<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</SPAN><br/> <span class="chapterhead">THE GARDEN HOUSE.</span></h2>
<p><span class="firstwords">From</span> coming home so late, and dropping off to sleep so soon
and heavily, Gilbert forgot to hang up the linen cloth which
served as curtain to the garret window. The unintercepted
sunbeam struck his eyes at five and speedily woke him. He
rose, vexed at having overslept.</p>
<p>Brought up in the country, he could exactly tell the time by
the sun's inclination and the amount of heat it emitted. He
hastened to consult this clock. The pallor of the dawn,
scarcely clearing the high trees, set him at ease; he was rising
too early, not too late.</p>
<p>He made his ablutions at the skylight, thinking over what
had happened over night, and gladly baring his burning and
burdened forehead to the fresh morning breeze. Then it came
to his mind that Andrea was housed next door to Armenonville
House, in an adjoining street. He wanted to distinguish this
residence.</p>
<p>The sight of shade-trees reminded him of her question to
her brother,—Was there a garden where they were going?</p>
<p>"Why may it not be just such a house in the back garden
as we have yonder?" he asked himself.</p>
<p>By a strange coincidence with his thought, a sound and a
movement quite unusual drew his attention where it was
turning; one of the long fastened up windows of a house
built at the rear of the one on the other street shook under a
rough or clumsy hand. The frame gave way at the top; but
it stuck probably with damp swelling it at the bottom. A still
rougher push started the two folds of the sash, which opened
like a door, and the gap showed a girl, red with the exertion
she had to make and shaking her dusty hands.</p>
<p>Gilbert uttered an outcry in astonishment and quickly drew
back, for this sleepy and yawning girl was Nicole.</p>
<p>He could harbor no doubt now. Philip Taverney had told<SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></SPAN>
his father that he had sent on Labrie and their maid servant
to get a lodging ready in Paris. Hence this was the one. The
house in Coq-Heron Street, where the travelers had disappeared—was
this with the extra building in the rear.</p>
<p>Gilbert's withdrawal had been so marked that Nicole must
have noticed it only for her being absorbed in that idle fit
seizing one just arisen. But he had retired swiftly, not
to be caught by her while looking out of a garret window.
Perhaps if he had lived on the first floor, and his window had
given a view within of a richly furnished apartment, he
would have called her attention on it. But the fifth flat still
classed him among social inferiors, so that he wanted to keep
in the background.</p>
<p>Besides, it is always an advantage to see without being seen.</p>
<p>Again, if Andrea saw him, might she not consider that
enough to induce her to move away, or at least not to stroll
about the garden?</p>
<p>Alas, for Gilbert's conceit! it enlarged him in his own eyes;
but what mattered Gilbert to the patrician, and what would
make her move a step nearer or further from him? Was she
not of the class of women who would come out from a bath
with a peasant or a footman by, and not regard them as men?</p>
<p>But Nicole was not of this degree, and she had to be avoided.</p>
<p>But Gilbert did not keep away from the window. He returned
to peep out at the corner.</p>
<p>A second window, exactly beneath the other, opened also,
and the white figure appearing there was Andrea's. In a
morning gown, she was stooping to look after her slipper
fallen under a chair.</p>
<p>In vain did Gilbert, every time he saw his beloved, make a
vow to resist his passion within a rampart of hate; the same
effect followed the cause. He was obliged to lean on the wall,
with his heart throbbing as if to burst and the blood boiling
all over his body.</p>
<p>As the arteries cooled gradually, he reflected. The main
point was to spy without being seen. He took one of Madame
Rousseau's old dresses off the clothesline, and fastened it with
a pin on a string across his window so that he might watch
Andrea under the improvised screen.</p>
<p>Andrea imitated Nicole in stretching her lovely arms, which,
by this extension, parted the gown an instant; then she
leaned out to examine the neighboring grounds at her leisure.
Her face expressed rare satisfaction, for while she seldom
smiled on men, she made up for it by often smiling on things.</p>
<p>On all sides the rear house was shaded by fine trees.</p>
<p>Rousseau's house attracted her gaze like all the other buildings,
but no more. From her point, the upper part alone
could be espied, but what concern had she in the servants'
quarters in a house?</p>
<SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></SPAN>
<p>Andrea therefore came to the conclusion that she was unseen
and alone, with no curious or joking face of Parisians on
the edge of this tranquil retreat, so dreaded by country
ladies.</p>
<p>Leaving her window wide open for the sunshine to flush the
remotest corners, the young lady went to pull the bellrope at
the fire-place side and began to dress in the twilight. Nicole
ran in and opening the straps of a shagreen dressing-case
dating from a previous reign, took a tortoise-shell comb and
disentangled her mistress' tresses.</p>
<p>Gilbert smothered a sigh. He could hardly be said to
recognize the hair, for Andrea followed the fashion in powdering
it, but he knew her a hundred times fairer without the
frippery than in the most pompous decorations. His mouth
dried up, his fingers scorched with fever, and his eye ceased to
see from his staring <SPAN name="tn_png_163"></SPAN><!--TN: "to" changed to "too" on Page 161-->too hard.</p>
<p>Chance ruled that Andrea's gaze, idle as it was from her sitting
still to have her hair brushed, fell on Rousseau's attic.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, keep on staring," uttered the youth, "but you
will see nothing and I shall see all."</p>
<p>But he was wrong, for she descried the novel screen of the
old dress which floated round the man's head as a kind of
turban. She pointed out this odd curtain to her maid.
Nicole stopped and pointed with the comb to the object to ask
whether that were the reason for her mistress' amusement.</p>
<p>Without his suspecting it, this had a fourth spectator.</p>
<p>He suddenly felt a hasty hand snatch Madame Rousseau's
dress from his brow, and he fell back thunderstricken at recognizing
the master.</p>
<p>"What the deuse are you up to?" queried the philosopher,
with a frowning brow and a sour grin as he examined the
gown.</p>
<p>"Nothing," stammered the other, trying to divert the intruder's
sight from the window.</p>
<p>"Then why hide up in this dress?"</p>
<p>"The sun was too bright for me."</p>
<p>"The sun is at the back of us, and I think it is you who are
too bright for me. You have very weak eyes, young man."</p>
<p>Rousseau walked straight up to the window. By a very
natural feeling to be a veil to his beauty, Gilbert, who had
shrunk away, now rushed in between.</p>
<p>"Bless me, the rear house is lived in now!" The tone froze
the blood in Gilbert's veins, and he could not get out a word.
"And by people who know my house, for they are pointing up
to it," added the suspicious author.</p>
<p>Gilbert, fearful now that he was too forward, retreated.
Neither the movement nor its cause escaped Rousseau, who
saw that his <SPAN name="tn_png_163a"></SPAN><!--TN: "employe" changed to "employee" on Page 161-->employee trembled to be seen.</p>
<p>"No, you don't, young man!" he said, grasping him by the<SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></SPAN>
wrist; "there is some plot afoot, for they are pointing out
your garret. Stand here, pray."</p>
<p>He placed him before the window, in the uncovered glare.</p>
<p>Gilbert would have had to struggle with his idol, and respect
restrained him from thus being free.</p>
<p>"You know those women, and they know you," continued
Rosseau, "or, why do you shrink from showing yourself?"</p>
<p>"Monsieur Rousseau, you have had secrets in your life.
Pity for mine!"</p>
<p>"Traitor!" cried the writer; "I know your sort of secret.
You are the tool of my enemies, the Grimms and Holbachs.
They taught you a part to captivate my benevolence, and,
sneaking into my house, you are betraying me. Threefold
fool that I am, stupid lover of nature, to think I was helping
one of my kind, and to nourish a spy!"</p>
<p>"A spy?" repeated the other in revolt.</p>
<p>"When are you to deliver me to my murderers, O Judas?"
demanded Rousseau, draping himself in Therese's dress, which
he had mechanically kept in hand, and looking droll when he
fancied he was sublime with sorrow.</p>
<p>"You calumniate me, sir," said Gilbert.</p>
<p>"Calumniate this little viper!" said the philosopher, "when
I catch you corresponding in dumb show with my enemies—I
daresay acquainting them in signs with my latest work."</p>
<p>"Had I come to steal your story, sir, I should better have
made a copy of the manuscript, lying on your desk, than to
convey it in signs."</p>
<p>This was true, and Rousseau felt that he had made one of
those blunders which escaped him in his moments of fear, and
he became angry.</p>
<p>"I am sorry for you, but experience makes me stern," he
said. "My life has passed amid deceit. I have been betrayed
by everybody, denied, sold and martyrized. You
know I am one of those illustrious unfortunates whom governments
outlaw. Under such circumstances, I may be allowed
to be suspicious. As you are a suspicious character, you
must take yourself out of this house."</p>
<p>Gilbert had not expected this conclusion. He was to be
driven forth! He clenched his fists, and a flash in his eyes
made Rousseau start. Gilbert reflected that in going he
would lose the mild pleasure of seeing his loved one during
the day, and lose Rousseau's affection—it was shame as well
as misfortune.</p>
<p>Dropping from his fierce pride, he clasped his hands and
implored:</p>
<p>"Listen to me, if only one word!"</p>
<p>"I am merciless," replied the author: "man's injustice
has made me more ferocious than a tiger. Go and join my
enemies with whom you correspond. League yourself with<SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></SPAN>
them, which I do not hinder, but do all this beyond my
domicile."</p>
<p>"Those young women are no enemies of yours—they are
Mademoiselle Andrea of Taverney, the young lady I told you
of, on whose estate I was born, and her maid Nicole. Excuse
me troubling you with such matters, but you drive me to it.
This is the lady whom I love more than you ever loved all
your flames. It is she whom I followed afoot, penniless and
wanting bread, until I fell exhausted on the highway and
racked with pain. It is she whom I saw once more yesterday
at St. Denis, and behind whose coach I came till I housed her
in the place yonder. In short, it is she for whom I wish one
of these days to be a great man—a Rousseau!"</p>
<p>His hearer knew the human heart, and the gamut of its exclamations.
The best actor could hardly have Gilbert's tearful
voice and the feverish gesture accompanying the effusion.</p>
<p>"So this is your lady love?"</p>
<p>"My foster-sister, yes."</p>
<p>"Then you lied a while ago when you said you knew her
not, and you are a liar, if not a traitor."</p>
<p>"You are racking my heart and you would hurt me less
were you to slay me on the spot."</p>
<p>"Pooh! that is a mere piece of fustian out of the Diderot or
Marmontel books. You are a liar, sir."</p>
<p>"Have it so, and the worse for you that you do not understand
such white lies!" retorted Gilbert. "I shall go, heartbroken,
and you will have my despair on your conscience."</p>
<p>Rousseau smoothed his chin and regarded the youth whose
case had so much analogy with his own.</p>
<p>"He is either a great rogue or a lad with a big heart," he
mused; "but after all, if he is in a plot against me, it will be
best to have the wires of the puppets in my hand."</p>
<p>Gilbert strode to the door, but he paused with his hand on
the knob, waiting for the last word to recall or banish him.</p>
<p>"Enough on this head, my son," said the man of letters.
"It is hard enough for you to be in love, to this degree. But
it is getting on, and we have thirty pages of music to copy
this day. Look alive, Gilbert, look alive!"</p>
<p>Gilbert grasped the speaker's hand and pressed it to his lips
as he would not a king's. While Gilbert leaned up against
the doorjamb with emotion, Rousseau took a last peep out of
the window. This was the moment when Andrea stood up to
put on her dress, but seeing a person up at the attic window,
she darted back and bade Nicole shut the sashes.</p>
<p>"My old head frightened her," mumbled the philosopher;
"his youthful one would not have done that. Oh, youth,
lovely youth!" he broke forth, sighing, "'Spring is the love-time
of the year! love is the springtime of life!'"</p>
<p>Hanging up the dress, he melancholically descended the<SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN>
stairs at the heels of Gilbert, for whose youth he would at
that time have bartered his reputation, at that juncture counterbalancing
Voltaire's and with it sharing the admiration of
the entire world.</p>
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