SPRINGTIME AND AUTUMN
The Countess and her daughter, dressed
in black crape, had just seated themselves opposite
each other, for breakfast, in the large dining-room
at Roncieres. The portraits of many ancestors,
crudely painted, one in a cuirass, another in a tight-fitting
coat, this a powdered officer of the French Guards,
that a colonel of the Restoration, hung in line on
the walls, a collection of deceased Guilleroys, in
old frames from which the gilding was peeling.
Two servants, stepping softly, began to serve the
two silent women, and the flies made a little cloud
of black specks, dancing and buzzing around the crystal
chandelier that hung over the center of the table.
“Open the windows,” said
the Countess, “It is a little cool here.”
The three long windows, reaching from
the floor to the ceiling, and large as bay-windows,
were opened wide. A breath of soft air, bearing
the odor of warm grass and the distant sounds of the
country, swept in immediately through these openings,
mingling with the slightly damp air of the room, inclosed
by the thick walls of the castle.
“Ah, that is good!” said Annette, taking
a full breath.
The eyes of the two women had turned
toward the outside and now gazed, beneath the blue
sky, lightly veiled by the midday haze which was reflected
on the meadows impregnated with sunshine, at the long
and verdant lawns of the park, with its groups of
trees here and there, and its perspective opening
to the yellow fields, illuminated as far as the eye
could see by the golden gleam of ripe grain.
“We will take a long walk after
breakfast,” said the Countess. “We
might walk as far as Berville, following the river,
for it will be too warm on the plain.”
“Yes, mamma, and let us take
Julio to scare up some partridges.”
“You know that your father forbids it.”
“Oh, but since papa is in Paris! it
is so amusing to see Julio pointing after them.
There he is now, worrying the cows! Oh, how funny
he is, the dear fellow!”
Pushing back her chair, she jumped
up and ran to the window, calling out: “Go
on, Julio! After them!”
Upon the lawn three heavy cows, gorged
with grass and overcome with heat, lay on their sides,
their bellies protruding from the pressure of the
earth. Rushing from one to another, barking and
bounding wildly, in a sort of mad abandon, partly
real, partly feigned, a hunting spaniel, slender,
white and red, whose curly ears flapped at every bound,
was trying to rouse the three big beasts, which did
not wish to get up. It was evidently the dog’s
favorite sport, with which he amused himself whenever
he saw the cows lying down. Irritated, but not
frightened, they gazed at him with their large, moist
eyes, turning their heads to watch him.
Annette, from her window, cried:
“Fetch them, Julio, fetch them!”
The excited spaniel, growing bolder,
barked louder and ventured as far as their cruppers,
feigning to be about to bite them. They began
to grow uneasy, and the nervous twitching of their
skin, to get rid of the flies, became more frequent
and protracted.
Suddenly the dog, carried along by
the impetus of a rush that he could not check in time,
bounced so close to one cow that, in order not to
fall against her, he was obliged to jump over her.
Startled by the bound, the heavy animal took fright,
and first raising her head she finally raised herself
slowly on her four legs, sniffing loudly. Seeing
her erect, the other two immediately got up also, and
Julio began to prance around them in a dance of triumph,
while Annette praised him.
“Bravo, Julio, bravo!”
“Come,” said the Countess, “come
to breakfast, my child.”
But the young girl, shading her eyes with one hand,
announced:
“There comes a telegraph messenger!”
Along the invisible path among the
wheat and the oats a blue blouse appeared to be gliding
along the top of the grain, and it came toward the
castle with the firm step of a man.
“Oh, heavens!” murmured
the Countess; “I hope he does not bring bad
news!”
She was still shaken with that terror
which remains with us a long time after the death
of some loved one has been announced by a telegram.
Now she could not remove the gummed band to open the
little blue paper without feeling her fingers tremble
and her soul agitated, believing that from those folds
which it took so long to open would come a grief that
would cause her tears to flow afresh.
Annette, on the contrary, full of
girlish curiosity, was delighted to meet with the
unknown mystery that comes to all of us at times.
Her heart, which life had just saddened for the first
time, could anticipate only something joyful from
that black and ominous bag hanging from the side of
the mail-carrier, who saw so many emotions through
the city streets and the country lanes.
The Countess ceased to eat, concentrating
her thoughts on the man who was approaching, bearer
of a few written words that might wound her as if
a knife had been thrust in her throat. The anguish
of having known that experience made her breathless,
and she tried to guess what this hurried message might
be. About what? From whom? The thought
of Olivier flashed through her mind. Was he ill?
Dead, perhaps, too!
The ten minutes she had to wait seemed
interminable to her; then, when she had torn open
the despatch and recognized the name of her husband,
she read: “I telegraph to tell you that
our friend Bertin leaves for Roncieres on the one
o’clock train. Send Phaeton station.
Love.”
“Well, mamma?” said Annette.
“Monsieur Olivier Bertin is coming to see us.”
“Ah, how lucky! When?”
“Very soon.”
“At four o’clock?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, how kind he is!”
But the Countess had turned pale,
for a new anxiety had lately troubled her, and the
sudden arrival of the painter seemed to her as painful
a menace as anything she might have been able to foresee.
“You will go to meet him with the carriage,”
she said to her daughter.
“And will you not come, too, mamma?”
“No, I will wait for you here.”
“Why? That will hurt him.”
“I do not feel very well.”
“You wished to walk as far as Berville just
now.”
“Yes, but my breakfast has made me feel ill.”
“You will feel better between now and the time
to go.”
“No, I am going up to my room. Let me know
as soon as you arrive.”
“Yes, mamma.”
After giving orders that the phaeton
should be ready at the proper hour, and that a room
be prepared, the Countess returned to her own room,
and shut herself in.
Up to this time her life had passed
almost without suffering, affected only by Olivier’s
love and concerned only by her anxiety to retain it.
She had succeeded, always victorious in that struggle.
Her heart, soothed by success and by flattery, had
become the exacting heart of a beautiful worldly woman
to whom are due all the good things of earth, and,
after consenting to a brilliant marriage, with which
affection had nothing to do, after accepting love
later as the complement of a happy existence, after
taking her part in a guilty intimacy, largely from
inclination, a little from a leaning toward sentiment
itself as a compensation for the prosaic hum-drum
of daily life, had barricaded itself in the happiness
that chance had offered her, with no other desire
than to defend it against the surprises of each day.
She had therefore accepted with the complacency of
a pretty woman the agreeable events that occurred;
and, though she ventured little, and was troubled
little by new necessities and desires for the unknown;
though she was tender, tenacious, and farseeing, content
with the present, but naturally anxious about the
morrow, she had known how to enjoy the elements that
Destiny had furnished her with wise and economical
prudence.
Now, little by little, without daring
to acknowledge it even to herself, the vague preoccupation
of passing time, of advancing age, had glided into
her soul. In her consciousness it had the effect
of a gnawing trouble that never ceased. But,
knowing well that this descent of life was without
an end, that once begun it never could be stopped,
and yielding to the instinct of danger, she closed
her eyes in letting herself glide along, that she
might retain her dream, that she might not be seized
with dizziness at sight of the abyss or be made desperate
by her impotence.
She lived, then, smiling, with a sort
of factitious pride in remaining beautiful so long,
and when Annette appeared at her side with the freshness
of her eighteen years, instead of suffering from this
contrast, she was proud, on the contrary, of being
able to command preference, in the ripe grace of her
womanhood, over that blooming young girl in the radiant
beauty of first youth.
She had even believed that she had
entered upon the beginning of a happy, tranquil period
when the death of her mother struck a blow at her
heart. During the first few days she was filled
with that profound despair that leaves no room for
any other thought. She remained from morning
until night buried in grief, trying to recall a thousand
things of the dead, her familiar words, her face in
earlier days, the gowns she used to wear, as if she
had stored her memory with relics; and from the now
buried past she gathered all the intimate and trivial
recollections with which to feed her cruel reveries.
Then, when she had arrived at such paroxysms of despair
that she fell into hysterics and swooned, all her
accumulated grief broke forth in tears, flowing from
her eyes by day and by night.
One morning, when her maid entered,
and opened the shutters after raising the shades,
asking: “How does Madame feel to-day?”
she answered, feeling exhausted from having wept so
much: “Oh, not at all well! Indeed,
I can bear no more.”
The servant, who was holding a tea-tray,
looked at her mistress, and, touched to see her lying
so pale amide the whiteness of the bed, she stammered,
in a tone of genuine sadness: “Madame really
looks very ill. Madame would do well to take
care of herself.”
The tone in which this was said pierced
the Countess’s heart like a sharp needle, and
as soon as the maid had gone she rose to go and look
at her face in her large dressing-mirror.
She was stupefied at the sight of
herself, frightened by her hollow cheeks, her red
eyes, the ravages produced in her by these days of
suffering. Her face, which she knew so well, which
she had often looked at in so many different mirrors,
of which she knew all the expressions, all the smiles,
the pallor which she had already corrected so many
times, smoothing away the marks of fatigue, and the
tiny wrinkles at the corners of the eyes, visible
in too strong a light her face suddenly
seemed to her that of another woman, a new face that
was distorted and irreparably ill.
In order to see herself better, to
be surer with regard to this unexpected misfortune,
she approached near enough to the mirror to touch
it with her forehead, so that her breath, spreading
a light mist over the glass, almost obscured the pale
image she was contemplating. She was compelled
to take a handkerchief to wipe away this mist, and,
trembling with a strange emotion, she made a long
and patient examination of the alterations in her
face. With a light finger she stretched the skin
of her cheeks, smoothed her forehead, pushed back
her hair, and turned the eyelids to look at the whites
of her eyes. Then she opened her mouth and examined
her teeth which were a little tarnished where the gold
fillings shone, and she was disturbed to note the
livid gums and the yellow tint of the flesh above
the cheeks and at the temples.
She was so lost in this examination
of her fading beauty that she did not hear the door
open, and was startled when her maid, standing behind
her, said:
“Madame has forgotten to take her tea.”
The Countess turned, confused, surprised,
ashamed, and the servant, guessing her thoughts continued:
“Madame has wept too much; there
is nothing worse to spoil the skin. One’s
blood turns to water.”
And as the Countess added sadly:
“There is age also,” the maid exclaimed:
“Oh, but Madame has not reached that time yet!
With a few days of rest not a trace will be left.
But Madame must go to walk, and take great care not
to weep.”
As soon as she was dressed the Countess
descended to the park, and for the first time since
her mother’s death she visited the little orchard
where long ago she had liked to cultivate and gather
flowers; then she went to the river and strolled beside
the stream until the hour for breakfast.
She sat down at the table opposite
her husband, and beside her daughter, and remarked,
that she might know what they thought: “I
feel better today. I must be less pale.”
“Oh, you still look very ill,” said the
Count.
Her heart contracted and she felt
like weeping, for she had fallen into the habit of
it.
Until evening, and the next day, and
all the following days, whether she thought of her
mother or of herself, every moment she felt her throat
swelling with sobs and her eyes filling with tears,
but to prevent them from overflowing and furrowing
her cheeks she repressed them, and by a superhuman
effort of will turned her thoughts in other directions,
mastered them, ruled them, separated them from her
sorrow, forced herself to feel consoled, tried to
amuse herself and to think of sad things no more,
in order to regain the hue of health.
Above all, she did not wish to return
to Paris and to receive Olivier Bertin until she had
become more like her former self. Realizing that
she had grown too thin, that the flesh of women of
her age needs to be full in order to keep fresh, she
sought to create appetite by walking in the woods
and along the roads; and though she returned weary
and not hungry she forced herself to eat a great deal.
The Count, who wished to go away,
could not understand her obstinacy. Finally,
as her resistance seemed invincible, he declared that
he would go alone, leaving the Countess free to return
when she might feel so disposed.
The next day she received the telegram
announcing Olivier’s arrival.
A desire to flee seized her, so much
did she fear his first look. She would have preferred
to wait another week or two. In a week, with care
one may change the face completely, since women, even
when young and in good health, under the least change
of influence become unrecognizable from one day to
another. But the idea of appearing in broad daylight
before Olivier, in the open fields, in the heat of
August, beside Annette, so fresh and blooming, disturbed
her so much that she decided immediately not to go
to the station, but to await him in the half-darkened
drawing-room.
She went up to her room and fell into
a dream. Breaths of warm air stirred the curtains
from time to time; the song of the crickets filled
the air. Never before had she felt so sad.
It was no more the great grief that had shattered
her heart, overwhelming her before the soulless body
of her beloved old mother. That grief, which she
had believed incurable, had in a few days become softened,
and was now but a sorrow of the memory; but now she
felt herself swept away on a deep wave of melancholy
into which she had entered gradually, and from which
she never would emerge.
She had an almost irresistible desire
to weep and would not. Every time
she felt her eyelids grow moist she wiped them away
quickly, rose, paced about the room, looked out into
the park and gazed at the tall trees, watched the
slow, black flight of the crows against the background
of blue sky. Then she passed before her mirror,
judged her appearance with one glance, effaced the
trace of a tear by touching the corner of her eye
with rice powder, and looked at the clock, trying to
guess at what point of the route he must have reached.
Like all women who are carried away
by a distress of soul, whether real or unreasonable,
she clung to her lover with a sort of frenzy.
Was he not her all all, everything, more
than life, all that anyone must be who has come to
be the sole affection of one who feels the approach
of age?
Suddenly she heard in the distance
the crack of a whip; she ran to the window and saw
the phaeton as it made the turn round the lawn, drawn
by two horses. Seated beside Annette, in the back
seat of the carriage, Olivier waved his handkerchief
as he saw the Countess, to which she responded by
waving him a salutation from the window. Then
she went down stairs with a heart throbbing fast but
happy now, thrilled with joy at knowing him so near,
of speaking to him and seeing him.
They met in the antechamber, before
the drawing-room door.
He opened his arms to her with an
irresistible impulse, and in a voice warmed by real
emotion, exclaimed: “Ah, my poor Countess,
let me embrace you!”
She closed her eyes, leaned toward
him and pressed against him, lifted her cheek to him,
and as he pressed his lips upon it, she murmured in
his ear: “I love thee!”
Then Olivier, without dropping the
hands he clasped in his own, looked at her, saying:
“Let us see that sad face.”
She felt ready to faint.
“Yes, a little pale,” said he, “but
that is nothing.”
To thank him for saying that, she said brokenly,
“Ah, dear friend, dear friend!” finding
nothing else to say.
But he turned, looking behind her
in search of Annette, who had disappeared.
“Is it not strange,” he
said abruptly, “to see your daughter in mourning?”
“Why?” inquired the Countess.
“What? You ask why?”
he exclaimed, with extraordinary animation. “Why,
it is your own portrait painted by me it
is my portrait. It is yourself, such as you were
when I met you long ago when I entered the Duchess’s
house! Ah, do you remember that door where you
passed under my gaze, as a frigate passes under a
cannon of a fort? Good heavens! when I saw the
little one, just now, at the railway station, standing
on the platform, all in black, with the sun shining
on her hair massed around her face, the blood rushed
to my head. I thought I should weep. I tell
you, it is enough to drive one mad, when one has known
you as I have, who has studied you as no one else
has, and reproduced you in painting, Madame.
Ah, I thought that you had sent her alone to meet me
at the station in order to give me that surprise.
My God! but I was surprised, indeed! I tell you,
it is enough to drive one mad.”
He called: “Annette! Nane!”
The young girl’s voice replied
from outside, where she was giving sugar to the horses:
“Yes, yes, I am here!”
“Come in here!”
She entered quickly.
“Here, stand close beside your mother.”
She obeyed, and he compared the two,
but repeated mechanically, “Yes, it is astonishing,
astonishing!” for they resembled each other less
when side by side than they did before leaving Paris,
the young girl having acquired a new expression of
luminous youth in her black attire, while the mother
had for a long time lost that radiance of hair and
complexion that had dazzled and entranced the painter
when they met for the first time.
Then the Countess and Olivier entered
the drawing-room. He seemed in high spirits.
“Ah, what a good plan it was
to come here!” he said. “But it was
your husband’s idea that I should come, you
know. He charged me to take you back with me.
And I do you know what I propose? You
have no idea, have you? Well, I propose, on the
contrary, to remain here! Paris is odious in
this heat, while the country is delicious. Heavens!
how sweet it is here!”
The dews of evening impregnated the
park with freshness, the soft breeze made the trees
tremble, and the earth exhaled imperceptible vapors
which threw a light, transparent veil over the horizon.
The three cows, standing with drooping heads, cropped
the grass with avidity, and four peacocks, with a
loud rustling of wings, flew up into their accustomed
perch in a cedar-tree under the windows of the castle.
The barking of dogs in the distance came to the ear,
and in the quiet air of the close of day the calls
of human voices were heard, in phrases shouted across
the fields, from one meadow to another, and in those
short, guttural cries used in driving animals.
The painter, with bared head and shining
eyes, breathed deeply, and, as he met the Countess’s
look, he said:
“This is happiness!”
“It never lasts,” she answered, approaching
nearer.
“Let us take it when it comes,” said he.
“You never used to like the
country until now,” the Countess replied, smiling.
“I like it to-day because I
find you here. I do not know how to live any
more where you are not. When one is young, he
may be in love though far away, through letters, thoughts,
or dreams, perhaps because he feels that life is all
before him, perhaps too because passion is stronger
than pure affection; at my age, on the contrary, love
has become like the habit of an invalid; it is a binding
up of the soul, which flies now with only one wing,
and mounts less frequently into the ideal. The
heart knows no more ecstasy, only selfish wants.
And then I know quite well that I have no time to
lose to enjoy what remains for me.”
“Oh, old!” she remonstrated, taking his
hand tenderly.
“Yes, yes, I am old,”
he repeated. “Everything shows it, my hair,
my changing character, the coming sadness. Alas!
that is something I never have known till now sadness.
If someone had told me when I was thirty that a time
would come when I should be sad without cause, uneasy,
discontented with everything, I should not have believed
it. That proves that my heart also has grown
old.”
The Countess replied with an air of profound certainty:
“Oh, as for me, my heart is
still young. It never has changed. Yes, it
has grown younger, perhaps. Once it was twenty;
now it is only sixteen!”
They remained a long while thus, talking
in the open window, mingled with the spirit of evening,
very near each other, nearer than they ever had been,
in this hour of tenderness, this twilight of love,
like that of the day.
A servant entered, announcing:
“Madame la Comtesse is served.”
“Have you called my daughter?” the Countess
asked.
“Mademoiselle is in the dining-room.”
All three sat down at the table.
The shutters were closed, and two large candelabra
with six candles each illumined Annette’s face
and seemed to powder her hair with gold dust.
Bertin, smiling, looked at her continually.
“Heavens, now pretty she is in black!”
he said.
And he turned toward the Countess
while admiring the daughter, as if to thank the mother
for having given him this pleasure.
When they returned to the drawing-room
the moon had risen above the trees in the park.
Their somber mass appeared like a great island, and
the country round about like a sea hidden under the
light mist that floated over the plains.
“Oh, mamma, let us take a walk,” said
Annette.
The Countess consented.
“I will take Julio.”
“Very well, if you wish.”
They set out. The young girl
walked in front, amusing herself with the dog.
When they crossed the lawn they heard the breathing
of the cows, which, awake and scenting their enemy,
raised their heads to look. Under the trees,
farther away, the moon was pouring among the branches
a shower of fine rays that fell to earth, seeming to
wet the leaves that were spread out on the path in
little patches of yellow light. Annette and Julio
ran along, each seeming to have on this serene night,
the same joyful and unburdened hearts, the gaiety
of which expressed itself in graceful gambols.
In the little openings, where the
wave of moonlight descended as into a well, the young
girl looked like a spirit, and the painter called her
back, marveling at this dark vision with its clear
and brilliant face. Then when she darted away
again, he took the Countess’s hand and pressed
it, often seeking her lips as they traversed the deeper
shadows, as if the sight of Annette had revived the
impatience of his heart.
At last they reached the edge of the
plain, where they could just discern, afar, here and
there, the groups of trees belonging to the farms.
Through the milky mist that bathed the fields the horizon
appeared illimitable, and the soft silence, the living
silence of that vast space, so warm and luminous,
was full of inexpressible hope, of that indefinable
expectancy which makes summer nights so sweet.
Far up in the heavens a few long slender clouds looked
like silver shells. Standing still for a few
seconds, one could hear in that nocturnal peace a
confused, continuous murmur of life, a thousand slight
sounds, the harmony of which seemed like silence.
A quail in a neighboring field uttered
her double cry, and Julio, his ears erect, glided
furtively toward the two flute-like notes of the bird,
Annette following, as softly as he, holding her breath
and crouching low.
“Ah,” said the Countess,
standing alone with the painter, “why do moments
like this pass so quickly? We can hold nothing,
keep nothing. We have not even time to taste
what is good. It is over already.”
Olivier kissed her hand, and replied, smiling:
“Oh, I cannot philosophize this
evening! I belong to the present hour entirely.”
“You do not love me as I love you,” she
murmured.
“Ah, do not ”
“No,” she interrupted,
“in me you love, as you said very truly before
dinner, a woman who satisfies the needs of your heart,
a woman who never has caused you a pain, and who has
put a little happiness into your life. I know
that; I feel it. Yes, I have the good consciousness,
the ardent joy of having been good, useful, and helpful
to you. You have loved, you still love all that
you find agreeable in me, my attentions to you, my
admiration, my wish to please you, my passion, the
complete gift I made to you of my whole being.
But it is not I you really love, do you know?
Oh, I feel that as one feels a cold current of air.
You love a thousand things about me my
beauty, which is fast leaving me, my devotion, the
wit they say I possess, the opinion the world has of
me, and that which I have of you in my heart; but
it is not I I, nothing but myself do
you understand?”
He laughed in a soft and friendly way.
“No, I do not understand you
very well. You make a reproachful attack which
is quite unexpected.”
“Oh, my God! I wish I could
make you understand how I love you! I am always
seeking, but cannot find a means. When I think
of you and I am always thinking of you I
feel in the depths of my being an unspeakable intoxication
of longing to be yours, an irresistible need of giving
myself to you even more completely. I should like
to sacrifice myself in some absolute way, for there
is nothing better, when one loves, than to give, to
give always, all, all, life, thought, body, all that
one has, to feel that one is giving, to be ready to
risk anything to give still more. I love you
so much that I love to suffer for you, I love even
my anxieties, my torments, my jealousies, the pain
I feel when I realize that you are not longer tender
toward me. I love in you a someone that only
I have discovered, a you which is not the you of the
world that is admired and known, a you which is mine,
which cannot change nor grow old, which I cannot cease
to love, for I have, to look at it, eyes that see
it alone. But one cannot say these things.
There are no words to express them.”
He repeated softly, over and over:
“Dear, dear, dear Any!”
Julio came back, bounding toward them,
without having found the quail, which had kept still
at his approach; Annette followed him, breathless
from running.
“I can’t run any more,”
said she. “I will prop myself up with you,
Monsieur painter!”
She leaned on Olivier’s free
arm, and they returned, walking thus, he between them,
under the shadow of the trees. They spoke no more.
He walked on, possessed by them, penetrated by a sort
of feminine essence with which their contact filled
him. He did not try to see them, since he had
them near him; he even closed his eyes that he might
feel their proximity the better. They guided
him, conducted him, and he walked straight before
him, fascinated by them, with the one on the left as
well as the one on the right, without knowing, indeed,
which was on the left or which on the right, which
was mother, which was daughter. He abandoned
himself willingly to the pleasure of unpremeditated
and exquisite sensuous delight. He even tried
to mingle them in his heart, not to distinguish them
in his thought, and quieted desire with the charm
of this confusion. Was it not only one woman beside
him, composed of this mother and daughter, so much
alike? And did not the daughter seem to have
come to earth only for the purpose of reanimating his
former love for the mother?
When he opened his eyes on entering
the castle, it seemed to him that he had just passed
through the most delicious moments of his life; that
he had experienced the strangest, the most puzzling,
yet complete emotion a man might feel, intoxicated
with the same love by the seductiveness emanating
from two women.
“Ah, what an exquisite evening!”
said he, as soon as he found himself between them
in the lamplight.
“I am not at all sleepy,”
said Annette; “I could pass the whole night
walking when the weather is fine.”
The Countess looked at the clock.
“Oh, it is half after eleven. You must
go to bed, my child.”
They separated, and went to their
own apartments. The young girl who did not wish
to go to bed was the only one that went to sleep at
once.
The next morning, at the usual hour,
when the maid, after opening the curtains and the
shutters, brought the tea and looked at her mistress,
who was still drowsy, she said:
“Madame looks better to-day, already.”
“Do you think so?”
“Oh, yes. Madame’s face looks more
rested.”
Though she had not yet looked at herself,
the Countess knew that this was true. Her heart
was light, she did not feel it throb, and she felt
once more as if she lived. The blood flowing in
her veins was no longer coursing so rapidly as on
the day before, hot and feverish, sending nervousness
and restlessness through all her body, but gave her
a sense of well-being and happy confidence.
When the maid had gone she went to
look at herself in the mirror. She was a little
surprised, for she felt so much better that she expected
to find herself rejuvenated by several years in a single
night. Then she realized the childishness of
such a hope, and, after another glance, resigned herself
to the knowledge that her complexion was only clearer,
her eyes less fatigued, her lips a little redder than
on the day before. As her soul was content, she
could not feel sad, and she smiled, thinking:
“Yes, in a few days I shall be quite myself again.
I have gone through too much to recover so quickly.”
But she remained seated a very long
time before her toilet-table, upon which were laid
out in graceful order on a muslin scarf bordered with
lace, before a beautiful mirror of cut crystal, all
her little ivory-handled instruments of coquetry,
bearing her arms surmounted by a coronet. There
they were, innumerable, pretty, all different, destined
for delicate and secret use, some of steel, fine and
sharp, of strange shapes, like surgical instruments
for operations on children, others round and soft,
of feathers, of down, of the skins of unknown animals,
made to lay upon the tender skin the caresses of fragrant
powders or of powerful liquid perfumes.
She handled them a long time with
practised fingers, carrying them from her lips to
her temples with touches softer than a kiss, correcting
imperfections, underlining the eyes, beautifying the
eyelashes. At last, when she went down stairs,
she felt almost sure that the first glance cast upon
her would not be too unfavorable.
“Where is Monsieur Bertin?”
she inquired of a servant she met in the vestibule.
“Monsieur Bertin is in the orchard,
playing tennis with Mademoiselle,” the man replied.
She heard them from a distance counting
the points. One after the other, the deep voice
of the painter and the light one of the young girl,
called: “Fifteen, thirty, forty, vantage,
deuce, vantage, game!”
The orchard, where a space had been
leveled for a tennis-court, was a great, square grass-plot,
planted with apple-trees, inclosed by the park, the
vegetable-garden, and the farms belonging to the castle.
Along the slope that formed a boundary on three sides,
like the defenses of an intrenched camp, grew borders
of various kinds of flowers, wild and cultivated,
roses in masses, pinks, heliotrope, fuchsias,
mignonnette, and many more, which as Bertin said
gave the air a taste of honey. Besides this,
the bees, whose hives, thatched with straw, lined the
wall of the vegetable-garden, covered the flowery field
in their yellow, buzzing flight.
In the exact center of this orchard
a few apple-trees had been cut down, in order to make
a good court for tennis, and a tarry net, stretched
across this space, separated it into two camps.
Annette, on one side, with bare head,
her black skirt caught up, showing her ankles and
half way up to her knee when she ran to catch a ball,
dashed to and fro, with sparkling eyes and flushed
cheeks, tired, out of breath with the sure and practised
play of her adversary.
He, in white flannels, fitting tightly
over the hips, a white shirt, and a white tennis cap,
his abdomen somewhat prominent in that costume, awaited
the ball coolly, judged its fall with precision, received
and returned it without haste, without running, with
the elegant pose, the passionate attention, and professional
skill which he displayed in all athletic sports.
It was Annette that spied her mother first.
“Good morning, mamma!”
she cried, “wait till we have finished this
play.”
That second’s distraction lost
her the game. The ball passed against her, almost
rolling, touched the ground and went out of the game.
Bertin shouted “Won!”
and the young girl, surprised, accused him of having
profited by her inattention. Julio, trained to
seek and find the lost balls, as if they were partridges
fallen among the bushes, sprang behind her to get
the ball rolling in the grass, seized it in his jaws,
and brought it back, wagging his tail.
The painter now saluted the Countess,
but, urged to resume the game, animated by the contest,
pleased to find himself so agile, he threw only a
short, preoccupied glance at the face prepared so carefully
for him, asking:
“Will you allow me, dear Countess?
I am afraid of taking cold and having neuralgia.”
“Oh, yes,” the Countess replied.
She sat down on a hay-stack, mowed
that morning in order to give a clear field to the
players, and, her heart suddenly touched with sadness,
looked on at the game.
Her daughter, irritated at losing
continually, grew more animated, excited, uttered
cries of vexation or of triumph, and flew impetuously
from one end of the court to the other. Often,
in her swift movements, little locks of hair were
loosened, rolled down and fell upon her shoulders.
She seized them with impatient movements, and, holding
the racket between her knees, fastened them up in
place, thrusting hairpins into the golden mass.
And Bertin, from his position, cried to the Countess:
“Isn’t she pretty like that, and fresh
as the day?”
Yes, she was young, she could run,
grow warm, become red, let her hair fly, brave anything,
dare everything, for all that only made her more beautiful.
Then, when they resumed their play
with ardor, the Countess, more and more melancholy,
felt that Olivier preferred that game, that childish
sport, like the play of kittens jumping after paper
balls, to the sweetness of sitting beside her that
warm morning, and feeling her loving pressure against
him.
When the bell, far away, rang the
first signal for breakfast, it seemed to her that
someone had freed her, that a weight had been lifted
from her heart. But as she returned, leaning
on his arm, he said to her:
“I have been amusing myself
like a boy. It is a great thing to be, or to
feel oneself, young. Ah, yes, there is nothing
like that. When we do not like to run any more,
it is all over with us.”
When they left the table the Countess,
who on the preceding day had for the first time omitted
her daily visit to the cemetery, proposed that they
should go there together; so all three set out for
the village.
They were obliged to go through some
woods, through which ran a stream called “La
Rainette,” no doubt because of the frogs
that peopled it; then they had to cross the end of
a plain before arriving at the church, situated in
the midst of a group of houses that sheltered the grocer,
the baker, the butcher, the wine-merchant, and several
other modest tradesmen who supplied the needs of the
peasants.
The walk was made in thoughtful silence,
the recollection of the dead weighing on their spirits.
Arrived at the grave, the women knelt and prayed a
long time. The Countess, motionless, bent low,
her handkerchief at her eyes, for she feared to weep
lest her tears run down her cheeks. She prayed,
but not as she had prayed before this day, in a sort
of invocation to her mother, a despairing appeal penetrating
under the marble of the tomb until she seemed to feel
by the poignancy of her own anguish that the dead
must hear her, listen to her, but a simple, hesitating,
and earnest utterance of the consecrated words of the
Pater Noster and the Ave Maria.
She would not have had that day sufficient strength
and steadiness of nerve necessary for that cruel communion
that brought no response with what remained of that
being who had disappeared in the tomb where all that
was left of her was concealed. Other anxieties
had penetrated her woman’s heart, had agitated,
wounded, and distracted her; and her fervent prayer
rose to Heaven, full of vague supplications.
She offered her adoration to God, the inexorable God
who has made all poor creatures on the earth, and
begged Him to take pity on her as well as on the one
He had recalled to Himself.
She could not have told what she had
asked of God, so vague and confused were her fears
still; but she felt the need of Divine aid, of a superhuman
support against approaching dangers and inevitable
sorrows.
Annette, with closed eyes, having
also murmured the formulas, sank into a reverie, for
she did not wish to rise before her mother.
Olivier Bertin looked at them, thinking
that he never had seen a more ravishing picture, and
somewhat regretful that it was out of the question
for him to be permitted to make a sketch of the scene.
On their way back they talked of human
life, softly stirring those bitter and poetic ideas
of a tender but pessimistic philosophy, which is a
frequent subject of conversation between men and women
whom life has wounded a little, and whose hearts mingle
as they sympathize with each other’s grief.
Annette, who was not ripe for such
thoughts, left them frequently to gather wild flowers
beside the road.
But Olivier, desiring to keep her
near him, nervous at seeing her continually darting
away, never removed his eyes from her. He was
irritated that she should show more interest in the
colors of the plants than in the words he spoke.
He experienced an inexpressible dissatisfaction at
not being able to charm her, to dominate her, as he
had captivated her mother; and he felt a desire to
hold out his hand and seize her, hold her, forbid
her to go away. He felt that she was too alert,
too young, too indifferent, too free free
as a bird, or like a little dog that will not come
back, will not obey, which has independence in its
veins, that sweet instinct of liberty which neither
voice nor whip has yet vanquished.
In order to attract her he talked
of gayer things, and at times he questioned her, trying
to awaken her feminine curiosity so that she would
listen; but one would think that the capricious wind
of heaven was blowing through Annette’s head
that day, as it blew across the undulating grain,
carrying away and dispersing her attention into space,
for she hardly uttered even the commonplace replies
expected of her, between her short digressions, and
made them with an absent air, then returned to her
flowers. Finally he became exasperated, filled
with a childish impatience, and as she ran up to beg
her mother to carry her first bouquet so that she
could gather another, he caught her by the elbow and
pressed her arm, so that she could not escape again.
She struggled, laughing, pulling with all her strength
to get away from him; then, moved by masculine instinct,
he tried gentler means, and, not being able to win
her attention he tried to purchase it by tempting her
coquetry.
“Tell me,” said he, “what
flower you prefer, and I will have a brooch made of
it for you.”
She hesitated, surprised.
“What, a brooch?”
“In stones of the same color;
in rubies if it is the poppy; in sapphires if it is
the cornflower, with a little leaf in emeralds.”
Annette’s face lighted up with
that affectionate joy with which promises and presents
animate a woman’s countenance.
“The cornflower,” said she, “it
is so pretty.”
“The cornflower it shall be.
We will go to order it as soon as we return to Paris.”
She no longer tried to leave him,
attracted by the thought of the jewel she already
tried to see, to imagine.
“Does it take very long to make
a thing like that?” she asked.
He laughed, feeling that he had caught her.
“I don’t know; it depends
upon the difficulties. We will make the jeweler
do it quickly.”
A dismal thought suddenly crossed her mind.
“But I cannot wear it since I am in deep mourning!”
He had passed his arm under that of
the young girl, and pressed it against him.
“Well, you will keep the brooch
until you cease to wear mourning,” said he;
“that will not prevent you from looking at it.”
As on the preceding evening, he was
walking between them, held captive between their shoulders,
and in order to see their eyes, of a similar blue
dotted with tiny black spots, raised to his, he spoke
to them in turn, moving his head first toward the
one, then toward the other. As the bright sunlight
now shone on them, he did not so fully confound the
Countess with Annette, but he did more and more associate
the daughter with the new-born remembrances of what
the mother had been. He had a strong desire to
embrace both, the one to find again upon cheek and
neck a little of that pink and white freshness which
he had already tasted, and which he saw now reproduced
as by a miracle; the other because he loved her as
he always had, and felt that from her came the powerful
appeal of long habit. He even realized at that
moment that his desire and affection for her, which
for some time had been waning, had revived at the
sight of her resuscitated youth.
Annette went away again to gather
more flowers. This time Olivier did not call
her back; it was as if the contact of her arm and the
satisfaction of knowing that he had given her pleasure
had quieted him; but he followed all her movements
with the pleasure one feels in seeing the persons
or things that captivate and intoxicate our eyes.
When she returned, with a large cluster of flowers,
he drew a deep breath, seeking unconsciously to inhale
something of her, a little of her breath or the warmth
of her skin in the air stirred by her running.
He looked at her, enraptured, as one watches the dawn,
or listens to music, with thrills of delight when
she bent, rose again, or raised her arms to arrange
her hair. And then, more and more, hour by hour,
she evoked in him the memory of the past! Her
laughter, her pretty ways, her motions, brought back
to his lips the savor of former kisses given and returned;
she made of the far-off past, of which he had forgotten
the precise sensation, something like a dream in the
present; she confused epochs, dates, the ages of his
heart, and rekindling the embers of cooled emotions,
she mingled, without his realizing it, yesterday with
to-morrow, recollection with hope.
He asked himself as he questioned
his memory whether the Countess in her brightest bloom
had had that fawn-like, supple grace, that bold, capricious,
irresistible charm, like the grace of a running, leaping
animal. No. She had had a riper bloom but
was less untamed. First, a child of the city,
then a woman, never having imbibed the air of the
fields and lived in the grass, she had grown pretty
under the shade of the walls and not in the sunlight
of heaven.
When they reentered the castle the
Countess began to write letters at her little low
table in the bay-window; Annette went up to her own
room, and the painter went out again to walk slowly,
cigar in mouth, hands clasped behind him, through
the winding paths of the park. But he did not
go away so far that he lost sight of the white façade
or the pointed roof of the castle. As soon as
it disappeared behind groups of trees or clusters
of shrubbery, a shadow seemed to fall over his heart,
as when a cloud hides the sun; and when it reappeared
through the apertures in the foliage he paused a few
seconds to contemplate the two rows of tall windows.
Then he resumed his walk. He felt agitated, but
content. Content with what? With everything.
The air seemed pure to him, life was
good that day. His body felt once more the liveliness
of a small boy, a desire to run, to catch the yellow
butterflies fluttering over the lawn, as if they were
suspended at the end of elastic threads. He sang
little airs from the opera. Several times he
repeated the celebrated phrase by Gounod: “Laisse-moi
contempler ton visage,” discovering in it
a profoundly tender expression which never before
he had felt in the same way.
Suddenly he asked himself how it was
that he had so soon become different from his usual
self. Yesterday, in Paris, dissatisfied with
everything, disgusted, irritated; to-day calm, satisfied
with everything one would say that some
benevolent god had changed his soul. “That
same kind god,” he thought, “might well
have changed my body at the same time, and rejuvenated
me a little.” Suddenly he saw Julio hunting
among the bushes. He called him, and when the
dog ran up to put his finely formed head, with its
curly ears, under his hand, he sat down on the grass
to pet him more comfortably, spoke gentle words to
him, laid him on his knees, and growing tender as
he caressed the animal, he kissed it, after the fashion
of women whose hearts are easily moved to demonstration.
After dinner, instead of going out
as on the evening before, they spent the hours in
the drawing-room.
Suddenly the Countess said: “We must leave
here soon.”
“Oh, don’t speak of that
yet!” Olivier exclaimed. “You would
not leave Roncieres when I was not here; now what
I have come, you think only of going away.”
“But, my dear friend,”
said she, “we three cannot remain here indefinitely.”
“It does not necessarily follow
that we need stay indefinitely, but just a few days.
How many times have I stayed at your house for whole
weeks?”
“Yes, but in different circumstances,
when the house was open to everyone.”
“Oh, mamma,” said Annette,
coaxingly, “let us stay a few days more, just
two or three. He teaches me so well how to play
tennis. It annoys me to lose, but afterward I
am glad to have made such progress.”
Only that morning the Countess had
been planning to make this mysterious visit of her
friend’s last until Sunday, and now she wished
to go away, without knowing why. That day which
she had hoped would be such a happy one had left in
her soul an inexpressible but poignant sadness, a
causeless apprehension, as tenacious and confused as
a presentiment.
When she was once more alone in her
room she even sought to define this new access of
melancholy.
Had she experienced one of those imperceptible
emotions whose touch has been so slight that reason
does not remember it, but whose vibrations still stir
the most sensitive chords of the heart? Perhaps?
Which? She recalled, certainly, some little annoyances,
in the thousand degrees of sentiment through which
she had passed, each minute having its own. But
they were too petty to have thus disheartened her.
“I am exacting,” she thought. “I
have no right to torment myself in this way.”
She opened her window, to breathe
the night air, and leaned on the window-sill, gazing
at the moon.
A slight noise made her look down.
Olivier was pacing before the castle. “Why
did he say that he was going to his room?” she
thought; “why did he not tell me he was going
out again? Why did he not ask me to come with
him? He knows very well that it would have made
me so happy. What is he thinking of now?”
This idea that he had not wished to
have her with him on his walk, that he had preferred
to go out alone this beautiful night, alone, with a
cigar in his mouth, for she could see its fiery-red
point alone, when he might have given her
the joy of taking her with him; this idea that he
had not continual need of her, that he did not desire
her always, created within her soul a new fermentation
of bitterness.
She was about to close the window,
that she might not see him or be tempted to call to
him, when he raised his eyes and saw her.
“Well, are you star-gazing, Countess?”
“Yes,” she answered. “You also,
as it appears.”
“Oh, I am simply smoking.”
She could not resist the desire to
ask: “Why did you not tell me you were
going out?”
“I only wanted to smoke a cigar. I am coming
in now.”
“Then good-night, my friend.”
“Good-night, Countess.”
She retired as far as her low chair,
sat down in it and wept; and her maid, who was called
to assist her to bed, seeing her red eyes said with
compassion:
“Ah, Madame is going to make a sad face for
herself again to-morrow.”
The Countess slept badly; she was
feverish and had nightmare. As soon as she awoke
she opened her window and her curtains to look at herself
in the mirror. Her features were drawn, her eyelids
swollen, her skin looked yellow; and she felt such
violent grief because of this that she wished to say
she was ill and to keep her bed, so that she need not
appear until evening.
Then, suddenly, the necessity to go
away entered her mind, to depart immediately, by the
first train, to quit the country, where one could
see too clearly by the broad light of the fields the
ineffaceable marks of sorrow and of life itself.
In Paris one lives in the half shadow of apartments,
where heavy curtains, even at noontime, admit only
a softened light. She would herself become beautiful
again there, with the pallor one should have in that
discreetly softened light. Then Annette’s
face rose before her eyes so fresh and pink,
with slightly disheveled hair, as when she was playing
tennis. She understood then the unknown anxiety
from which her soul had suffered. She was not
jealous of her daughter’s beauty! No, certainly
not; but she felt, she acknowledged for the first
time that she must never again show herself by Annette’s
side in the bright sunlight.
She rang, and before drinking her
tea she gave orders for departure, wrote some telegrams,
even ordering her dinner for that evening by telegraph,
settled her bills in the country, gave her final instructions,
arranged everything in less than an hour, a prey to
feverish and increasing impatience.
When she went down stairs, Annette
and Olivier, who had been told of her decision, questioned
her with surprise. Then, seeing that she would
not give any precise reason for this sudden departure,
they grumbled a little and expressed their dissatisfaction
until they separated at the station in Paris.
The Countess, holding out her hand
to the painter, said: “Will you dine with
us to-morrow?”
“Certainly, I will come,”
he replied, rather sulkily. “All the same,
what you have done was not nice. We were so happy
down there, all three of us.”