Complete Works of Emile Zola (318 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Emile Zola
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‘You did quite right to count upon me,’ she exclaimed as she pressed Marthe’s hands. ‘Who ought to help those poor girls if it isn’t we whom people accuse of setting them a bad example by our luxury? It is frightful to think of those children being exposed to all those horrible dangers. It has made me feel quite ill. I am entirely at your service.’

When Marthe told her that her mother could not join the committee she displayed still greater enthusiasm for the scheme.

‘It is a pity Madame Rougon has so many things to do,’ she said with a touch of irony; ‘she would have been of great assistance to us. But it can’t be helped. No one can do more than they are able. I have plenty of friends. I will go and see the Bishop; and move heaven and earth if it’s neces­sary. I’ll promise you that we shall succeed,’

She would not listen to any of the particulars about the expenses. She was quite sure, she said, that whatever money was wanted would be found, and she meant the Home to be a credit to the committee, as handsome and as comfortable as possible. She added with a laugh that she quite lost her head when she began to dabble in figures; but she undertook to charge herself with the preliminary steps and the general furtherance of the scheme. Dear Madame Mouret, said she, was not accustomed to begging, and she would accompany her on her visits and would even take several of them off her hands altogether. By the end of a quarter of an hour she had made the business entirely her own, and it was now she who gave instructions to Marthe. The latter was just about to take her leave when Monsieur de Condamin came into the room; so she lingered on, feeling very ill at ease, however, and not daring to say any more on the subject of her visit in the presence of a man who was rumoured to be compromised in that matter of the poor girls with whose shameful story the town was ringing.

But Madame de Condamin explained the great scheme to her husband, who listened with an appearance of perfect ease, and gave utterance to the most moral sentiments. He con­sidered the scheme an extremely proper one.

‘It is an idea which could only have occurred to a mother,’ he said gravely, in a tone which made it impossible to tell whether he was serious or not. ‘Plassans will be indebted to you, madame, for a purer morality.’

‘But I must tell you that the idea is not my own! I have merely adopted it,’ replied Marthe, made uneasy by these praises. ‘It was suggested to me by a person whom I esteem very highly.’

‘Who was that?’ asked Madame de Condamin, with a show of curiosity.

‘Abbé Faujas.’

Then Marthe, with great frankness, told them what a high opinion she had of the priest. She made no allusion to the unpleasant stories that had been circulated about him, but she represented him as a man worthy of the highest respect, whom she was very happy to receive in her home. Madame de Condamin nodded approvingly as she listened.

‘I always said so!’ she exclaimed. ‘Abbé Faujas is a very distinguished priest. But there are such a lot of malicious people about! Now, however, that you receive him in your home, they don’t venture to say anything more against him; all that calumnious talk has been cut short. The idea, you say, is his. We shall have to persuade him, then, to take a prominent part in putting it into execution. For the present we will keep the matter very quiet. I can assure you that I always liked and defended the Abbé.’

‘I recollect talking with him, and I thought him a very good fellow,’ remarked the conservator of rivers and forests.

His wife silenced him with a gesture. She occasionally treated him in a very cavalier style. Truth to tell, Monsieur de Condamin alone bore the shame attaching to the equivocal marriage which he was charged with having made; the young woman, whom he had brought from no one knew where, had got herself forgiven and liked by the whole town, thanks to her pleasant ways and taking looks, to which provincial folks are more susceptible than might be imagined.

Monsieur de Condamin understood that he was in the way in this virtuous consultation.

‘I will leave you to your good designs,’ he said with a slight touch of irony. ‘I am going to smoke a cigar. Octavie, don’t forget to be dressed in good time. We are going to the Sub-Prefecture this evening, you know.’

When he had left the room, the two women resumed their conversation for a few moments longer, returning to what they had previously been saying, expressing pity for the poor girls who yielded to temptation, and manifesting much anxiety to shelter them from danger. Madame de Condamin inveighed eloquently against vice.

‘Well, then!’ she said, as she pressed Marthe’s hand for the last time, ‘it is all settled, and I shall be entirely at your service as soon as you call for my help. If you go to see Madame Rastoil and Madame Delangre, tell them that I will undertake to do everything, and that all we want from them is their names. My idea is a good one, don’t you think? We won’t depart a hair’s breadth from it. Give my compliments to Abbé Faujas.’

Marthe at once proceeded to call upon Madame Delangre, and then upon Madame Rastoil. She found them very polite, but less enthusiastic than Madame de Condamin. They dis­cussed the pecuniary side of the scheme. A large sum of money would be required, they said; the charity of the public would certainly never provide it, and there was a great risk of the whole business coming to a ridiculous termination. Marthe tried to reassure them, and plied them with figures. Then they asked her what ladies had consented to join the committee. The mention of Madame de Condamin’s name left them silent, but when they learned that Madame Rougon had excused herself from joining, they became more amiable.

Madame Delangre had received Marthe in her husband’s private room. She was a pale little woman whose dissolute­ness had remained a matter of legend in Plassans.

‘Indeed,’ she ended by saying, ‘there is nothing I should like to see better. It would be a school of virtue for the youth of the working-classes, and it would be the means of saving many weak souls. I cannot refuse my assistance, for I feel that I could be of much use to you through my husband, who as mayor of the town is brought into continual contact with all the influential people. But I must ask you to allow me till to-morrow before I give a definite reply. Our position requires us to exercise circumspection, and I should like to consult Monsieur Delangre.’

In Madame Rastoil Marthe encountered a woman who was equally listless but more prudish, and who sought for irre­proachable words when referring to the unfortunate girls who had fallen. She was a sleek, plump person, and Marthe found her embroidering a very gorgeous alb, between her two daughters, whom she sent away at her visitor’s first words.

‘I am much obliged to you for having thought of me, she said; ‘but really I am very much occupied. I am already on several committees and I don’t know whether I should have the time. I have had some such idea as your own myself, but my scheme was a larger one and, perhaps, more complete and comprehensive. For a whole month I have been intending to talk to the Bishop about it, but I have never been able to find the time. Well! we will unite our efforts, and I will tell you my own views, for I think you are making a mistake in some points. Since it seems necessary, I will surrender still more of my time. But it was only yesterday that my husband said to me: “Really, you never attend to your own affairs; you are always looking after other people’s.”‘

Marthe glanced at her curiously, thinking of her old en­tanglement with Monsieur Delangre, which folks still chuckled over in the cafés of the Cour Sauvaire. The wives of the mayor and the presiding judge had received the mention of Abbé Faujas’s name very suspiciously, the latter especially so. Marthe was a little vexed at this distrust of a person for whom she vouched; so she made a point of dwelling upon the Abbé’s good qualities, and eventually forced the two women to acknowledge the merit of this priest, who lived a life of retire­ment and supported his mother.

On leaving Madame Rastoil’s Marthe merely had to cross the road to reach Madame Paloque’s, which was on the other side of the Rue Balande. It was seven o’clock, but she was anxious to make this last call, even if she were to keep Mouret waiting for dinner and get herself scolded in consequence.

The Paloques were just about to sit down to table in a chilly dining-room, whose prim coldness spoke of provincial penury. Madame Paloque hastened to cover up the soup-tureen, vexed at being thus found at table. She was very polite, humble almost, anxious as she really felt about this visit which she had not expected. Her husband, the judge, sat before his empty plate with his hands upon his knees.

‘The hussies!’ he exclaimed, when Marthe spoke of the girls of the old quarter of the town. ‘I heard some nice accounts of them to-day at court. It was they who led some of our most respectable townspeople astray. You do wrong, madame, to interest yourself about such vermin.’

‘I am very much afraid,’ said Madame Paloque in her turn, ‘that I cannot be of much assistance to you. I know no one, and my husband would cut his hand off rather than beg for the smallest trifle. We have held ourselves quite aloof from everyone, disgusted as we are with all the injustices we have witnessed. We live here very quietly and modestly, happy in being forgotten and let alone. Even if promotion were offered to my husband now, he would refuse it. Wouldn’t you, my dear?’

The judge nodded his head in assent and they exchanged a slight smile, while Marthe sat ill at ease in the presence of that hideous wrinkled couple, livid with gall and bitter­ness, who played so well the little comedy of feigned resigna­tion. Fortunately she recalled her mother’s counsels.

‘I had quite counted upon you,’ she said, making herself very pleasant. ‘We shall have Madame Delangre, Madame Rastoil, and Madame de Condamin; but, between ourselves, those ladies will only give us their names. I should have liked to find some lady of good status and kindly, charitable disposition, who would have taken a stronger interest and shown more energy in the matter, and I thought that you would be the very person. Think what gratitude Plassans would owe us if we could only bring such an undertaking to a successful issue!’

‘Of course, of course!’ Madame Paloque murmured, quite delighted at Marthe’s insinuating words.

‘I am sure you are wrong in fancying that you are without power to assist us. It is very well known that Monsieur Paloque is a favourite at the Sub-Prefecture; and between ourselves I may say that he is intended to succeed Monsieur Rastoil. Ah, now! don’t try to depreciate yourselves; your merits are known, and it is no use your trying to hide them. This would be a very good opportunity for Madame Paloque to emerge a little from the obscurity and privacy in which she keeps herself, and to let the world see what a head and what a heart she has!’

The judge seemed very restless. He looked at his wife with blinking eyes.

‘Madame Paloque has not refused,’ said he.

‘No, certainly not,’ interposed the latter. ‘If you really stand in need of me, that settles the matter. I dare say I am only committing another piece of folly, and shall give myself a lot of trouble without ever getting a word of thanks for it. Monsieur Paloque can tell you of all the good works we’ve done without ever saying a word about them; and you can see for yourself what they’ve brought us to. Well, well, we can’t change our natures, and I suppose we shall continue being dupes to the end! You may count upon me, dear madame.’

The Paloques rose and Marthe took leave of them, thank­ing them for their kindly interest. As she stopped for a moment on the landing to liberate a flounce of her dress which had caught between the banisters and the steps, she heard them talking with animation on the other side of the door.

‘They want to enlist you because they want to make use of you!’ the judge was saying in a bitter voice. ‘You will be their beast of burden.’

‘Of course!’ replied his wife, ‘but you may be sure that I’ll make them pay for it with the rest!’

When Marthe at last got back home, it was nearly eight o’clock. Mouret had been waiting a whole half-hour for his dinner, and she was afraid that there would be a terrible scene. But, when she had undressed and come downstairs, she found her husband seated astride an overturned chair, tranquilly beating a tattoo on the table-cloth with his fingers. He was in a very teasing, bantering mood.

‘Well,’ said he, ‘I had quite made up my mind that you were going to spend the night in a confessional-box. Now that you have taken to going to church, you had better give me notice when the priests invite you, so that I can dine out.’

All through the dinner he indulged in witticisms of this kind, and Marthe was more distressed by them than if he had openly stormed at her. Two or three times she cast a glance at him as if beseeching him to leave her in peace. But her looks only appeared to stimulate his wit. Octave and Désirée laughed at it all, but Serge remained silent and mentally took his mother’s side. During dessert Rose came into the room, looking quite scared, with the news that Monsieur Delangre had called and wished to see madame.

‘Hallo! have you begun to associate with the authorities as well?’ exclaimed Mouret in his sneering fashion.

Marthe went into the drawing-room to receive the mayor. With much politeness the latter told her that he had felt unwilling to wait until the morrow to congratulate her upon her charitable idea. Madame Delangre was a little timid; she had done wrong in not immediately promising her co­operation, and he had now come to say in her name that she would be delighted to serve on the committee of lady patronesses of the Home of the Virgin. As for himself, he would do all he could to further the success of a scheme that would be so useful, so conducive to morality.

Marthe accompanied him to the street-door; and there, as Rose held up the lamp to light the footpath, the mayor added:

‘Will you tell Abbé Faujas that I shall be glad to have a little conversation with him, if he will kindly call on me? As he has had experience of an establishment of this kind at Besançon, he will be able to give me valuable information. I mean the town to pay for the building, at any rate. Good­bye, dear madame. Give my best compliments to Monsieur Mouret, whom I won’t disturb.’

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