Complete Works of Emile Zola (1764 page)

And that handkerchief?’ Marc asked.

Oh!  I picked it up here just now.... Perhaps the man wanted to stifle the child’s cries with it, and dropped it as he ran away.’

But Marc no longer listened; he was leaning over the little form upon the ground, and an exclamation of frantic grief suddenly escaped his lips: ‘Rose! our little Rose!’

The victim was indeed the pretty little girl, who, as a babe, in the arms of her cousin Lucienne, had offered a bouquet to Simon on the occasion of his triumph ten years previously. She had grown up full of beauty and charm, with a bright, dimpled, smiling face amid a mass of fair and wavy tresses. And the scene could be easily pictured: the child returning home across that deserted square in the falling night, some bandit surprising her ill-using her, and flinging her there upon the ground, whereupon, hearing a sound of footsteps, he had been seized with terror and had fled. The child did not stir; she lay there as if lifeless, in her little white frock figured with pink flowerets, a holiday frock which her mother had allowed her to wear for her visit to her friend.

‘Rose! Rose!’ called Marc, who was beside himself. ‘Why do you not answer me, my darling? Speak, say only one word to me, only one word.’

He touched her gently, not daring as yet to raise her from the ground. And, talking to himself, he said, ‘She has only fainted; I can tell that she is breathing. But I fear that something is broken.... Ah! misfortune dogs us; here again is grief indeed!’

Indescribable terror came upon him as all the frightful past suddenly arose before his mind’s eye. There, under that tragic window, close to that room where the wretched Gorgias had killed little Zéphirin, he had now found his own great-granddaughter, his well-loved little Rose, who was assuredly hurt, and who in all probability only owed her salvation to the accidental arrival of a stranger. Who was it that had brought about that awful renewal of the past? What new and prolonged anguish was foreboded by that crime? As if by the glow of a great lightning flash, Marc, at that horrible moment, saw all his past life spread out, and lived all his battles and all his sufferings anew.

Marsouillier, however, had remained there with the handkerchief in his hand. He ended by slipping it into his pocket in an embarrassed way, like a man who had not said all he knew, and who devoutly wished that he had not crossed the square that evening.

‘One ought not to leave her there, Monsieur Froment,’ he said at last. ‘You are not strong enough to pick her up; if you like I will take her in my arms and carry her to her mamma’s, as it is close by.’

Marc was compelled to accept the offer, and followed the sturdy beadle, who took the child up very gently, without rousing her from her fainting fit. In this wise they reached the mother’s door, and for her what a shock it was when she beheld her well-loved child, now her only joy and comfort, brought back to her insensible, as pale as death in her bright frock, and with her beautiful hair streaming loosely about her. The frock was in shreds, a lock of hair which had been torn off was caught in the lace collar. And the struggle must have been terrible, for the child’s wrenched hands were all bruised, and her right arm hung down so limply that it was certainly broken.

Thérèse, distracted, beside herself, repeated amid her choking sobs: ‘Rose, my little Rose! They have killed my Rose!’

In vain did Marc point out to her that the child was still breathing, and that not a drop of blood was to be seen; the mother still repeated that her child was dead. But Marsouillier carried the girl upstairs and laid her on a bed, where all at once she suddenly opened her eyes and gazed around her with indescribable terror. Then, shivering the while, she began to stammer: ‘Oh, mamma, mamma, hide me, I am frightened!’

Thunderstruck by her revival to consciousness, Thérèse sank on the bed beside her, caught her in her arms and pressed her to her bosom, so overcome by emotion that she could no longer speak. Marc, however, begged the assistant teacher, who happened to be present, to go for a doctor; and then, quite upset by the mystery, endeavoured to fathom it at once.

‘What happened to you, my darling?’ he inquired; ‘can you tell us?’

Rose looked at him for a moment as if to make sure who was speaking to her, and then, with haggard, wandering eyes, peered into all the dim corners of the room. ‘I’m afraid, I’m afraid, grandfather,’ she said.

He endeavoured to reassure her and inquired gently:

‘Did nobody accompany you when you left your little friend’s?’

‘I didn’t want anybody to come. The house is so near. And we had played so long, I was afraid I would get home still later.’

‘And be you came back running, my darling, eh? And somebody sprang on you; that is what happened, is it not?’

But the terrified child again began to tremble, and did not answer. Marc had to repeat his question. ‘Yes, yes, somebody,’ she stammered at last.

Marc waited till she became calmer, caressing her hair the while, and kissing her on the forehead. ‘You see, you ought to tell us,’ he resumed. ‘You cried out, naturally, you struggled. The man wanted to close your mouth, did he not?’

‘Oh, grandfather, it was all so quick! He took hold of my arms, and he twisted them round. He wanted to drive me out of my senses and carry me off on his back. It hurt me so dreadfully, I thought I should die, and I fell to the ground: that is all I remember.’

Marc felt greatly relieved; he was now convinced that nothing worse had happened, particularly as Marsouillier, on hearing the girl’s cries, had hastened to the spot. And so he asked but one question more: ‘And would you be able to recognise the man, my dear?’

Again Rose quivered, and her eyes became quite wild as if some terrible vision was rising before her. Then, covering her face with both hands, she relapsed into stubborn silence. As her glance had already fallen on Marsouillier and she had raised no exclamation on seeing him, Marc realised that he had been mistaken when he had suspected the beadle of the crime. Nevertheless he wished to question him also; for, even allowing that he had spoken the truth, it might be that he had not told the whole of it.

‘You saw the man run away?’ said Marc. ‘Would you be able to recognise him?’

‘Oh! I don’t think so, Monsieur Froment. He passed me, but it was already dark. Besides, I was so disturbed.’ And the beadle, who had not yet fully recovered his composure, let a further detail escape him: ‘He said something as he passed, I fancy... he called “imbecile!”’

‘What! Imbecile?’ retorted Marc, who was greatly surprised. ‘Why should he have said that to you?’

But Marsouillier, deeply regretting that he had added that particular, for he understood the possible gravity of any admission on his part, endeavoured to recall his words. ‘I can’t be sure of anything,’ he said, ‘it was like a growl.... And no, no, I should not be able to recognise him.’

Then, as Marc asked him for the handkerchief, he drew it from his pocket with some appearance of indifference, and laid it on a table. It was a very common kind of handkerchief, one of those which are embroidered by the gross with initials in red thread. This one was marked with the letter F, and the clue was a slight one, for dozens of similar handkerchiefs were sold in the shops.

Meantime Thérèse, who had again caught Rose in a gentle embrace, caressed her lovingly. ‘The doctor is coming, my treasure,’ she said. ‘I won’t touch you any more till he is here. It won’t be anything. You are not in great pain, are you?’

‘No, mother,’ Rose replied, ‘but my arm bums me and seems very heavy.’

Then, in an undertone, Thérèse, in her turn, tried to confess the girl, for the mysteriousness of the assault had left her very anxious. But at each fresh question Rose evinced yet greater alarm, and at last she closed her eyes and buried her head in the pillow, so as to see and hear nothing more. Every time her mother made a fresh attempt, begging her to say if she knew the man and would be able to recognise him, the child quivered dreadfully. But all at once, bursting into loud sobs, quite beside herself, almost delirious, she told everything in a loud, distressful voice, fancying, perhaps, that she was simply whispering her words in her mother’s ear.

‘Oh! mother, mother, I am so grieved! I recognised him — it was father who was waiting there, and who threw himself upon me!’

Thérèse sprang to her feet in stupefaction. ‘Your father? What is it you say, you unhappy child?’

Marc and Marsouillier also had heard the girl. And the former drew near to her with a violent gesture of incredulity: ‘Your father? It is impossible I... Come, come, my darling, you must have dreamt that.’

‘No, no, father was waiting for me behind the school, and I recognised him by his board and his hat. He tried to carry me away, and as I would not let him he twisted my arms and made me fall.’

She clung stubbornly to that account of the affair, though she could supply little proof of what she asserted, for the man had not spoken a word to her, and she had only noticed his beard and hat, remembering nothing else, not even his features, which had been hidden by the darkness. Nevertheless, that man was her father, she was sure of it; nothing could efface that impression, which, if incorrect, might be some haunting idea which had sprung from the grief in which she had seen her mother plunged since the departure of the unfaithful François.

‘It is impossible; it is madness!’ Marc repeated, for his reason rebelled and protested against such a notion. ‘If François had wished to take Rose away, he would not have hurt her — killed her almost!’

Thérèse also quietly displayed a feeling of perfect certainty. ‘François is incapable of such an action,’ said she. ‘He has caused me a great deal of grief, but I know him, and will defend him if need be... You were mistaken, my poor Rose.’

Nevertheless the unhappy woman went to look at the handkerchief which had remained on the table. And she could not restrain a nervous start, for it appeared to be one of a dozen marked with a similar letter F, which she had purchased for her husband of the Sisters Landois, who kept a drapery shop in the High Street. On going to a chest of drawers Thérèse found ten similar handkerchiefs, and it was quite possible that François had taken two away with him at the time of his flight. However, the unhappy wife strove to overcome her uneasiness, and as firmly and as positively as before, she said: ‘The handkerchief may belong to him.... But it was not he; never shall I think him guilty.’

The strange scene seemed to have stupefied Marsouillier. He had remained on one side, at a loss apparently as to how he might quit those sorrowing folk, and since he had heard the child’s story his eyes had been all astonishment. The recognition of the handkerchief brought his dismay to a climax, and at last, profiting by the arrival of the doctor fetched by the assistant teacher, he managed to slip away. Marc, on his side, went into the dining-room to await the result of the medical examination. Rose’s right arm was indeed broken, but there was nothing of a disquieting character about the fracture, and the wrenched wrists and a few bruises were the only other marks of violence which the doctor found. He, indeed, was most concerned respecting the result of the nervous shock which the girl had experienced, for it had been a violent one. And he only left her an hour later, when he had reduced the fracture and saw her overcome, as it were, plunged in a heavy sleep.

Marc, however, had meantime sent a message to his wife and Louise, for he feared that they might be alarmed by his failure to return home. And they hastened to the school, terrified by this frightful business, which reminded them also of the old and abominable affair. Thérèse having joined them, a kind of family council was held, the door of the bedroom remaining open in order that they might at once hear the injured girl if she should wake up. Marc, who was quite feverish, expressed his views at length. What possible reason could there have been for François to commit such a deed? He might have yielded to a transport of passion by running away with Colette, but he had invariably shown himself to be a loving father, and his wife did not even complain of his manner towards herself, for it had remained outwardly dignified, almost deferential. Thus, what motive could have prompted him if he were guilty? Hidden away with his mistress in some unknown retreat, it could hardly be that he had experienced a sudden craving to have his daughter with him. What could he have done with the child? She would have been a burden on him in the life he must be leading. And even supposing that he had wished to strike a cruel blow at his wife, and reduce her to solitude, without a consolation remaining to her, it was incredible that he should have ill-used and injured his daughter, have left her upon the ground senseless! He would simply have taken her away with him. Thus, in spite of Rose’s statements, in spite of the handkerchief, François could not be guilty, the impossibilities were too great. Nevertheless, faced as he was by this mysterious problem, and the task of again seeking the truth, Marc felt disturbed and anxious, for he was convinced that Marsouillier would relate what he had seen and heard, and that all Maillebois would be discussing the drama on the morrow. And as all the appearances were against François, would public opinion denounce him even as in former days it had denounced his grandfather, Simon the Jew? In that case, how could he be defended? what ought to be done to prevent a renewal of the monstrous iniquity of long ago?

‘The one thing that tends to tranquillize me,’ said Marc at last, ‘is that the times have changed. We now have to deal with people who have been freed and educated, and it will greatly surprise me if they do not help us to unravel the truth.’

Silence fell. At last, in spite of the little quiver which she was unable to master, Thérèse exclaimed energetically, ‘You are right, grandfather. Before everything else we must establish the innocence of François, which I cannot possibly doubt, whatever may be the accusations.... He has made me suffer dreadfully, but I will forget it, and you may rely on me, I will help you with all my strength.’

Geneviève and Louise nodded their assent. ‘Ah!’ muttered the latter, ‘the unhappy lad! When he was seven years old he used to throw his arms round me and say, “Little mother, I love you very dearly I” He has a tender and passionate nature, and thus one must forgive him a great deal.’

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