Sour Grapes.
On this sweltering day in 1765, one of the hottest of the year in southwest France, the sounds of the horse-drawn two-wheeled cart carried far over the flat farmlands.
Corrine du Corbieres noticed the faint, far-off sounds first.
Corrine held her sun-browned hand to her eyes against the glaring sun and focused upon what was stirring the rising plume of brown dust that stained the otherwise clear blue sky.
A moment later, Corrine grunted in satisfaction as her supposition proved correct: He - de Bergerac - was here.
Corrine stepped out of the traditional grape press - the 20-foot-long by 4-foot-wide tiltable wooden trough - of ankle-deep, half-pressed black grapes and onto the dark, fertile soil, which stuck to the juice-slicked soles of her sun-bronzed bare feet.
Upon stepping from the trough, Corrine would usually stand and rub the soles of her feet against its rough outer planking in an up-and-down movement. By these means, she would dislodge the major lumps of juice-dampened soil before stepping into her well-worn sabots... But not this time. Corrine's gaze was too intent upon the cart's passenger.
The other eleven female grape crushers had now also ceased their grape-treading labours. Just like their forewoman, Corrine, they too were looking avidly across the regimented rows of grapevines at the slowly approaching and gradually clarifying horse-drawn two-wheeled cart and focusing their gaze not on the driver but on its single, standing passenger.
Corrine's sister grape pulverisers now stepped out of the knee-high, long wooden grape pressing trough and onto the dark soil.
And neither did they rub their bare feet against the trough's rough exterior boarding to free the bigger lumps of clingy nutrient-rich terroir that stuck to their juice-wettened soles, as they too normally would, before inserting their feet into their old or hand-me-down backless clog-like sabots.
Standing united in their land worker tatty, threadbare attire in their dirty bare feet, enmity emanated from their sweaty, sunburned faces as they glowered their bitter resentment at the slowly approaching cart.
The twelve weather-worn, hard-bitten, attitudinous young women made a formidable-looking reception party as they stood with their arms folded.
Gilles de Bergerac - aristocrat owner of appellation-supreme winery Chateau la Feete - was expected.
***
Driven by a Social Charter Committee appointee detailed to oversee Civil Punishment and Compensation proceedings, the horse-drawn two-wheeled cart arrived with its single passenger and, as pre-arranged, halted alongside the grape-pressing trough.
The driver got down from his seat, took off his three-cornered hat, walked between his cart and the rudimentary grape press and slid the bolt to drop the cart's sideboard.
Proud and unbowed, arrogance personified, stood Gilles de Bergerac.
Arriving directly from the expected negative outcome of his Judicial Hearing, splendidly attired in his powdered wig, gold-braided blue frock coat and silver-buckled shoe finery, the flaunting of such flamboyant symbols of privileged societal status served only to antagonise and inflame further the belligerence and envy of his penny poor employees.
Hands restrained behind his back - another grievous insult to his esteemed upper-echelon station - his great umbrage plainly written on his face, Gilles de Bergerac stared downward at the twelve perspiring sun-seared vengeful faces of his all-female workforce.
The all-female workforce that he had criminally wronged, according to the findings of the Social Charter's Judiciary of Appeal, upon their having now passed judgment upon the five primary complaints formally submitted to them last week by his forewoman Corrine du Corbieres:
1) Doubled this year, the rents of his workers' on-site wretched dwellings.
2) Reneged on his promised productivity bonus payments.
3) Withheld their wages for weeks at a time.
4) Behaved towards his employees licentiously - abusing his authority in a manner grossly inappropriate in an employer/employee relationship.
5) And - the most grievous of all: halved their daily wine allowance.
Gilles de Bergerac stared down at his twelve grape crushers' baleful gazes - at their hostile, pitiless faces... and knew he could expect no quarter. Not that he would have asked those harlots for any; his aristocratic pride would not permit it.
But, for all of his outward bravura, his acute anxiety at his unthinkable predicament - and his trepidation at his imminent punishment, was apparent.
For all of his proud defiance - for all of the disdain that he projected toward them in his inbred air of upper-class superiority - Gilles de Bergerac was sweating from more than the mid-afternoon heat.
Gilles de Bergerac jutted his goatee-bearded chin at the lower-class females he so disdained - but who, now, as never before, were staring right back at him, eye to eye.
Unflinchingly.
But not just unflinchingly - brazenly.
And not just brazenly - insolently.
And not just insolently.
Challengingly.
Apparently, behind their land workers' protective shield, afforded to them by the new Socialist government, who appreciated the vital importance of their wine-producing roles, they were all feeling safe and secure from him. After being assured of the unlikelihood of any unpleasant comebacks from their master, as any form of reprisals by him would result in the confiscation of his winery by the Socialist government, Gilles de Bergerac's twelve grape-treader employees stared up at him resolutely.
Gilles de Bergerac and others of the elite classes thought the new Socialist government were too big for their boots. The land workers' protective shield was the reason for his employees' newfound brazen confidence - their new air of authority-defying challenge.