"Let us go and find him, and then we'll away to the inn and crack a
bottle of the best Burgundy, perhaps two bottles."
But Cordemais was not readily to be found. None of the company had seen him
since the close of the performance. M. Binet went round to the entrance.
Cordemais was not there. At first he was annoyed; then as he continued in vain
to bawl the fellow's name, he began to grow uneasy; lastly, when Polichinelle,
who was with them, discovered Cordemais' crutch standing discarded behind the
door, M. Binet became alarmed. A dreadful suspicion entered his mind. He grew
visibly pale under his paint.
"But this evening he couldn't walk without the crutch!" he
exclaimed. "How then does he come to leave it there and take himself
off?"
"Perhaps he has gone on to the inn," suggested some one.
"But he could n't walk without his crutch," M. Binet insisted.
Nevertheless, since clearly he was not anywhere about the market-hall, to
the inn they all trooped, and deafened the landlady with their inquiries.
"Oh, yes, M. Cordemais came in some time ago."
"Where is he now?"
"He went away again at once. He just came for his bag."
"For his bag!" Binet was on the point of an apoplexy. "How
long ago was that?"
She glanced at the timepiece on the overmantel. "It would be about half
an hour ago. It was a few minutes before the Rennes diligence passed
through."
"The Rennes diligence!" M. Binet was almost inarticulate.
"Could he... could he walk?" he asked, on a note of terrible anxiety.
"Walk? He ran like a hare when he left the inn. I thought, myself, that
his agility was suspicious, seeing how lame he had been since he fell
downstairs yesterday. Is anything wrong?"
M. Binet had collapsed into a chair. He took his head in his hands, and
groaned.
"The scoundrel was shamming all the time!" exclaimed Climene.
"His fall downstairs was a trick. He was playing for this. He has swindled
us."
"Fifteen louis at least - perhaps sixteen!" said M. Binet.
"Oh, the heartless blackguard! To swindle me who have been as a father to
him - and to swindle me in such a moment."
>From the ranks of the silent, awe-stricken company, each member of which
was wondering by how much of the loss his own meagre pay would be mulcted,
there came a splutter of laughter.
M. Binet glared with blood-injected eyes.
"Who laughs?" he roared. "What heartless wretch has the
audacity to laugh at my misfortune?"
Andre-Louis, still in the sable glories of Scaramouche, stood forward. He
was laughing still.
"It is you, is it? You may laugh on another note, my friend, if I
choose a way to recoup myself that I know of."
"Dullard!" Scaramouche scorned him. "Rabbit-brained elephant!
What if Cordemais has gone with fifteen louis? Hasn't he left you something
worth twenty times as much?"
M. Binet gaped uncomprehending.
"You are between two wines, I think. You've been drinking," he
concluded.
"So I have - at the fountain of Thalia. Oh, don't you see? Don't you
see the treasure that Cordemais has left behind him?"
"What has he left?"
"A unique idea for the groundwork of a scenario. It unfolds itself all
before me. I'll borrow part of the title from Moliere. We'll call it 'Les
Fourberies de Scaramouche,' and if we don't leave the audiences of Maure and
Pipriac with sides aching from laughter I'll play the dullard Pantaloon in
future."
Polichinelle smacked fist into palm. "Superb!" he said, fiercely.
"To cull fortune from misfortune, to turn loss into profit, that is to
have genius.
Scaramouche made a leg. "Polichinelle, you are a fellow after my own
heart. I love a man who can discern my merit. If Pantaloon had half your wit,
we should have Burgundy to-night in spite of the flight of Cordemais."
"Burgundy?" roared M. Binet, and before he could get farther
Harlequin had clapped his hands together.
"That is the spirit, M. Binet. You heard him, landlady. He called for
Burgundy."
"I called for nothing of the kind."
"But you heard him, dear madame. We all heard him."
The others made chorus, whilst Scaramouche smiled at him, and patted his
shoulder.
"Up, man, a little courage. Did you not say that fortune awaits us? And
have we not now the wherewithal to constrain fortune? Burgundy, then, to... to
toast 'Les Fourberies de Scaramouche.'"
And M. Binet, who was not blind to the force of the idea, yielded, took
courage, and got drunk with the rest.
CHAPTER VI. CLIMENE
Diligent search among the many scenarios of the improvisers which have
survived their day, has failed to bring to light the scenario of "Les
Fourberies de Scaramouche," upon which we are told the fortunes of the
Binet troupe came to be soundly established. They played it for the first time
at Maure in the following week, with Andre-Louis - who was known by now as
Scaramouche to all the company, and to the public alike - in the title-role. If
he had acquitted himself well as Figaro-Scaramouche, he excelled himself in the
new piece, the scenario of which would appear to be very much the better of the
two.
After Maure came Pipriac, where four performances were given, two of each of
the scenarios that now formed the backbone of the Binet repertoire. In both
Scaramouche, who was beginning to find himself, materially improved his
performances. So smoothly now did the two pieces run that Scaramouche actually
suggested to Binet that after Fougeray, which they were to visit in the
following week, they should tempt fortune in a real theatre in the important
town of Redon. The notion terrified Binet at first, but coming to think of it,
and his ambition being fanned by Andre-Louis, he ended by allowing himself to
succumb to the temptation.
It seemed to Andre-Louis in those days that he had found his real metier,
and not only was he beginning to like it, but actually to look forward to a
career as actor-author that might indeed lead him in the end to that Mecca of
all comedians, the Comedie Francaise. And there were other possibilities. From
the writing of skeleton scenarios for improvisers, he might presently pass to
writing plays of dialogue, plays in the proper sense of the word, after the
manner of Chenier, Eglantine, and Beaumarchais.
The fact that he dreamed such dreams shows us how very kindly he had taken
to the profession into which Chance and M. Binet between them had conspired to
thrust him. That he had real talent both as author and as actor I do not doubt,
and I am persuaded that had things fallen out differently he would have won for
himself a lasting place among French dramatists, and thus fully have realized
that dream of his.
Now, dream though it was, he did not neglect the practical side of it.
"You realize," he told M. Binet, "that I have it in my power
to make your fortune for you.
He and Binet were sitting alone together in the parlour of the inn at
Pipriac, drinking a very excellent bottle of Volnay. It was on the night after
the fourth and last performance there of "Les Feurberies." The
business in Pipriac had been as excellent as in Maure and Guichen. You will
have gathered this from the fact that they drank Volnay.
"I will concede it, my dear Scaramouche, so that I may hear the
sequel."
"I am disposed to exercise this power if the inducement is sufficient.
You will realize that for fifteen livres a month a man does not sell such
exceptional gifts as mine.
"There is an alternative," said M. Binet, darkly.
"There is no alternative. Don't be a fool, Binet."
Binet sat up as if he had been prodded. Members of his company did not take
this tone of direct rebuke with him.
"Anyway, I make you a present of it," Scaramouche pursued, airily.
"Exercise it if you please. Step outside and inform the police that they
can lay hands upon one Andre-Louis Moreau. But that will be the end of your
fine dreams of going to Redon, and for the first time in your life playing in a
real theatre. Without me, you can't do it, and you know it; and I am not going
to Redon or anywhere else, in fact I am not even going to Fougeray, until we
have an equitable arrangement."
"But what heat!" complained Binet, "and all for what? Why
must you assume that I have the soul of a usurer? When our little arrangement
was made, I had no idea how could I? - that you would prove as valuable to me
as you are? You had but to remind me, my dear Scaramouche. I am a just man. As
from to-day you shall have thirty livres a month. See, I double it at once. I am
a generous man."
"But you are not ambitious. Now listen to me, a moment."
And he proceeded to unfold a scheme that filled Binet with a paralyzing
terror.
"After Redon, Nantes," he said. "Nantes and the Theatre
Feydau."
M. Binet choked in the act of drinking. The Theatre Feydau was a sort of
provincial Comedie Francaise. The great Fleury had played there to an audience
as critical as any in France. The very thought of Redon, cherished as it had
come to be by M. Binet, gave him at moments a cramp in the stomach, so
dangerously ambitious did it seem to him. And Redon was a puppet-show by
comparison with Nantes. Yet this raw lad whom he had picked up by chance three
weeks ago, and who in that time had blossomed from a country attorney into
author and actor, could talk of Nantes and the Theatre Feydau without changing
colour.
"But why not Paris and the Comedie Francaise?" wondered M. Binet,
with sarcasm, when at last he had got his breath.
"That may come later," says impudence.
"Eh? You've been drinking, my friend."
But Andre-Louis detailed the plan that had been forming in his mind.
Fougeray should be a training-ground for Redon, and Redon should be a
training-ground for Nantes. They would stay in Redon as long as Redon would pay
adequately to come and see them, working hard to perfect themselves the while.
They would add three or four new players of talent to the company; he would
write three or four fresh scenarios, and these should be tested and perfected
until the troupe was in possession of at least half a dozen plays upon which
they could depend; they would lay out a portion of their profits on better
dresses and better scenery, and finally in a couple of months' time, if all
went well, they should be ready to make their real bid for fortune at Nantes.
It was quite true that distinction was usually demanded of the companies
appearing at the Feydau, but on the other hand Nantes had not seen a troupe of
improvisers for a generation and longer. They would be supplying a novelty to
which all Nantes should flock provided that the work were really well done, and
Scaramouche undertook - pledged himself - that if matters were left in his own
hands, his projected revival of the Commedia dell' Arte in all its glories
would exceed whatever expectations the public of Nantes might bring to the
theatre.
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