Fabrizio's eye soon caught sight of the vivandiere: she was going on foot, her eyes were red and every now and again she burst into tears.
Fabrizio looked in vain for the little cart and Cocotte.
"Stripped, ruined, robbed!" cried the vivandiere, in answer to our hero's inquiring glance.
He, without a word, got down from his horse, took hold of the bridle and said to the vivandiere:
"Mount!"
She did not have to be told twice.
"Shorten the stirrups for me," was her only remark.
As soon as she was comfortably in the saddle she began to tell Fabrizio all the disasters of the night.
After a narrative of endless length but eagerly drunk in by our hero who, to tell the truth, understood nothing at all of what she said but had a tender feeling for the vivandiere, she went on:
"And to think that they were Frenchmen who robbed me, beat me, destroyed me… ."
"What!
It wasn't the enemy?" said Fabrizio with an air of innocence which made his grave, pale face look charming.
"What a fool you are, you poor boy!" said the vivandiere, smiling through her tears; "but you're very nice, for all that."
"And such as he is, he brought down his Prussian properly," said Corporal Aubry, who, in the general confusion round them, happened to be on the other side of the horse on which the cantiniere was sitting.
"But he's proud," the corporal went on… .
Fabrizio made an impulsive movement.
"And what's your name?" asked the corporal; "for if there's a report going in I should like to mention you."
"I'm called Vasi," replied Fabrizio, with a curious expression on his face. "Boulot, I mean," he added, quickly correcting himself.
Boulot was the name of the late possessor of the marching orders which the gaoler's wife at B—— had given him; on his way from B—— he had studied them carefully, for he was beginning to think a little and was no longer so easily surprised.
In addition to the marching orders of Trooper Boulot, he had stowed away in a safe place the precious Italian passport according to which he was entitled to the noble appellation of Vasi, dealer in barometers.
When the corporal had charged him with being proud, it had been on the tip of his tongue to retort:
"I proud!
I, Fabrizio Volterra, Marchesino del Dongo, who consent to go by the name of a Vasi, dealer in barometers!"
While he was making these reflexions and saying to himself:
"I must not forget that I am called B'oulot, or look out for the prison fate threatens me with," the corporal and the cantiniere had been exchanging a few words with regard to him.
"Don't say I'm inquisitive," said the cantiniere, ceasing to address him in the second person singular, "it's for your good I ask you these questions.
Who are you, now, really?"
Fabrizio did not reply at first.
He was considering that never again would he find more devoted friends to ask for advice, and he was in urgent need of advice from someone.
"We are coming into a fortified place, the governor will want to know who I am, and ware prison if I let him see by my answers that I know nobody in the 4th Hussar Regiment, whose uniform I am wearing!"
In his capacity as an Austrian subject, Fabrizio knew all about the importance to be attached to a passport.
Various members of his family, although noble and devout, although supporters of the winning side, had been in trouble a score of times over their passports; he was therefore not in the least put out by the question which the cantiniere had addressed to him.
But as, before answering, he had to think of the French words which would express his meaning most clearly, the cantiniere, pricked by a keen curiosity, added, to induce him to speak:
"Corporal Aubry and I are going to give you some good advice."
"I have no doubt you are," replied Fabrizio. "My name is Vasi and I come from Genoa; my sister, who is famous for her beauty, is married to a captain.
As I am only seventeen, she made me come to her to let me see something of France, and form my character a little; not finding her in Paris, and knowing that she was with this army, I came on here.
I've searched for her everywhere and haven't found her.
The soldiers, who were puzzled by my accent, had me arrested.
I had money then, I gave some to the gendarme, who let me have some marching orders and a uniform, and said to me:
'Get away with you, and swear you'll never mention my name.' "
"What was he called?" asked the cantiniere.
"I've given my word," said Fabrizio.
"He's right," put in the corporal, "the gendarme is a sweep, but our friend ought not to give his name.
And what is the other one called, this captain, your sister's husband?
If we knew his name, we could try to find him."
"Teulier, Captain in the 4th Hussars," replied our hero.
"And, so," said the corporal, with a certain subtlety, "from your foreign accent the soldiers took you for a spy?"
"That's the abominable word!" cried Fabrizio, his eyes blazing.
"I who love the Emperor so and the French people!
And it was that insult that annoyed me more than anything."