Say something. Why do you not walk?
Walk a little, that I may see them move, that I may see them live,—your little shoes."
He knelt down, kissed my shoes, kneaded them with his feverish and caressing fingers, unlaced them. And, while kissing, kneading, and caressing them, he said, in a supplicating voice, in the voice of a weeping child:
"Oh! Marie, Marie, your little shoes; give them to me directly, directly, directly. I want them directly. Give them to me."
I was powerless. Astonishment had paralyzed me.
I did not know whether I was really living or dreaming.
Of Monsieur's eyes I saw nothing but two little white globes streaked with red.
And his mouth was all daubed with a sort of soapy foam.
At last he took my shoes away and shut himself up with them in his room for two hours.
"Monsieur is much pleased with you," said the governess to me, in showing me over the house.
"Try to continue to please him.
The place is a good one."
Four days later, in the morning, on going at the usual hour to open the windows, I came near fainting with horror in the chamber. Monsieur was dead.
Stretched on his back in the middle of the bed, he lay with all the rigidity of a corpse.
He had not struggled.
The bed-clothing was not disarranged. There was not the slightest trace of shock, of agony, of clinched hands striving to strangle Death. And I should have thought him asleep, if his face had not been violet, frightfully violet, the sinister violet of the egg-plant.
And,—terrifying spectacle, which, still more than this face, caused me to quake with fear,—Monsieur held, pressed between his teeth, one of my shoes, so firmly pressed between his teeth that, after useless and horrible efforts, I was obliged to cut the leather with a razor, in order to tear it from him.
I am no saint; I have known many men, and I know, by experience, all the madness, all the vileness, of which they are capable. But a man like Monsieur?
Oh! indeed, is it not ridiculous all the same that such types exist?
And where do they go in search of all their conceits, when it is so simple and so good to love each other prettily, as other people do? _____
I do not think that anything of that kind will happen to me here.
Here, evidently, they are of another sort.
But is it better?
Is it worse?
As to that, I know nothing.
There is one thing that torments me.
I ought, perhaps, to have finished, once for all, with all these dirty places, and squarely taken the step from domesticity into gallantry, like so many others that I have known, and who—I say it without pride—had fewer "advantages" than I.
Though I am not what is called pretty, I am better; without conceit I may say that I have an atmosphere, a style, which many society women and many women of the demi-monde have often envied me.
A little tall, perhaps, but supple, slender, and well-formed, with very beautiful blonde hair, very beautiful deep-blue eyes, an audacious mouth, and, finally, an original manner and a turn of mind, very lively and languishing at once, that pleases men.
I might have succeeded.
But, in addition to the fact that, by my own fault, I have missed some astonishing opportunities, which probably will never come to me again, I have been afraid.
I have been afraid, for one never knows where that will lead you. I have rubbed against so many miseries in that sphere of life; I have received so many distressing confidences.
And those tragic calvaries from the Depot to the Hospital, which one does not always escape!
And, for a background to the picture, the hell of Saint-Lazare!
Such things cause one to reflect and shudder. Who knows, too, whether I should have had, as woman, the same success that I have had as chambermaid?
The particular charm which we exercise over men does not lie solely in ourselves, however pretty we may be.
It depends largely, as I have had occasion to know, on our environment, on the luxury and vice of our surroundings, on our mistresses themselves and on the desire which they excite.
In loving us, it is a little of them and much of their mystery that men love in us.
But there is something else.
In spite of my dissolute life, I have luckily preserved, in the depths of my being, a very sincere religious feeling, which saves me from definitive falls and holds me back at the edge of the worst abysses.
Ah! if there were no religion; if, on evenings of gloom and moral distress, there were no prayer in the churches; if it were not for the Holy Virgin, and Saint Anthony of Padua, and all the rest of the outfit,—we should be much more unhappy, that is sure.
And what would become of us, and how far we should go, the devil only knows!
Finally,—and this is more serious,—I have not the least defence against men.
I should be the constant victim of my disinterestedness and their pleasure.
I am too amorous,—yes, I am too much in love with love, to draw any profit whatever out of love.
It is stronger than I; I cannot ask money of one who gives me happiness and sets ajar for me the radiant gates of Ecstasy.
So here I am, then, at the Priory, awaiting what?
Indeed, I do not know.
The wisest way would be not to think about it, and trust everything to luck.
Perhaps it is thus that things go best.