,不是給他吃砒霜,她才不那么慈悲呢,她更辣手,用的是軟功,成天不斷地去刺激他??蓱z的老頭兒,換一個安靜的環(huán)境,譬如在鄉(xiāng)下吧,能有周到的服侍,朋友的安慰,一定會恢復(fù);可是給一個潑辣的女人折磨——她年輕時候,是聞名巴黎的二三十個牡蠣美人之中的一個,又貪心,又多嘴,又蠻橫——病人給她磨著,要他在遺囑上送她大大的一筆錢,最后肝臟會硬化的,也許現(xiàn)在已經(jīng)生了結(jié)石,非開刀不可了,而那個手術(shù)病人是受不住的……醫(yī)生哪,是個絕頂好人!……他可為難死了。照理他應(yīng)當(dāng)教病人把那婆娘打發(fā)掉……”

“那潑婦簡直是野獸了!”庭長夫人裝出溫柔的聲音叫。

弗萊齊埃聽到這種跟自己相像的聲音,不由得在肚里暗笑,他知道把天生刺耳的嗓音故意裝作柔和是什么意思。他想起路易十一所說的故事。有位法官娶了一位太太,跟蘇格拉底的太太一模一樣[1],法官卻并沒那個大人物的達(dá)觀,便在燕麥中加了鹽喂他的馬匹,又不給它們喝水。有一天,太太坐了車沿著塞納河到鄉(xiāng)下去,那些馬急于喝水,便連車帶人一起拉到了河里。于是法官感謝上帝替他這樣自自然然地擺脫了太太。這時,瑪維爾太太也在感謝上帝在邦斯身邊安插了一個女人,替她把邦斯不著痕跡地擺脫掉。

她說:“只要有一點兒不清白,哪怕一百萬我也不拿的……你的朋友應(yīng)當(dāng)點醒邦斯先生,把看門女人打發(fā)走?!?/p>

“太太,第一,許??撕桶钏箖晌话堰@女人當(dāng)作天使,不但不肯聽我朋友的話,還會把他打發(fā)走呢。第二,這該死的牡蠣美人還是醫(yī)生的恩人,他給比勒洛先生看病就是她介紹去的。他囑咐她對病人要一百二十分地柔和,可是這個話反而給她指點了加重病勢的方法。”

“你的朋友對我舅舅的病認(rèn)為怎么樣呢?”

弗萊齊埃的答話那么中肯,眼光那么尖銳,把那顆跟西卜女人一樣貪婪的心看得那么清楚,使庭長太太為之一震。

“六個星期之內(nèi),繼承可以開始了[2]?!?/p>

庭長太太把眼睛低了下去。

“可憐的人!”她想裝出哀傷的神氣,可是裝不像。

“太太有什么話要我轉(zhuǎn)達(dá)勒勃夫先生嗎?我預(yù)備坐火車到芒德去。”

“好吧,你坐一會,我去寫封信約他明天來吃飯;我們要他來商量,把你那件冤枉事給平反一下?!?/p>

庭長太太一走開,弗萊齊埃仿佛已經(jīng)當(dāng)上初級法庭庭長,人也不是本來面目了:他胖了起來,好不舒暢地呼吸著快樂的空氣,吹到了萬事如意的好風(fēng)。意志那個神秘的寶庫,給他添了一般強(qiáng)勁的新生的力量,他像雷蒙諾克一樣,覺得為了成功竟有膽子去犯罪,只要不留痕跡。他一鼓作氣來到庭長太太面前,把猜測肯定為事實,天花亂墜地說得鑿鑿有據(jù),但求她委托自己去搶救那筆遺產(chǎn)而得到她的提拔。他和醫(yī)生兩人,過的是無邊苦海的生活,心中存的亦是無窮無極的欲望。他預(yù)備把珍珠街上那個丑惡的住所一腳踢開。盤算之下,西卜女人的酬金大概可有三千法郎,庭長那里五千法郎,這就足夠去租一個像樣的公寓。并且他欠波冷的情分也能還掉了。有些陰險的性格,雖然被苦難磨得非常兇狠,也會感到相反方面的情緒,跟惡念一樣強(qiáng)烈:黎塞留是個殘酷的敵人,也是個熱心的朋友。為了報答波冷的恩惠,弗萊齊埃便是砍下自己的腦袋都愿意。庭長太太拿著一封信進(jìn)來,對這個自以為幸福而有了存款的人,偷偷地瞧了一下,覺得不像她第一眼看到的那么丑了;并且他現(xiàn)在要做她的爪牙了,而我們看自己的工具和看鄰人的工具,眼光總是不同的。

“弗萊齊埃先生,”她說,“我已經(jīng)看出你是個聰明人,我也相信你是坦白的?!?/p>

弗萊齊埃做了個意味深長的姿勢。

“那么,”她接著又說,“請你老老實實回答一個問題:你的行動會不會連累我,或是連累瑪維爾先生?……”

“我絕不敢來見您的,太太,要是將來有一天,我會埋怨自己把泥巴丟在了你們身上,哪怕像針尖般小的污點,在你們身上也要像月亮般大。太太,您忘了我要做一個巴黎初級法庭的庭長,先得使你們滿意。我一生受的第一個教訓(xùn),已經(jīng)使我吃不消了,還敢再碰那樣的釘子嗎?末了,還有一句話,我一切的行動,凡是關(guān)涉到你們的,一定先來請示……”

“那很好。這兒是給勒勃夫先生的信。現(xiàn)在我就等你報告遺產(chǎn)價值的消息?!?/p>

“關(guān)鍵就在這里?!备トR齊埃很狡猾地說,他對庭長太太行著禮,盡他的臉?biāo)鼙硎镜淖龅妹奸_眼笑。

“謝天謝地!”加繆索太太心里想,“哦!我可以有錢啦!加繆索可以當(dāng)選議員啦。派這個弗萊齊埃到鮑貝克縣里去活動,他準(zhǔn)會替我們張羅到多數(shù)的選票。這工具再好沒有了!”

“謝天謝地!”弗萊齊埃走下樓梯的時候想,“加繆索太太真是一個角色!我要有這一類的女人做太太才好呢!行了,干事要緊!”

于是他動身上芒德向一個不大認(rèn)識的人討情去了。他把這希望寄托在華蒂南太太身上。過去他的倒塌就是為了她;可是不幸的愛情,往往像可靠的債務(wù)人的一張到期不付的借票,會加你利錢的。

注解:

[1] 相傳蘇格拉底的妻子極兇悍潑辣,而蘇格拉底認(rèn)為可以訓(xùn)練他的涵養(yǎng)功夫。

[2] 繼承開始為法律術(shù)語,各國法律均有類似“繼承因被繼承人死亡而開始”之定義。

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