Gervaise’s greatest joy was a tree growing in the courtyard to the left of their window, an acacia that stretched out a single branch and yet, with its meager foliage, lent charm to the entire street.
It was on the last day of April that Gervaise was confined.
The pains came on in the afternoon, towards four o’clock, as she was ironing a pair of curtains at Madame Fauconnier’s.
She would not go home at once, but remained there wriggling about on a chair, and continuing her ironing every time the pain allowed her to do so; the curtains were wanted quickly and she obstinately made a point of finishing them.
Besides, perhaps after all it was only a colic; it would never do to be frightened by a bit of a stomach-ache.
But as she was talking of starting on some shirts, she became quite pale.
She was obliged to leave the work-shop, and cross the street doubled in two, holding on to the walls.
One of the workwomen offered to accompany her; she declined, but begged her to go instead for the midwife, close by, in the Rue de la Charbonniere.
This was only a false alarm; there was no need to make a fuss.
She would be like that no doubt all through the night.
It was not going to prevent her getting Coupeau’s dinner ready as soon as she was indoors; then she might perhaps lie down on the bed a little, but without undressing.
On the staircase she was seized with such a violent pain, that she was obliged to sit down on one of the stairs; and she pressed her two fists against her mouth to prevent herself from crying out, for she would have been ashamed to have been found there by any man, had one come up.
The pain passed away; she was able to open her door, feeling relieved, and thinking that she had decidedly been mistaken.
That evening she was going to make a stew with some neck chops.
All went well while she peeled the potatoes.
The chops were cooking in a saucepan when the pains returned.
She mixed the gravy as she stamped about in front of the stove, almost blinded with her tears.
If she was going to give birth, that was no reason why Coupeau should be kept without his dinner.
At length the stew began to simmer on a fire covered with cinders.
She went into the other room, and thought she would have time to lay the cloth at one end of the table.
But she was obliged to put down the bottle of wine very quickly; she no longer had strength to reach the bed; she fell prostrate, and she had more pains on a mat on the floor.
When the midwife arrived, a quarter of an hour later, she found mother and baby lying there on the floor.
The zinc-worker was still employed at the hospital.
Gervaise would not have him disturbed.
When he came home at seven o’clock, he found her in bed, well covered up, looking very pale on the pillow, and the child crying, swathed in a shawl at it’s mother’s feet.
“Ah, my poor wife!” said Coupeau, kissing Gervaise.
“And I was joking only an hour ago, whilst you were crying with pain!
I say, you don’t make much fuss about it — the time to sneeze and it’s all over.”
She smiled faintly; then she murmured:
“It’s a girl.”
“Right!” the zinc-worker replied, joking so as to enliven her,
“I ordered a girl!
Well, now I’ve got what I wanted!
You do everything I wish!”
And, taking the child up in his arms, he continued: “Let’s have a look at you, miss! You’ve got a very black little mug.
It’ll get whiter, never fear.
You must be good, never run about the streets, and grow up sensible like your papa and mamma.”
Gervaise looked at her daughter very seriously, with wide open eyes, slowly overshadowed with sadness, for she would rather have had a boy. Boys can talk care of themselves and don’t have to run such risks on the streets of Paris as girls do.
The midwife took the infant from Coupeau.
She forbade Gervaise to do any talking; it was bad enough there was so much noise around her.
Then the zinc-worker said that he must tell the news to mother Coupeau and the Lorilleuxs, but he was dying with hunger, he must first of all have his dinner.
It was a great worry to the invalid to see him have to wait on himself, run to the kitchen for the stew, eat it out of a soup plate, and not be able to find the bread.
In spite of being told not to do so, she bewailed her condition, and fidgeted about in her bed.
It was stupid of her not to have managed to set the cloth, the pains had laid her on her back like a blow from a bludgeon.
Her poor old man would not think it kind of her to be nursing herself up there whilst he was dining so badly.
At least were the potatoes cooked enough?
She no longer remembered whether she had put salt in them.
“Keep quiet!” cried the midwife.
“Ah! if only you could stop her from wearing herself out!” said Coupeau with his mouth full.
“If you were not here, I’d bet she’d get up to cut my bread. Keep on your back, you big goose!