that they felt the necessity of "rigging themselves up" (studio
slang). They, therefore, put on their most superlative suits and then
walked over to the steward's lodge, piloted by Jacques Moreau, the
eldest son, a hardy youth, dressed like an English boy in a handsome
jacket with a turned-over collar, who was spending his vacation like a
fish in water on the estate where his father and mother reigned as
aristocrats.
"Mamma," he said, "here are the two artists sent down by Monsieur
Schinner."
Madame Moreau, agreeably surprised, rose, told her son to place
chairs, and began to display her graces.
"Mamma, the Husson boy is with papa," added the lad; "shall I fetch
him?"
"You need not hurry; go and play with him," said his mother.
The remark "you need not hurry" proved to the two artists the
unimportance of their late travelling companion in the eyes of their
hostess; but it also showed, what they did not know, the feeling of a
step-mother against a step-son. Madame Moreau, after seventeen years
of married life, could not be ignorant of the steward's attachment to
Madame Clapart and the little Husson, and she hated both mother and
Title: Cast Adrift
Author: T. S. Arthur
Release Date: October, 2003 [Etext #4592]
[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
[This file was first posted on February 12, 2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
The Project Gutenberg Etext of Cast Adrift
by T. S. Arthur
******This file should be named cstdr10.txt or cstdr10.zip******
Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, cstdr11.txt
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child so vehemently that it is not surprising that Moreau had never
before risked bringing Oscar to Presles.
"We are requested, my husband and myself," she said to the two
artists, "to do you the honors of the chateau. We both love art, and,
above all, artists," she added in a mincing tone; "and I beg you to
make yourselves at home here. In the country, you know, every one
should be at their ease; one must feel wholly at liberty, or life is
_too_ insipid. We have already had Monsieur Schinner with us."
Mistigris gave a sly glance at his companion.
"You know him, of course?" continued Estelle, after a slight pause.
"Who does not know him, madame?" said the painter.
"Knows him like his double," remarked Mistigris.
"Monsieur Grindot told me your name," said Madame Moreau to the
painter. "But--"
"Joseph Bridau," he replied, wondering with what sort of woman he had
to do.
Mistigris began to rebel internally against the patronizing manner of
the steward's wife; but he waited, like Bridau, for some word which