'La Joie de Vivre,' here translated as 'The Joy of Life,' was
written by M. Zola in 1883, partly at his country house at Médan,
and partly at Bénodet, a little seaside place in Brittany. The
scene of the story is laid, however, on the coast of the
neighbouring province of Normandy, between the mouth of the Orne
and the rocks of Grandcamp, where the author had sojourned, more
than once, in previous years. The title selected by him for this
book is to be taken in an ironical or sarcastic sense. There is no
joy at all in the lives of the characters whom he portrays in it.
The story of the 'hero' is one of mental weakness, poisoned by a
constantly recurring fear of death; whilst that of his father is
one of intense physical suffering, blended with an eager desire to
continue living, even at the cost of yet greater torture. Again,
the story of the heroine is one of blighted affections, the
wrecking of all which might have made her life worth living. And
there is a great deal of truth in the various pictures of human
existence which are thus presented to us; however much some people,
in their egregious vanity, may recoil from the idea that life and
love and talent and glory are all very poor and paltry
things.M. Zola is not usually a pessimist. One finds many of his
darkest pictures relieved by a touch of hopefulness; but there is
extremely little in the pages of 'La Joie de Vivre,' which is
essentially an analysis of human suffering and misery.
Nevertheless, the heroine, Pauline Quenu, the daughter of the
Quenus who figure largely in 'Le Ventre de Paris' ('The Fat and the
Thin'), is a beautiful, touching, and almost consolatory creature.
She appears to the reader as the embodiment of human abnegation and
devotion. Her guardians rob her, but she scarcely heeds it; her
lover Lazare, their son, discards her for another woman, but she
forgives him. It is she who infuses life into the lungs of her
rival's puny babe; and when Lazare yields to his horrible fear of
death it is she who tries to comfort him, who endeavours to dispel
the gloomy thoughts which poison his hours. No sacrifice is too
great for her—money, love, she relinquishes everything, in the vain
hope of securing a transient happiness for the man to whom she has
given her heart. At times, no doubt, she yearns for his affection,
she experiences momentary weaknesses, but her spirit is strong, and
it invariably triumphs over her rebellious flesh.Lazare, on the other hand, is one of those wretched beings
whose number seems to be constantly increasing in our midst, the
product of our corrupt civilisation, our grotesque educational
systems, our restlessness and thirst for wealth, our thousand vices
and our blatant hypocrisy. At the same time he is a talented young
fellow, as are so many of the wretcheddécadentsof nowadays; and 'something
more or something less' in his brain might have turned his talent
into genius. In this respect, indeed, he suggests another of M.
Zola's characters, Claude Lantier, the painter of 'L'Œuvre'; but he
is far weaker than was Claude, whose insanity sprang from his
passion for his art, whereas Lazare's mental disorder is the fruit
of that lack, both of will-power and of the spirit of perseverance,
which always becomes manifest in decaying races. Briefly, he is a
type of the talented, versatile, erratic weakling—a variety of what
Paris expressively calls thearriviste, who loomed so largely through the final years of the last
century, and who by force of numbers, not of power, threatens to
dominate the century which has just begun.In one respect Lazare differs greatly from Claude Lantier.
Claude's insanity drove him to suicide, but Lazare shrinks from the
idea of annihilation. His whole life indeed is blighted by the
unreasoning fear of death to which I have previously alluded. In
the brightest moments of Lazare's existence, in the broad sunshine,
amid the fairest scenes of Nature, in the very transports of love,
as in moments of anxiety and bereavement, and as in the gloom, the
silence, and the solitude of night, the terrible, ever-recurring
thought flashes on him: 'My God, my God, so one must die!' In the
course of years this dread is intensified by the death of his
mother and his old dog; and neither of the women who love him—the
devoted Pauline, whom he discards, and the puppet Louise, whom he
marries—can dispel it. The pious may argue that this fear of death
is only natural on the part of an unbeliever, and that the proper
course for Lazare to have pursued was to have sought the
consolation of religion. But they have only to visit a few lunatic
asylums to find in them extremely devout patients, who, whilst
believing in a resurrection and a future life, nevertheless dread
death quite as keenly as Lazare Chanteau did. Indeed, this fear of
dissolution constitutes a well-known and perfectly defined disorder
of the brain, rebellious alike to scientific and to spiritual
treatment.By the side of Lazare and Pauline 'La Joie de Vivre' shows us
the former's parents. There is Lazare's mother, who despoils and
wrongs Pauline for his benefit, who lives a life of sour envy, and
who dies a wretched death, fearful of punishment. And there is his
father, whose only thought is his stomach, and who, as I have
mentioned, clings despairingly to a semblance of life amid the
direst physical anguish. Louise, whom Lazare marries, is a
skilfully drawn type of the weak, pretty, scented, coquettish,
frivolous woman, who seems to have been with us ever since the
world began, the woman to whom men are drawn by a perversion of
natural instincts, and whom they need, perhaps, in order that in
their saner moments they may the better appreciate the qualities of
those few who resemble Pauline. As for the subordinate characters
of the story, the grumpy Norman servant, though of a type often met
with in M. Zola's stories, is perhaps the best, the various changes
in her disposition towards the heroine being described with great
fidelity to human nature. Then the rough but kind-hearted old
doctor, the sturdy, tolerant priest, the artful and vicious village
children, are all admirably delineated by M. Zola, and grouped
around the central figures in such wise as to add to the truth,
interest, and impressiveness of his narrative. And, painful as the
tale at times may be, it is perhaps as well, in these days of pride
and vanity, that one should be recalled now and again to a sense of
the abject grovelling which unhappily characterises such a vast
number of human lives. It may slightly console one, no doubt, to
remember that there are at least some Paulines among us. But then,
how few they are, and how numerous on the other hand are the men
like Lazare and the women like his mother! When all is considered,
judging by what one sees around one every day, one is forced to the
conclusion that this diseased world of ours makes extremely little
progress towards real sanity and health.E. A. V.MERTON, SURREY.THE JOY OF LIFE
I
When the cuckoo-clock in the dining-room struck six, Chanteau
lost all hope. He rose with a painful effort from the arm-chair in
which he was sitting, warming his heavy, gouty legs before a coke
fire. Ever since two o'clock he had been awaiting the arrival of
Madame Chanteau, who, after five weeks' absence, was to-day
expected to bring from Paris their little cousin, Pauline Quenu, an
orphan girl, ten years of age, whose guardianship they had
undertaken.'I can't understand it at all, Véronique,' he said, opening
the kitchen-door. 'Some accident must have happened to
them.'The cook, a tall stout woman of five-and-thirty, with hands
like a man's and a face like a gendarme's, was just removing from
the fire a leg of mutton, which seemed in imminent danger of being
over-done. She did not express her irritation in words, but the
pallor of her usually ruddy cheeks betokened her
displeasure.'Madame has, no doubt, stayed in Paris,' she said curtly,
'looking after that endless business which is putting us all
topsy-turvy.''No! no!' answered Chanteau. 'The letter we had yesterday
evening said that the little girl's affairs were completely
settled. Madame was to arrive this morning at Caen, where she
intended making a short stay to see Davoine. At one o'clock she was
to take the train again; at two she would alight at Bayeux; at
three, old Malivoire's coach would put her down at Arromanches.
Even if Malivoire wasn't ready to start at once, Madame ought to
have been here by four o'clock, or by half-past at the latest.
There are scarcely six miles from Arromanches to
Bonneville.'The cook kept her eyes fixed on the joint, and only shook her
head while these calculations were thrown at her. After some little
hesitation Chanteau added: 'I think you had better go to the corner
of the road and look if you can see anything of them,
Véronique.'She glared at him, growing still paler with suppressed
anger.'Why? What for? Monsieur Lazare is already out there, getting
drenched in looking for them: and what's the good of my going and
getting wet through also?''The truth is,' murmured Chanteau, softly, 'that I am
beginning to feel a little uneasy about my son as well. He ought to
have been back by this time. What can he have been doing out on the
road for the last hour?'Without vouchsafing any answer Véronique took from a nail an
old black woollen shawl, which she threw over her head and
shoulders. Then, as she saw her master following her into the
passage, she said to him, rather snappishly: 'Go back to your fire,
if you don't want to be bellowing with pain
to-morrow.'She shut the door with a bang, and put on her clogs while
standing on the steps and crying out to the wind:'The horrid little brat! Putting us to all this
trouble!'Chanteau's composure remained perfect. He was accustomed to
Véronique's ebullitions of temper. She had entered his service in
the first year of his married life, when she was but a girl of
fifteen. As soon as the sound of her clogs had died away, he bolted
off like a schoolboy, and planted himself at the other end of the
passage, before a glass door which overlooked the sea. There he
stood for a moment, gazing at the sky with his blue eyes. He was a
short, stout man, with thick closely-cut white hair. He was
scarcely fifty-six years old, but gout, to which he was a martyr,
had prematurely aged him.Just then he was feeling anxious and troubled, and hoped that
little Pauline would be able to win Véronique's affection. But was
it his fault that she was coming? When the Paris notary had written
to tell him that his cousin Quenu, whose wife had died some six
months previously, had just died also, charging him in his will
with the guardianship of his little daughter, he had not felt able
to refuse the trust. It was true they had not seen much of one
another, as the family had been dispersed. Chanteau's father, after
leaving the South and wandering all over France as a journeyman
carpenter, had established a timber-yard at Caen; while, on the
other hand, Quenu, at his mother's death, had gone to Paris, where
one of his uncles had subsequently given him a flourishing
pork-butcher's business, in the very centre of the market
district.[1]They
had only met each other some two or three times, on occasions when
Chanteau had been compelled by his gout to quit his business and
repair to Paris for special medical advice. But the two men had
ever had a genuine respect for one another, and the dying father
had probably thought that the sea air would be beneficial to his
daughter. The girl, too, as the heiress of the pork-butcher's
business, would certainly be no charge upon them. Madame Chanteau,
indeed, had fallen so heartily into the scheme that she had
insisted upon saving her husband all the dangerous fatigue of the
journey to Paris. Setting off alone and bustling about she had
settled everything, in her perpetual craving for activity; and
Chanteau was quite contented so long as his wife was
pleased.But what could be detaining the pair of them? Anxiety seized
him again, as he looked out upon the dark sky, over which the west
wind was driving huge masses of black clouds, like sooty rags whose
tattered ends draggled far away into the sea. It was one of those
March gales, when the equinoctial tides beat furiously upon the
shores. The flux was only just setting in, and all that could be
seen of it was a thin white bar of foam, far away towards the
horizon. The wide expanse of bare beach, a league of rocks and
gloomy seaweed, its level surface blotched here and there with dark
pools, had a weirdly melancholy aspect as it lay stretched out
beneath the quickly increasing darkness that fell from the black
clouds scudding across the skies.'Perhaps the wind has overturned them into some ditch,'
murmured Chanteau.He felt constrained to go out and look. He opened the glass
door, and ventured in his list-slippers on to the gravelled terrace
which commanded a view of the village. A few drops of rain were
dashed against his face by the hurricane, and a terrific gust made
his thick blue woollen dressing-jacket flap and flap again. But he
struggled on, bareheaded and bending down, and at last reached the
parapet, over which he leaned while glancing at the road that ran
beneath. This road descended between two steep cliffs, and looked
almost as though it had been hewn out of the solid rock to afford a
resting-place for the twenty or thirty hovels of which Bonneville
consisted. Every tide threatened to hurl the houses from their
narrow shingle-strewn anchorage and crush them against the rocky
cliff. To the left there was a little landing-place, a mere strip
of sand, whither amid rhythmic calls men hoisted up some half-score
boats. The inhabitants did not number more than a couple of hundred
souls. They made a bare living out of the sea, clinging to their
native rocks with all the unreasoning persistence of limpets. And
on the cliffs above their miserable roofs, which every winter were
battered by the storms, there was nothing to be seen except the
church, standing about half-way up on the right, and the Chanteaus'
house across the cleft on the other hand. Bonneville contained
nothing more.'What dreadful weather it is!' cried a voice.Chanteau raised his head and recognised the priest, Abbé
Horteur, a thick-set man of peasant-like build, whose red hair was
still unsilvered by his fifty years. He used a plot of graveyard
land in front of the church as a vegetable garden, and was now
examining his early salad plants, tucking his cassock the while
between his legs in order to prevent the wind from blowing it over
his head. Chanteau, who could not make himself heard amidst the
roaring of the gale, contented himself with waving his
hand.'They are doing right in getting their boats up, I think,'
shouted the priest.But just then a gust of wind caught hold of his cassock and
wrapt it round his head, so he fled for refuge behind the
church.Chanteau turned round to escape the violence of the blast.
With his eyes streaming with moisture he cast a glance at his
garden, over which the spray was sweeping, and the brick-built
two-storeyed house with five windows, whose shutters seemed in
imminent danger of being torn away from their fastenings. When the
sudden squall had subsided, he bent down again to look at the road;
and just at that moment Véronique returned. She shook her hands at
him.'What! you have actually come out!—Be good enough to go into
the house again at once, sir!'She caught him up in the passage, and scolded him like a
child detected in wrong-doing. Wouldn't she have all the trouble of
looking after him in the morning when he suffered agonies of pain
from his indiscretion?'Have you seen nothing of them?' he asked,
submissively.'No, indeed, I have seen nothing—Madame is no doubt taking
shelter somewhere.'He dared not tell her that she should have gone further on.
However, he was now beginning to feel especially anxious about his
son.'I saw that all the neighbourhood was being blown into the
air,' continued the cook. 'They are quite afraid of being done for
this time. Last September the Cuches' house was cracked from top to
bottom, and Prouane, who was going up to the church to ring
theAngelus, has just told me
that he is sure it will topple over before morning.'Just as she spoke a big lad of nineteen sprang up the three
steps before the door. He had a spreading brow and sparkling eyes,
and a fine chestnut down fringed his long oval face.'Ah! here's Lazare at last!' said Chanteau, feeling much
relieved. 'How wet you are, my poor boy!'In the passage the young man hung his hooded cloak, which was
quite saturated with sea-water.'Well?' interrogated his father.'I can see nothing of them,' replied Lazare. 'I have been as
far as Verchemont, and waited under the shed at the inn there, and
kept my eyes on the road, which is a river of mud. But I could see
no sign of them. Then, as I began to feel afraid that you might get
uneasy about me, I came back.'The previous August Lazare had left the College of Caen,
after gaining his Bachelor's degree; and for the last eight months
he had been roaming about the cliffs, unable to make any choice of
a profession, for he only felt enthusiastic about music, a
predisposition which distressed his mother extremely. She had gone
away very much displeased with him, as he had refused to accompany
her to Paris, where she had thought she might be able to place him
in some advantageous position.'Now that I have let you know I am all right,' the young man
resumed, 'I should like to go on to Arromanches.''No, no! it is getting late,' said Chanteau. 'We shall be
having some news of your mother presently. I am expecting a message
every moment. Listen! Isn't that a carriage?'Véronique had gone to open the door.'It is Doctor Cazenove's gig,' she said. 'Shall I bring him
in, sir? Why! good gracious! there's madame in it!'They all three hurried down the steps. A huge dog, a cross
between a sheep-dog and a Newfoundland, who had been lying asleep
in a corner of the passage, sprang forward and began to bark
furiously. Upon hearing this barking, a small white cat of delicate
aspect made its way to the door, but, at the sight of the wet and
dirt outside, it gave a slight wriggle of disgust with its tail,
and sat down very sedately on the top step to see what was going to
happen.A lady about fifty years of age sprang from the gig with all
the agility of a young girl. She was short and slight, her hair was
still perfectly black, and her face would have been quite pleasant
but for the largeness of her nose. The dog sprang forward and
placed his big paws on her shoulders, as though he wanted to kiss
her; but this displeased her.'Down! down! Matthew. Get away, will you? Tiresome
animal!'Lazare ran across the yard behind the dog, calling as he
went, 'All right, mother?''Yes, yes!' replied Madame Chanteau.'We have been very anxious about you,' said Chanteau, who had
followed his son, in spite of the wind. 'What has happened to make
you so late?''Oh! we've had nothing but troubles,' she answered. 'To begin
with, the roads are so bad that it has taken us nearly two hours to
come from Bayeux. Then, at Arromanches, one of Malivoire's horses
went lame and he couldn't let us have another. At one time I really
thought we should have to stay with him all night. But the Doctor
was kind enough to offer us his gig, and Martin here has driven us
home.'The driver, an old man with a wooden leg, who had formerly
served in the navy, and had there had his limb amputated by
Cazenove, then a naval surgeon, had afterwards taken service under
the Doctor. He was tethering the horse when Madame Chanteau
suddenly checked her flow of speech and called to him:'Martin! help the little girl to get down!'No one had yet given a thought to the child. The hood of the
gig fell very low, and only her black skirt and little black-gloved
hands could be seen. She did not wait, however, for the coachman's
assistance, but sprang lightly to the ground. Just then there came
a fierce puff of wind, which whirled her clothes about her and sent
the curls of her dark brown hair flying from under her
crape-trimmed hat. She did not seem very strong for her ten years.
Her lips were thick; and her face, if full, showed the pallor of
the girls who are brought up in the back shops of Paris. The others
stared at her. Véronique, who had just bustled up to welcome her
mistress, checked herself, her face assuming an icy and jealous
expression. But Matthew showed none of this reserve. He sprang up
between the child's arms and licked her with his
tongue.'Don't be afraid of him!' cried Madame Chanteau. 'He won't
hurt you.''Oh! I'm not at all afraid of him,' said Pauline quietly; 'I
am very fond of dogs.'Indeed, Matthew's boisterous welcome did not seem to disturb
her in the slightest degree. Her grave little face broke out into a
smile beneath her black hat, and she affectionately kissed the dog
on his snout.'Aren't you going to kiss your relations too?' exclaimed
Madame Chanteau. 'See, this is your uncle, since you call me your
aunt; and this is your cousin, a great strapping scapegrace, who
isn't half as well behaved as you are.'The child manifested no awkward shyness. She kissed everyone,
and even found a word or two for each, with all the grace of a
young Parisienne already schooled in politeness.'I am very much obliged to you, uncle, for taking me to live
with you——You will see that we shall get on very well together,
cousin——''What a sweet little thing she is!' cried Chanteau, quite
delighted.Lazare looked at her in surprise, for he had pictured her as
being much smaller and far more shy and childish.'Yes, indeed, she is a sweet child,' said the lady, 'and you
have no idea how brave she is! The wind blew straight in our faces
as we drove along, and the rain quite blinded us. Fully a score of
times I thought that the hood, which was flapping about like a
veil, would be carried away altogether. Well, that child there,
instead of being alarmed, was quite amused by it all and enjoyed
it. But what are we stopping out here for? It is no use getting any
wetter than we are; the rain is beginning to fall
again.'She turned round to see where Véronique was. When she saw her
keeping aloof and looking very surly, she said to her
sarcastically:'Good evening, Véronique. How are you? While you are making
up your mind to come and speak to me, you had better go and get a
bottle of wine for Martin. We have not been able to bring our
luggage with us, but Malivoire will bring it on early
to-morrow.'Then she suddenly checked herself and hastily returned to the
gig. 'My bag! my bag! Ah, there it is! I was afraid it had slipped
into the road.'It was a large black leather bag, already whitened at the
corners by wear. She would not trust it to her son, but persisted
in carrying it herself. Just as they were at last about to enter
the house, another violent squall made them halt, short of breath,
near the door. The cat, sitting on the steps with an air of
curiosity, watched them fighting their way onwards; and Madame
Chanteau then inquired if Minouche had behaved properly during her
absence. The name of Minouche again brought a smile to Pauline's
serious little face. She stooped down and fondled the cat, which
rubbed itself against her skirts, whilst holding its tail erect in
the air. Matthew for his part, in proclamation of the return, began
to bark again as he saw the family mounting the steps and entering
the vestibule.'Ah, it is pleasant to be home again!' said Madame Chanteau.
'I really thought that we should never get here. Yes, Matthew, you
are a very good dog, but please be quiet—Lazare, do make him keep
still. He is quite splitting my ears!'However, the dog proved obstinate, and the entry of the
Chanteaus into their dining-room was accompanied by this lively
music. They pushed Pauline, the new daughter of the house, before
them; Matthew came on behind, still barking loudly; and Minouche
followed last, with her sensitive hair bristling amidst the
uproar.In the kitchen Martin had already drunk a couple of glasses
of wine, one after the other, and was now hastening away, stamping
over the floor with his wooden leg and calling 'good-night' to
everybody. Véronique had just put the leg of mutton to the fire
again, as it had got quite cold. She thrust her head into the room,
and asked:'Will you have dinner now?''Yes, indeed we will,' said Chanteau. 'It is seven o'clock.
But, my good girl, we must wait till madame and the little one have
changed their things.''But I haven't got Pauline's trunk here,' said Madame
Chanteau. 'Fortunately, however, our underclothing is not wet. Take
off your cloak and hat, my dear. There, take them away, Véronique.
And take off her boots. I have some slippers here.'The cook knelt down before the child, who had seated herself.
Madame Chanteau took out of her bag a pair of small felt slippers
and put them on the girl's feet. Then she took off her own boots,
and, once more dipping her hand into the bag, brought out a pair of
shoes for herself.'Shall I bring dinner in now?' asked Véronique
again.'In a minute. Pauline, come into the kitchen and wash your
hands and face. We will make more of a toilet later on, for, just
now, we are dying of hunger.'Pauline came back first, having left her aunt with her nose
in a bowl of water. Chanteau had resumed his place in his big
yellow velvet arm-chair before the fire. He was rubbing his legs
mechanically, fearing another attack of pain; while Lazare stood
cutting some bread in front of the table, on which four covers had
been laid more than an hour before. The two men, who were scarcely
at their ease, smiled at the child, without managing to find a word
to say to her; while she calmly inspected the room, which was
furnished in walnut-wood. Her glance wandered from the sideboard
and the half-dozen chairs to the hanging lamp of polished brass,
and then rested upon some framed lithographs which hung against the
brown wall-paper. Four of them represented the seasons, and the
fifth was a view of Vesuvius. Probably the imitation wainscotting
of oak-coloured paint, scratched and showing the plaster
underneath, the flooring soiled with old grease-spots, and the
general shabbiness of this room, where the family lived, made her
regret the beautiful marble-fitted shop which she had left the
previous day, for her eyes assumed an expression of sadness, and
she seemed to guess all the cares that lay concealed in this her
new dwelling-place. Then, after curiously examining a very old
barometer mounted in a case of gilded wood, her eyes turned to a
strange-looking affair which monopolised the whole of the
mantelpiece. It was enclosed in a glass box, secured at the edges
by strips of blue paper. At first sight it looked like a toy, a
miniature wooden bridge; but a bridge of extremely intricate
design.'That was made by your great-uncle,' explained Chanteau, who
was delighted to find a subject of conversation. 'My father, you
know, began life as a carpenter, and I have always preserved his
masterpiece.'He was not at all ashamed of his origin, and Madame Chanteau
tolerated the presence of the bridge on the mantelpiece, in spite
of the displeasure which this cumbersome curiosity always caused
her by reminding her of her marriage with a working-man's son. But
the little girl was no longer paying attention to her uncle's
words, for through the window she had just caught sight of the
far-reaching horizon, and she eagerly stepped forward and planted
herself close to the panes, whose muslin curtains were held back by
cotton loops. Since her departure from Paris her one continual
thought had been the sea. She had dreamed of it and never ceased to
question her aunt about it during their journey; inquiring at every
hill they came to whether the sea lay at the other side of it. When
at last they reached the beach at Arromanches, she had been struck
silent with wonder, her eyes dilating and her heart heaving with a
heavy sigh. From Arromanches to Bonneville she had every minute
thrust her head out of the gig's hood, in spite of the violent
wind, in order to look at the sea, which seemed to follow them. And
now the sea was still there; it would always be there, as though it
belonged to her. With her eyes she seemed to be slowly taking
possession of it.The night was falling from the grey sky, across which the
wind drove the clouds at headlong speed. Amid the increasing
darkness of that turbulent evening only the white line of the
rising tide could be distinguished. It was a band of foam, which
seemed to be ever widening, a succession of waves flowing up,
pouring over the tracts of weed and covering the ridges of rock
with a soft gliding motion, whose approach seemed like a caress.
But far away the roar of the billows increased, huge crests arose,
while at the foot of the cliff, where Bonneville had stowed itself
away as securely as possible behind its doors, there hovered a
death-like gloom. The boats, drawn up to the top of the shingle,
lay there, alone and deserted, like huge stranded fish. The rain
steeped the village in vaporous mist, and only the church still
stood out plainly against a pale patch of sky.Pauline stood by the window in silence. Her little heart was
heaving anew. She seemed to be stifling, and as she drew a deep
sigh all her breath appeared to drain from her lips.'Well! it's a good deal bigger than the Seine, isn't it?'
said Lazare, who had just taken his stand behind her.The girl continued to be a source of much surprise to him; he
felt all the shy awkwardness of a schoolboy in her
presence.'Yes, indeed,' she replied, in a very low voice, without
turning her head.'You are not frightened of it?'At this she turned and looked at him with an expression of
astonishment. 'No, indeed. Why should I be? The water won't come up
so far as this!''Ah! one never knows what it will do,' he said, yielding to
an impulse to make fun of her. 'Sometimes the water rises over the
church.'She broke into a hearty laugh, an outburst of noisy, healthy
gaiety, the merriment of a sensible person whom the absurd
delights.'Ah! cousin,' said she, playfully taking the young man's
hand, 'I'm not so foolish as you think. You wouldn't stop here if
the sea were likely to come up over the church.'Lazare laughed in his turn, and clasped the child's hands.
The pair were henceforth hearty friends. In the midst of their
merriment Madame Chanteau returned into the room. She appeared
quite delighted, and exclaimed as she rubbed her hands: 'Ah! you
have got to know each other, then? I felt quite sure you would get
on well together.''Shall I bring in dinner, Madame?' asked Véronique, standing
by the kitchen door.'Yes, certainly, my girl. But you had better light the lamp
first; it is getting too dark to see.'The night, indeed, was falling so quickly that the
dining-room would have been in darkness but for the red glow of the
coke fire. Lighting the lamp caused a further delay, but at last
the operation was satisfactorily performed, and the table lay
illuminated beneath the lowered shade. They were all in their
places, Pauline between her uncle and cousin, and opposite her
aunt, when the latter rose from her chair again, with that
restlessness of one who can never remain still.'Where is my bag? Wait a moment, my dear; I am going to give
you your mug. Take the glass away, Véronique. The little girl is
used to having her own mug.'She took a silver mug, already a little battered, out of her
bag, and, having first wiped it with her napkin, placed it before
Pauline. Then she put the bag away behind her, on a chair. The cook
brought in some vermicelli soup, warning them, in her crabbed
fashion, that it was much overcooked. No one dared complain,
however. They were all very hungry, and the soup hissed in their
spoons. Next came some soup-beef. Chanteau, fond of dainties,
scarcely took any of it, reserving himself for the leg of mutton.
But when this was placed upon the table there was a general outcry.
It was like fried leather; surely they could not eat
it!'I knew very well how it would be,' said Véronique, placidly.
'You oughtn't to have kept it waiting.'Pauline, with a laugh, cut her meat up into little bits, and
managed to swallow it, in spite of its toughness. As for Lazare, he
was quite unconscious of what he had upon his plate, and would have
eaten slices of dry bread without knowing that they were not cut
from a fowl's breast. Chanteau, however, gazed at the leg of mutton
with a mournful expression.'And what else have you got, Véronique?''Fried potatoes, sir.'He made a gesture of despair and threw himself back in his
chair.'Shall I bring the beef back again, sir?' asked the
cook.But he answered her with a melancholy shake of his head. 'As
well have bread as boiled beef. Oh, my gracious! what a dinner! and
just in this bad weather, too, when we can't get any
fish.'Madame Chanteau, who was a very small eater, looked at him
compassionately.'My poor dear,' she said, suddenly, 'you quite distress me. I
have brought a little present with me; I meant it for to-morrow,
but as there seems to be a famine this evening——'She had opened her bag as she spoke and drew out of it a pan
offoie gras. Chanteau's eyes
flashed brightly.Foie gras!Ah,
it was forbidden fruit! A luxury which he adored, but which his
doctor had absolutely forbidden him to touch.'You know,' continued his wife, 'you must have only a very
little. Don't be foolish, now, or you shall never have any
more.'Chanteau had caught hold of the pan, and he began to open it
with trembling hands. There were frequently tremendous struggles
between his greediness and his fear of gout; and almost invariably
it was his greediness that got the upper hand. Never mind! it was
too good to resist, and he would put up with the pain that would
follow.Véronique, who had watched him helping himself to a thick
slice, took herself off to the kitchen, grumbling as she
went:'Well, well! how he will bellow to-morrow!'The word 'bellow' was habitually on her tongue, and her
master and mistress had grown quite used and reconciled to it, so
naturally and simply did it come from her lips. When the master had
an attack of gout he bellowed, according to Véronique, and she was
never scolded for her want of respect in saying so. The dinner
ended very merrily. Lazare jokingly dispossessed his father of
thefoie gras. When the cheese
and biscuits were put upon the table, Matthew's sudden appearance
caused a boisterous commotion. Until then he had been lying asleep
under the table. But the arrival of the biscuits had awakened him.
He seemed to have scented them in his sleep. Every evening, just at
this stage of the meal, it was his custom to get up and shake
himself and make the round of the table, questioning the faces of
the diners to see if they were charitably disposed. Usually it was
Lazare who first took pity upon him, but that evening Matthew, on
his second circuit of the table, halted by Pauline's side and gazed
up at her earnestly with his honest human-like eyes; and then,
divining in her a friend both of man and beast, he laid his huge
head on her little knee, without dropping his glance of mild
supplication.'Oh, what a shameful beggar you are!' said Madame Chanteau.
'Aren't you ashamed of yourself, Matthew, to be so
greedy?'The dog swallowed at a single gulp the piece of biscuit which
Pauline offered him, and then again laid his head on her little
knee, asking for another piece, with his eyes constantly fixed on
those of his new friend. She laughed at him and kissed him and
found him very amusing, with his flattened ears and the black spot
under his left eye, the only spot of colour that marked his rough
white hairy coat. Then there came a diversion of another character.
Minouche, growing jealous, leapt lightly upon the edge of the
table, and began to purr and rub her head against the little girl's
chin, swaying her supple body the while with all the grace of a
young kid. To poke one with her cold nose and kiss one lightly with
her sharp teeth, while she pounded about with her feet like a baker
kneading dough, was her feline way of caressing. Pauline was now
quite delighted between the two animals. The cat on her left, the
dog on her right, took possession of her and worried her shamefully
in order to secure all her biscuits.'Send them away,' said her aunt. 'They will leave you nothing
for yourself.''Oh! that doesn't matter,' she placidly replied, feeling
quite happy in being despoiled.They finished, and Véronique removed the dishes. The two
animals, seeing the table quite bare, gave their lips a last lick
and then took themselves off, without even saying 'thank
you.'Pauline rose from her chair, and went to stand by the window,
straining her eyes to penetrate the darkness. Ever since the soup
had been put upon the table she had been watching the window grow
darker and darker, till it had gradually become as black as ink.
Now it was like an impenetrable wall; the dense darkness had hidden
everything—sky, sea, village, and even church itself. Nevertheless,
without feeling in the least disturbed by her cousin's jests, she
tried to distinguish the water, worrying to find out how far the
tide was going to rise; but she could only hear its ever-increasing
roar, its angry threatening voice, which seemed to grow louder
every minute amidst the howling of the wind and the splashing of
the rain. Not a glimmer, not even the whiteness of the foam, could
be seen in that chaos; and nothing was heard but the rush of the
waves, lashed on by the gale in the black depths.'Dear me,' said Chanteau, 'it is coming up stiffly, and yet
it won't be high-water for another couple of hours.''If the wind were to blow from the north,' put in Lazare,
'Bonneville would certainly be swept away. Fortunately for us here,
it is coming slantwise.'The little maid had turned and was listening to them, her big
eyes full of an expression of anxious pity.'Bah!' said Madame Chanteau, 'we are safe under shelter, and
we must let other folks get out of their trouble as best they
may——Tell me, my dear, would you like a cup of hot tea? And then,
afterwards, we will go to bed.'Véronique had laid an old red cloth, with a faded pattern of
big bunches of flowers, over the dinner-table, around which the
family generally spent the evening. They took their accustomed
places. Lazare, who had left the room for a moment, came back
carrying an inkstand, a pen, and a whole handful of papers, and,
seating himself beneath the lamp-light, he began to copy some
music. Madame Chanteau, whose eyes since her return had never
ceased following her son with an affectionate glance, suddenly
became very stiff and surly.'That music of yours again! You can't devote an evening to
us, then, even on the night of my return home?''But, mother, I am not going out of the room. I mean to stay
with you. You know very well that this doesn't interfere with my
talking. Fire away and talk to me, and I will answer
you.'He went on with his work, covering half the table with his
papers. Chanteau had stretched himself out comfortably in his
arm-chair, with his hands hanging listlessly at his sides. In front
of the fire Matthew lay asleep, while Minouche, who had sprung upon
the table again, was performing an elaborate toilet, carefully
licking her stomach, with one leg cocked up in the air. The falling
light from the hanging lamp seemed to make everything cosy and
homelike, and Pauline, who with half-closed eyelids had been
smiling upon her newly-found relatives, could no longer keep
herself from sleep, worn out as she was with fatigue and rendered
drowsy by the heat of the room. Her head slipped down upon her arm,
which was resting on the table, and lay there, motionless, beneath
the placid glow of the lamp. Her delicate eyelids looked like a
silk veil cast over her eyes, and soft regular breath came gently
from her pure lips.'She must be tired out,' said Madame Chanteau, lowering her
voice. 'We will just wake her up to give her some tea, and then I
will take her to bed.'Then silence reigned in the room. No sound broke upon the
howling of the storm except the scratching of Lazare's pen. It was
perfect quiet, the habitual sleepiness of life spent every evening
in the same spot. For a long time the father and mother looked at
each other without saying a word. At last Chanteau asked, in a
hesitating voice:'And is Davoine doing well at Caen?''Bah! Doing well, indeed! I told you that you were being
taken in!'Now that the child was fast asleep they could talk. They
spoke in low tones, however, and at first seemed inclined to tell
each other what there was to be told as briefly as possible. But
presently passion got the better of them and carried them on, and,
by degrees, all the worries of the household became
manifest.At the death of his father the former journeyman carpenter,
who had carried on his timber-trade with ambitious audacity,
Chanteau had found the business considerably compromised. A very
inactive man himself, unaspiring and careful, he had contented
himself with simply putting matters on a safe basis, by dint of
good management, and living upon a moderate but sure profit. The
one romance of his life was his marriage. He had married a
governess whom he had met in a friend's family. Eugénie de la
Vignière, the orphan daughter of one of the ruined squireens of the
Cotentin, reckoned upon fanning his indolent nature into ambition.
But he with his imperfect education, for he had been sent late to
school, recoiled from vast schemes, and opposed his own natural
inertness to the ambitious plans of his wife. When their son was
born, she transferred to that child her hopes for the family's rise
in life, sent him to college, and superintended his studies every
evening herself. But a last disaster upset all her plans. Chanteau,
who had suffered from gout from the time he was forty years of age,
at last experienced such severe and painful attacks that he began
to talk about selling his business. To Madame Chanteau this
portended straitened means and mediocrity, the spending of their
remaining days in retirement on their petty savings, and the
casting of her son into the struggle for life, without the support
of an income of twenty thousand francs, such as she had dreamed of
for him.Thereupon she had insisted upon having, at any rate, a hand
in the sale. The profits were about ten thousand francs a year, on
which the family made a considerable show, for Madame Chanteau was
fond of giving parties. Having discovered a certain Davoine, she
had worked out the following scheme. Davoine was to buy the timber
business for a hundred thousand francs, but he was only to pay
fifty thousand in money; in consideration of the other fifty
thousand remaining unpaid, the Chanteaus were to become his
partners in the business and share the profits. This man Davoine
appeared to be a very bold fellow, and, even if he did not extend
the business of the firm, they would still be sure of five thousand
francs a year, which, added to the interest of the fifty thousand
invested in stock, would give them altogether an income of eight
thousand francs.[2]And on
this they would get on as well as they could, pending the time when
their son should achieve some brilliant success and be able to
extricate them from a life of mediocrity.It was upon these principles that the business was sold. Two
years previously Chanteau had bought a seaside house at Bonneville,
which he had been able to get as a bargain through the bankruptcy
of an insolvent debtor. Instead of selling it again at a profit, as
for a time she had thought of doing, Madame Chanteau determined
that the family should go and live there, at any rate until Lazare
had achieved his first successes. To give up her parties and bury
herself in such an out-of-the-way place was for her, indeed, almost
suicide; but as she had agreed to surrender their entire house to
Davoine, she would have had to rent another, and so she summoned up
all her resolution to go in for a life of economy, with the firm
hope of one day making a triumphal return to Caen, when her son
should have gained a high position. Chanteau gave his consent to
everything. His gout would have to accommodate itself to the sea
air, and, besides, of three doctors whom he had consulted, two had
been good enough to declare that the fresh breezes from the open
would act as a splendid tonic on his system generally. So, one
morning in May, the Chanteaus departed to settle at Bonneville,
leaving Lazare, then fourteen years old, at the college at
Caen.Since this heroic exile, five years had passed, and the
affairs of the family had gone from bad to worse. As Davoine was
constantly launching out into fresh speculations, he was ever
telling them that it was necessary he should have further advances;
and the consequence was that all the profits were risked again and
again, and the balance-sheet generally showed a loss. The Chanteaus
were reduced to living at Bonneville on the three thousand francs a
year derived from the money they had invested in stock, and they
were so hardly pressed that they had been obliged to sell their
horse, and get Véronique to undertake the management of the kitchen
garden.'At any rate, Eugénie,' said Chanteau, a little timorously,
'if I have been let in, it is partly your fault.'But she repudiated the responsibility altogether. She always
conveniently forgot that the partnership with Davoine was her own
work.'My fault indeed!' she replied drily. 'How can that be? Am I
laid up? If you were not such an invalid, we might perhaps be
millionaires.'Whenever his wife attacked him in this bitter fashion, he
always lowered his head with pain and shame at the thought that it
was his illness that was ruining the family.'We must wait and be patient,' he murmured. 'Davoine appears
to be very confident of the success of his new scheme. If the price
of deal goes up, we shall make a fortune.''And what good will that be?' interrupted Lazare, who was
still copying out his music. 'We have enough to eat as it is. It is
very foolish of you worrying yourselves in this way. I don't care a
bit about money.'Madame Chanteau shrugged her shoulders again.'It would be a great deal better if you cared about it a
little more, and didn't waste your time in foolish
nonsense.'It was she herself who had taught him to play the piano,
though the mere sight of a score now sufficed to make her angry.
Her last hope had fled. This son of hers, whom she had dreamed of
seeing a prefect or a judge, talked of writing operas; and she
foresaw that in the future he would be reduced to running about the
streets giving lessons, as she herself had once done.'Here is the balance-sheet for the last three months, which
Davoine gave me,' she said. 'If things continue in this way, it
will be we who shall owe him money by next July.'She had put her bag upon the table, and she took out of it a
paper, which she handed to Chanteau. He just turned it round, and
then laid it down in front of him without opening it. At that
moment Véronique brought in the tea. No one spoke for some time,
and the cups remained empty. Minouche was dozing placidly beside
the sugar-basin, and Matthew was snoring like a man before the
fire. The roar of the sea continued outside like a mighty bass
accompaniment to the peaceful echoes of the drowsy
room.'Won't you awaken her, mother?' said Lazare, at last. 'It
can't be good for her to go on sleeping there.''Yes! yes!' murmured Madame Chanteau, who seemed buried in
deep thought, with her eyes fixed upon Pauline.They all three looked at the sleeping girl. Her breathing was
very calm, and there was a flowery softness about her pale cheeks
and rosy lips beneath the glow of the lamp-light. Her chestnut
curls, which the wind had disarranged, cast a slight shadow over
her delicate brow. Then Madame Chanteau's thoughts reverted to her
visit to Paris, and all the bother she had met with there, and she
felt quite astonished at the enthusiasm with which she had
undertaken the child's guardianship, inspired with instinctive
regard for a wealthy ward, though her intentions of course were
scrupulously honourable, and quite without thought of benefiting by
the fortune of which she would be trustee.'When I alighted at the shop,' she began slowly, 'she was
wearing a little black frock, and she came to kiss me, sobbing and
crying. It is a very fine shop indeed; beautifully fitted up with
marble and plate-glass, and just in front of the markets. There was
such a servant there, about as big as a jackboot, with a fresh red
face. It was she who had given information to the notary, and had
brought him to put everything under seal. When I got there she was
going on quietly selling sausages and black puddings. It was Adèle
who told me about our poor cousin Quenu's death. Ever since he had
lost his wife, six months previously, his blood seemed to be
suffocating him. He was constantly fidgeting about his neck with
his hand to loosen his neckerchief; and at last they found him one
evening lying with his face all purple in a bowl of dripping. His
uncle Gradelle died in just the same way.'She said no more, and silence fell again. Over Pauline's
face, as she lay asleep, there played a passing smile, suggesting
some pleasant dream.'And the law business, was that all transacted
satisfactorily?' asked Chanteau.'Oh! quite so. But your lawyer was very right in leaving a
blank for the name in the power-of-attorney; for it appears that I
could not have acted in your stead, as women are not eligible in
such matters. But, as I wrote and told you, on my arrival I went to
consult the parish lawyer who sent us the extract from the will in
which you were appointed guardian. He at once inserted his chief
clerk's name in the power-of-attorney, which is quite a common
course, he tells me. Then we were able to get along. I went before
a justice of the peace and nominated as members of the family
council three relations on Lisa's side: two young cousins, Octave
Mouret and Claude Lantier, and a cousin by marriage, Monsieur
Rambaud, who lives at Marseilles; then, on our side, that is
Quenu's side, I chose his nephews, Naudet, Liardin, and Delorme. It
is a very proper council, you see, and one which we can easily
manage as we think best for the child's benefit. At their first
meeting they nominated as surrogate-guardian Monsieur
Saccard,[3]whom I
had chosen, out of necessity, from among Lisa's
relations.''Hush! hush! She is waking up,' interrupted
Lazare.Pauline had just opened her eyes widely. Without moving, she
gazed with some astonishment at the people talking around her, and
then, with a smile full of sleepiness, closed her eyes once more,
being worn out with fatigue. Again did her motionless little face
show a milky camellia-like transparency.'Isn't that Saccard the speculator?' asked
Chanteau.'Yes,' answered his wife. 'I saw him, and we had a talk
together. He is a charming man. He has so many things to look
after, he told me, that I must not reckon much on his assistance.
But, you know, we really don't want anybody's help. From the moment
we take the child—well, we do take her; and we don't want anybody
coming and interfering with us. All the other business was got
through quickly. Your power-of-attorney conferred all the necessary
authority. The seals were removed, an inventory of the property was
made, and the business was sold by auction. The sale went off
splendidly, for there were two parties bidding hotly one against
the other, and so we got ninety thousand francs, cash down. The
notary had previously discovered scrip for sixty thousand francs in
a desk. I begged him to buy more scrip, and so now we have a
hundred and fifty thousand francs securely invested. I have brought
the scrip along with me, having first given the chief clerk the
full discharge and receipt, which I asked you to send me by return
of post. See! here it is!'She had thrust her hand into her bag and brought out a bulky
packet. It was the scrip, tied up between two pieces of thick
cardboard which had formed the binding of one of the shop
account-books. The green marbled surface was speckled with
grease-spots. Both father and son looked attentively at the fortune
which lay upon the shabby tablecloth.'The tea is getting cold, mother,' said Lazare, putting his
pen down at last. 'Hadn't I better pour it out?'He got up from his seat and filled the cups. His mother had
returned no answer to his question. Her eyes were still fixed on
the scrip.'Of course,' she continued slowly, 'at a subsequent meeting
of the family council which I summoned, I asked to have my
travelling expenses reimbursed, and the sum that we are to receive
for the child's maintenance was fixed at eight hundred francs a
year. We are not so rich as she is, and we cannot afford to take
her for nothing. None of us would desire to make a farthing profit
out of the girl, but it would have pressed us too much to have kept
her out of our own income. The interest of her fortune will be
banked and invested, and her capital will be almost doubled by the
time she comes of age. Well, it is only our duty that we are doing.
We are bound to obey the wishes of the dead. And if it costs us
something to do it, perhaps the sacrifice may bring us better
fortune, of which, I am sure, we stand in great need——The poor
little dear was so cut up, and sobbed so bitterly at leaving her
nurse! I trust she will be happy with us here.'The two men were quite affected.'Most certainly I shall never be unkind to her,' said
Chanteau.'She is a charming little thing,' added Lazare. 'I love her
already.'Just then Matthew appeared to have smelt the tea in his
dreams, for he gave himself a shake, and again came and thrust his
big head upon the edge of the table. Minouche, too, got up and
stretched herself and yawned, and, when she was quite awake, she
craned out her neck to sniff at the packet of papers in the greasy
covers. As the Chanteaus glanced at Pauline, they saw that her eyes
were also open and fixed upon the scrip and the old ledger
binding.'Ah! she knows very well what is inside there,' said Madame
Chanteau. 'Don't you, my dear? I showed them all to you in Paris.
That is what your poor father and mother have left
you.'Tears trickled down the child's face. Her grief often
recurred in April-like showers. But she soon smiled again through
her tears, feeling amused at Minouche, who had for a long time
smelt at the papers and was doubtless attracted by their odour, for
she began to purr and rub her head against the corners of the
ledger.'Come away, Minouche!' cried Madame Chanteau. 'Money isn't to
be made a plaything of!'Chanteau laughed, and so did Lazare. With his head resting on
the edge of the table, Matthew was becoming quite excited. Looking
eagerly with his flaming eyes at the packet of papers which he must
have taken for some great delicacy, he began to bark at the cat.
Then all the family grew lively. Pauline caught up Minouche and
fondled her in her arms as though she were a doll.For fear the girl should drop off to sleep again, Madame
Chanteau made her drink her tea at once. Then she called
Véronique.'Bring us our candles. Here we are sitting and talking and
never going to bed. Why! it is actually ten o'clock, and I am so
tired that I half fell asleep at dinner!'But a man's voice sounded from the kitchen, and when the cook
returned with four lighted candles her mistress asked
her:'Whom were you talking to?''It is Prouane, Madame. He came up to tell the master that
things are in a very bad way down yonder. The sea is breaking
everything to pieces apparently.'Chanteau had been prevailed upon to accept office as mayor of
Bonneville, and Prouane, the tipsy scamp, who acted as Abbé
Horteur's beadle, likewise discharged the duties of mayor's clerk.
He had been a non-commissioned officer in the navy, and wrote a
copybook hand. When they called to him to come into the room, he
made his appearance with his woollen cap in his hand and his jacket
and boots streaming with water.'Well! what's the matter, Prouane?''Sure, sir, the Cuches' house is completely flooded. And if
it goes on like this much longer it will be the same with the
Gonins'. We have all been down there, Tourmal, Houtelard, myself,
and the others. But it is no use; we can't do anything against that
thievish sea. It's written that it will carry off a slice of the
land every year.'Then they all became silent. The four candles burned with
tall flames, and the rush of the devouring sea against the cliffs
broke through the night air. It was now high tide, and the house
shook as every wave dashed against the rocky barrier. It was like
the roaring of giant artillery; thunderous consecutive reports
arose amidst the rolling of shingle, which, as it swept over the
rocks, sounded like the continuous crackling of a fusillade. And
amidst all this uproar the wind raised its howling plaint, and the
rain, every now and then increasing in violence, seemed to pelt the
walls of the house with a hail of bullets.'It is like the end of the world,' Madame Chanteau murmured.
'What will the Cuches do? Where are they going to take
refuge?''They will have to be sheltered,' said Prouane. 'Meantime
they are at the Gonins'. What a sight it was! There was a little
lad, who is only three years old, perfectly drenched, and his
mother with nothing on but a petticoat—begging your pardon for
mentioning it—and the father, too, with his hand split open by a
falling beam, while madly trying to save their few
rags.'Pauline had risen from the table and returned to the window.
She listened to what was being said with all the serious demeanour
of a grown-up person. Her expression indicated distressful sympathy
and pity, and her full lips trembled with emotion.'Oh, aunt!' she said, 'how very sad for the poor things!'
Then her gaze wandered through the window into that inky darkness
where nothing was visible. They could hear that the sea had reached
the road, and was sweeping wildly and fiercely over it, but they
could see nothing. The little village and the rocks and the whole
neighbourhood seemed submerged beneath a flood of ink. For the
young girl it was a painful experience and surprise. That sea which
she had thought so beautiful hurled itself upon poor folks and
ruined them!'I will go down with you, Prouane,' cried Lazare. 'Perhaps
something can be done.''Oh yes! do go, cousin!' said Pauline, with flashing eyes.
But the man shook his head.'It is no use troubling yourself, Monsieur Lazare; you
couldn't do anything more than the others. We can only stand about
and watch the sea work its will, and destroy what it likes, and
when it gets tired of that we shall have to be grateful that it has
done no worse. I merely came up to inform Monsieur
Chanteau.'Then Chanteau began to grow angry, bothered by this business,
which would give him an uneasy night and demand all his attention
in the morning.'I don't believe there ever was a village built in such an
idiotic position!' he cried. 'You have buried yourselves right
under the waves, and it's no wonder if the sea swallows up your
houses one by one. And why ever in the world do you stop in such a
place? You should leave it and go elsewhere.''Where can we go?' asked Prouane, who listened with an
expression of stupefaction. 'We are here, sir, and we have got to
stop here. We must be somewhere.''Yes, that's true,' said Madame Chanteau, bringing the
discussion to an end. 'And wherever you are, here or elsewhere,
there will always be trouble——We are just going to bed. Good-night.
To-morrow it will be light.'The man went off bowing, and they heard Véronique bolt the
door behind him. They took their candles and gave a parting caress
to Matthew and Minouche, who both slept in the kitchen. Lazare
collected his music together, and Madame Chanteau put the scrip in
its greasy covers beneath her arm, and also took from the table
Davoine's balance-sheet, which her husband had forgotten. It was a
heart-breaking paper, and the sooner it was put out of sight the
better.'We are going to bed, Véronique,' she cried. 'You need not
wander up and down at this time of night.' But, hearing nothing
save a grunt in the kitchen, she added in lower tones:'What is the matter with her? I haven't brought a baby home
for her to wean!''Leave her alone,' said Chanteau. 'She has her whims, you
know. Well! we are all four here: so good-night!'He himself slept on the ground floor, in a room on the other
side of the passage. This arrangement had been made so that, when
he was suffering from an attack of gout, he might be readily
wheeled in his arm-chair either to table or to the terrace. He
opened the door, and then stood still for a moment. His legs were
very heavy, as at the approach of a fresh attack, of which, indeed,
the stiffness of his joints had been giving him warning since the
previous day. Plainly enough, he had acted very foolishly in eating
thatfoie gras. The
consciousness of his error made him feel anything but
happy.'Good-night,' he repeated in a mournful voice. 'You others
can always sleep. Good-night, my little dear. Have a good long
rest; you want it at your age.''Good-night, uncle,' said Pauline in reply, as she kissed
him. Then the door closed. Madame Chanteau went upstairs first with
the little girl. Lazare followed behind.'Well, for my part, I shan't want anyone to rock me to sleep
to-night,' said the old lady, 'that's quite certain. And I don't at
all object to that uproar. I find it lulling. When I was in Paris I
quite missed the shaking of my bed.'