At the period when the people of St. Sampson were particularly excited on the subject of Gilliatt, the last persons who had seen the King of the Auxcriniers declared that his pelerine was now ornamented with only thirteen shells. Thirteen! He was only the more dangerous. But what had become of the fourteenth? Had he given it to some one? No one would say positively; and folks confined themselves to conjecture. But it was an undoubted fact that a certain Mons. Lupin Mabier, of Godaines, a man of property, paying a good sum to the land tax, was ready to depose on oath, that he had once seen in the hands of Gilliatt a very remarkable kind of shell.
It was not uncommon to hear dialogues like the following among the country people:—
“I have a fine bull here, neighbour, what do you say?”
“It is a fact, tho’ ’tis I who say it; he is better though for tallow than for meat.”
“Ver dia!”
“Are you sure that Gilliatt hasn’t cast his eye upon it?”
Gilliatt would stop sometimes beside a field where some labourers were assembled, or near gardens in which gardeners were engaged, and would perhaps hear these mysterious words:
“When the mors du diable flourishes, reap the winter rye.”
(The mors du diable is the scabwort plant.)