Wealth adds to happiness.”
Cosette made no reply.
Jean Valjean’s visits were not abridged.
Far from it.
When it is the heart which is slipping, one does not halt on the downward slope.
When Jean Valjean wished to prolong his visit and to induce forgetfulness of the hour, he sang the praises of Marius; he pronounced him handsome, noble, courageous, witty, eloquent, good.
Cosette outdid him.
Jean Valjean began again.
They were never weary.
Marius—that word was inexhaustible; those six letters contained volumes.
In this manner, Jean Valjean contrived to remain a long time.
It was so sweet to see Cosette, to forget by her side!
It alleviated his wounds.
It frequently happened that Basque came twice to announce:
“M. Gillenormand sends me to remind Madame la Baronne that dinner is served.”
On those days, Jean Valjean was very thoughtful on his return home.
Was there, then, any truth in that comparison of the chrysalis which had presented itself to the mind of Marius?
Was Jean Valjean really a chrysalis who would persist, and who would come to visit his butterfly?
One day he remained still longer than usual.
On the following day he observed that there was no fire on the hearth.—“Hello!” he thought. “No fire.”—And he furnished the explanation for himself.—“It is perfectly simple.
It is April. The cold weather has ceased.”
“Heavens! how cold it is here!” exclaimed Cosette when she entered.
“Why, no,” said Jean Valjean.
“Was it you who told Basque not to make a fire then?”
“Yes, since we are now in the month of May.”
“But we have a fire until June.
One is needed all the year in this cellar.”
“I thought that a fire was unnecessary.”
“That is exactly like one of your ideas!” retorted Cosette.
On the following day there was a fire.
But the two armchairs were arranged at the other end of the room near the door. “—What is the meaning of this?” thought Jean Valjean.
He went for the armchairs and restored them to their ordinary place near the hearth.
This fire lighted once more encouraged him, however.
He prolonged the conversation even beyond its customary limits.
As he rose to take his leave, Cosette said to him:
“My husband said a queer thing to me yesterday.”
“What was it?”
“He said to me:
‘Cosette, we have an income of thirty thousand livres.
Twenty-seven that you own, and three that my grandfather gives me.’
I replied:
‘That makes thirty.’
He went on:
‘Would you have the courage to live on the three thousand?’
I answered: ‘Yes, on nothing. Provided that it was with you.’
And then I asked:
‘Why do you say that to me?’
He replied:
‘I wanted to know.’”
Jean Valjean found not a word to answer.