GERMINAL
PART II
CHAPTER V
AT Rasseneur's, after having eaten his soup,
Étienne went back into the small chamber
beneath the roof and facing the Voreux, which he
was to occupy, and fell on to his bed dressed as
he was, overcome with fatigue. In two days he had
not slept four hours. When he awoke in the
twilight he was dazed for a moment, not
recognizing his surroundings; and he felt such
uneasiness and his head was so heavy that he rose,
painfully, with the idea of getting some fresh air
before having his dinner and going to bed for the
night.
Outside, the weather was becoming milder: the
sooty sky was growing copper-coloured, laden with
one of those warm rains of the Nord, the approach
of which one feels by the moist warmth of the air,
and the night was coming on in great mists which
drowned the distant landscape of the plain. Over
this immense sea of reddish earth the low sky
seemed to melt into black dust, without a breath
of wind now to animate the darkness. It was the
wan and deathly melancholy of a funeral.
Étienne walked straight ahead at random,
with no other aim but to shake off his fever.
When he passed before the Voreux, already growing
gloomy at the bottom of its hole and with no
lantern yet shining from it, he stopped a moment
to watch the departure of the day-workers. No
doubt six o'clock had struck; landers, porters
from the pit-eye, and grooms were going away in
bands, mixed with the vague and laughing figures
of the screening girls in the shade.
At first it was Brulé and her son-in-law,
Pierron. She was abusing him because he had not
supported her in a quarrel with an overseer over
her reckoning of stones.
"Get along! damned good-for-nothing! Do you
call yourself a man to lower yourself like that
before one of these beasts who devour us?"
Pierron followed her peacefully, without replying.
At last he said:
"I suppose I ought to jump on the boss?
Thanks for showing me how to get into a
mess!"
"Bend your backside to him, then," she
shouted. "By God! if my daughter had
listened to me! It's not enough for them to kill
the father. Perhaps you'd like me to say 'thank
you.' No, I'll have their skins first!"
Their voices were lost. Étienne saw her
disappear, with her eagle nose, her flying white
hair, her long, lean arms that gesticulated
furiously. But the conversation of two young
people behind caused him to listen. He had
recognized Zacharie, who was waiting there, and
who had just been addressed by his friend Mouquet.
"Are you here?" said the latter.
"We will have something to eat, and then off
to the Volcan."
"Directly. I've something to attend
to."
"What, then?"
The lander turned and saw Philoméne coming
out of the screening shed. He thought he
understood.
"Very well, if it's that. Then I go
ahead."
"Yes, I'll catch you up."
As he went away, Mouquet met his father, old
Mouque, who was also coming out of the Voreux.
The two men simply wished each other good evening,
the son taking the main road while the father went
along by the canal.
Zacharie was already pushing Philoméne in
spite of her resistance into the same solitary
path. She was in a hurry another time; and the
two wrangled like old housemates. There was no
fun in only seeing one another out of doors,
especially in winter, when the earth is moist and
there are no wheatfields to lie in.
"No, no, it's not that," he whispered
impatiently. "I've something to say to
you." He led her gently with his arm round
her waist. Then, when they were in the shadow of
the pit-bank, he asked if she had any money.
"What for?" she demanded.
Then he became confused, spoke of a debt of two
francs which had reduced his family to despair.
"Hold your tongue! I've seen Mouquet; you're
going again to the Volcan with him, where those
dirty singer-women are."
He defended himself, struck his chest, gave his
word of honour. Then, as she shrugged her
shoulders, he said suddenly:
"Come with us if it will amuse you. You see
that you don't put me out. What do I want to do
with the singers? Will you come?"
"And the little one?" she replied.
"How can one stir with a child that's always
screaming? Let me go back, I guess they're not
getting on at the house."
But he held her and entreated. See! it was only
not to look foolish before Mouquet to whom he had
promised. A man could not go to bed every evening
like the fowls. She was overcome, and pulled up
the skirt of her gown; with her nail she cut the
thread and drew out some half-franc pieces from a
corner of the hem. For fear of being robbed by
her mother she hid there the profit of the
overtime work she did at the pit.
"I've got five, you see," she said,
"I'll give you three. Only you must swear
that you'll make your mother decide to let us
marry. We've had enough of this life in the open
air. And mother reproaches me for every mouthful
I eat. Swear first."
She spoke with the soft voice of a big, delicate
girl, without passion, simply tired of her life.
He swore, exclaimed that it was a sacred promise;
then, when he had got the three pieces, he kissed
her, tickled her, made her laugh, and would have
pushed things to an extreme in this corner of the
pit-bank, which was the winter chamber of their
household, if she had not again refused, saying
that it would not give her any pleasure. She went
back to the settlement alone, while he cut across
the fields to rejoin his companion.
Étienne had followed them mechanically,
from afar, without understanding, regarding it as
a simple rendezvous. The girls were precocious in
the pits; and he recalled the Lille work-girls
whom he had waited for behind the factories, those
bands of girls, corrupted at fourteen, in the
abandonment of their wretchedness. But another
meeting surprised him more. He stopped.
At the bottom of the pit-bank, in a hollow into
which some large stones had slipped, little
Jeanlin was violently snubbing Lydie and
Bébert, seated one at his right, the other
at his left.
"What do you say? Eh? I'll slap each of you
if you want more. Who thought of it first,
eh?"
In fact, Jeanlin had had an idea. After having
roamed about in the meadows, along the canal, for
an hour, gathering dandelions with the two others,
it had occurred to him, before this pile of salad,
that they would never eat all that at home; and
instead of going back to the settlement he had
gone to Montsou, keeping Bébert to watch,
and making Lydie ring at the houses and offer the
dandelions. He was experienced enough to know
that, as he said, girls could sell what they
liked. In the ardour of business, the entire pile
had disappeared; but the girl had gained eleven
sous. And now, with empty hands, the three were
dividing the profits.
"That's not fair!" Bébert
declared. "Must divide into three. If you
keep seven sous we shall only have two each."
"What? not fair!" replied Jeanlin
furiously. "I gathered more first of
all."
The other usually submitted with timid admiration
and a credulity which always made him the dupe.
Though older and stronger, he even allowed himself
to be struck. But this time the sight of all that
money excited him to rebellion.
"He's robbing us, Lydie, isn't he? If he
doesn't share, we'll tell his mother."
Jeanlin at once thrust his fist beneath the
other's nose. "Say that again! I'll go and
say at your house that you sold my mother's salad.
And then, you silly beast, how can I divide eleven
sous into three? Just try and see, if you're so
clever. Here are your two sous each. Just look
sharp and take them, or I'll put them in my
pocket."
Bébert was vanquished ,and accepted the two
sous. Lydie, who was trembling, had said nothing,
for with Jeanlin she experienced the fear and the
tenderness of a little beaten woman. When he held
out the two sous to her she advanced her hand with
a submissive laugh. But he suddenly changed his
mind.
"Eh! what will you do with all that? Your
mother will nab them, sure enough, if you don't
know how to hide them from her. I'd better keep
them for you. When you want money you can ask me
for it."
And the nine sous disappeared. To shut her mouth
he had put his arms around her laughingly and was
rolling with her over the pit-bank. She was his
little wife, and in the dark corners they used to
try together the love which they heard and saw in
their homes behind partitions, through the cracks
of doors. They knew everything, but they were
able to do nothing, being too young, fumbling and
playing for hours at the games of vicious puppies.
He called that playing at papa and mama; and when
he chased her she ran away and let herself be
caught with the delicious trembling of instinct,
often angry, but always yielding, in the
expectation of something which never came.
As Bébert was not admitted to these games
and received a cuffing whenever he wanted to touch
Lydie, he was always constrained, agitated by
anger and uneasiness when the other two were
amusing themselves, which they did not hesitate to
do in his presence. His one idea, therefore, was
to frighten them and disturb them, calling out
that someone could see them.
"It's all up! There's a man looking."
This time he told the truth; it was
Étienne, who had decided to continue his
walk. The children jumped up and ran away, and he
passed by round the bank, following the canal,
amused at the terror of these little rascals. No
doubt it was too early at their age, but they saw
and heard so much that one would have to tie them
up to restrain them. Yet Étienne became
sad.
A hundred paces farther on he came across more
couples. He had arrived at Réquillart, and
there, around the old ruined mine, all the girls
of Montsou prowled about with their lovers. It
was the common rendezvous, the remote and deserted
spot to which the putters came to get their first
child when they dared not risk the shed. The
broken palings opened to every one the old yard,
now become a nondescript piece of ground,
obstructed by the ruins of the two sheds which had
fallen in, and by the skeletons of the large
buttresses which were still standing. Derelict
trains were lying about, and piles of old rotting
wood, while a dense vegetation was reconquering
this corner of ground, displaying itself in thick
grass, and springing up in young trees that were
already vigorous. Every girl found herself at
home here; there were concealed holes for all;
their lovers placed them over beams, behind the
timber, in the trains; they even lay elbow to
elbow without troubling about their neighbours.
And it seemed that around this extinguished
engine, near this shaft weary of disgorging coal,
there was a revenge of creation in the free love
which, beneath the lash of instinct, planted
children in the bellies of these girls who were
yet hardly women.
Yet a caretaker lived there, old Mouque, to whom
the Company had given up, almost beneath the
destroyed tower, two rooms which were constantly
threatened by destruction from the expected fall
of the last walls. He had even been obliged to
shore up a part of the roof, and he lived there
very comfortably with his family, he and Mouquet
in one room, Mouquette in the other. As the
windows no longer possessed a single pane, he had
decided to close them by nailing up boards; one
could not see well, but it was warm. For the
rest, this caretaker cared for nothing: he went to
look after his horses at the Voreux, and never
troubled himself about the ruins of
Réquillart, of which the shaft only was
preserved, in order to serve as a chimney for a
fire which ventilated the neighbouring pit.
It was thus that Father Mouque was ending his old
age in the midst of love. Ever since she was ten
Mouquette had been lying about in all the corners
of the ruins, not as a timid and still green
little urchin like Lydie, but as a girl who was
already big, and a mate for bearded lads. The
father had nothing to say, for she was
considerate, and never introduced a lover into the
house. Then he was used to this sort of accident.
When he went to the Voreux, when he came back,
whenever he came out of his hole, he could
scarcely put a foot down without treading on a
couple in the grass; and it was worse if he wanted
to gather wood to heat his soup or look for
burdocks for his rabbit at the other end of the
enclosure. Then he saw one by one the voluptuous
noses of all the girls of Montsou rising up around
him, while he had to be careful not to knock
against the limbs stretched out level with the
paths. Besides, these meetings had gradually
ceased to disturb either him who was simply taking
care not to stumble, or the girls whom he allowed
to finish their affairs, going away with discreet
little steps like a worthy man who was at peace
with the ways of nature. Only just as they now
knew him he at last also knew them, as one knows
the rascally magpies who become corrupted in the
pear-trees in the garden. Ah! youth! youth!
how it goes on, how wild it is! Sometimes he
wagged his chin with silent regret, turning away
from the noisy wantons who were breathing too
loudly in the darkness. Only one thing put him
out of temper: two lovers had acquired the bad
habit of embracing outside his wall. It was not
that it prevented him from sleeping, but they
leaned against the wall so heavily that at last
they damaged it.
Every evening old Mouque received a visit from his
friend, Father Bonnemort, who regularly before
dinner took the same walk. The two old men spoke
little, scarcely exchanging ten words during the
half-hour that they spent together. But it
cheered them thus to think over the days of old,
to chew their recollections over again without
need to talk of them. At Réquillart they
sat on a beam side by side, saying a word and then
sinking into their dreams, with faces bent towards
the earth. No doubt they were becoming young
again. Around them lovers were turning over their
sweethearts; there was a murmur of kisses and
laughter; the warm odour of the girls arose in the
freshness of the trodden grass. It was now
forty-three years since Father Bonnemort had taken
his wife behind the pit; she was a putter, so
slight that he had placed her on a tram to embrace
her at ease. Ah! those were fine days. And the
two old men, shaking their heads, at last left
each other, often without saying good night.
That evening, however, as Étienne arrived,
Father Bonnemort, who was getting up from the beam
to return to the settlement, said to Mouque:
"Good night, old man. I say, you knew
Roussie?"
Mouque was silent for a moment, rocked his
shoulders; then, returning to the house:
"Good night, good night, old man."
Étienne came and sat on the beam, in his
turn. His sadness was increasing, though he could
not tell why. The old man, whose disappearing
back he watched, recalled his arrival in the
morning, and the flood of words which the piercing
wind had dragged from his silence. What
wretchedness! And all these girls, worn out with
fatigue, who were still stupid enough in the
evening to fabricate little ones, to yield flesh
for labour and suffering! It would never come to
an end if they were always filling themselves with
starvelings. Would it not be better if they were
to shut up their bellies, and press their thighs
together, as at the approach of misfortune?
Perhaps these gloomy ideas only stirred confusedly
in him because he was alone, while all the others
at this hour were going about taking their
pleasure in couples. The mild weather stifled him
a little, occasional drops of rain fell on his
feverish hands. Yes, they all came to it; it was
something stronger than reason.
Just then, as Étienne remained seated
motionless in the shadow, a couple who came down
from Montsou rustled against him without seeing
him as they entered the uneven Réquillart
ground. The girl, certainly a virgin, was
struggling and resisting with low whispered
supplications, while the lad in silence was
pushing her towards the darkness of a corner of
the shed, still upright, under which there were
piles of old mouldy rope. It was Catherine and
big Chaval. But Étienne had not recognized
them in passing, and his eyes followed them; he
was watching for the end of the story, touched by
a sensuality which changed the course of his
thoughts. Why should he interfere? When girls
refuse it is because they like first to be forced.
On leaving the settlement of the
Deux-Cent-Quarante Catherine had gone to Montsou
along the road. From the age of ten, since she
had earned her living at the pit, she went about
the country alone in the complete liberty of the
colliers' families; and if no man had possessed
her at fifteen it was owing to the tardy awakening
of her puberty, the crisis of which had not yet
arrived. When she was in front of the Company's
Yards she crossed the road and entered a
laundress's where she was certain to find
Mouquette; for the latter stayed there from
morning till night, among women who treated each
other with coffee all round. But she was
disappointed; Mouquette had just then been
regaling them in her turn so thoroughly that she
was not able to lend the half-franc she had
promised. To console her they vainly offered a
glass of hot coffee. She was not even willing
that her companion should borrow from another
woman. An idea of economy had come to her, a sort
of superstitious fear, the certainty that that
ribbon would bring her bad luck if she were to buy
it now.
She hastened to regain the road to the settlement,
and had reached the last houses of Montsou when a
man at the door of the Estaminet Piquette called
her:
"Eh! Catherine! where are you off to so
quick?"
It was lanky Chaval. She was vexed, not because
he displeased her, but because she was not
inclined to joke.
"Come in and have a drink. A little glass of
sweet, won't you?"
She refused politely; the night was coming on,
they were expecting her at home. He had advanced,
and was entreating her in a low voice in the
middle of the road. It had been his idea for a
long time to persuade her to come up to the room
which he occupied on the first story of the
Estaminet Piquette, a fine room for a household,
with a large bed. Did he frighten her, that she
always refused? She laughed good-naturedly, and
said that she would come up some day when children
didn't grow. Then, one thing leading to another,
she told him, without knowing how, about the blue
ribbon which she had not been able to buy.
"But I'll pay for it," he exclaimed.
She blushed, feeling that it would be best to
refuse again, but possessed by a strong desire to
have the ribbon. The idea of a loan came back to
her, and at last she accepted on condition that
she should return to him what he spent on her.
They began to joke again: it was agreed that if
she did not sleep with him she should return him
the money. But there was another difficulty when
he talked of going to Maigrat's.
"No, not Maigrat's; mother won't let
me."
"Why? is there any need to say where one
goes? He has the best ribbons in Montsou."
When Maigrat saw lanky Chaval and Catherine coming
to his shop like two lovers who are buying their
engagement gifts, he became very red, and
exhibited his pieces of blue ribbon with the rage
of a man who is being made fun of. Then, when he
had served the young people, he planted himself at
the door to watch them disappear in the twilight;
and when his wife came to ask him a question in a
timid voice, he fell on her, abusing her, and
exclaiming that he would make them repent some
day, the filthy creatures, who had no gratitude,
when they ought all to be on the ground licking
his feet.
Lanky Chaval accompanied Catherine along the road.
He walked beside her, swinging his arms; only he
pushed her by the hip, conducting her without
seeming to do so. She suddenly perceived that he
had made her leave the pavement and that they were
taking the narrow Réquillart road. But she
had no time to be angry; his arm was already round
her waist, and he was dazing her with a constant
caress of words. How stupid she was to be afraid!
Did he want to hurt such a little darling, who was
as soft as silk, so tender that he could have
devoured her? And he breathed behind her ear, in
her neck, so that a shudder passed over the skin
of her whole body. She felt stifled, and had
nothing to reply. It was true that he seemed to
love her. On Saturday evenings, after having
blown out the candle, she had asked herself what
would happen if he were to take her in this way;
then, on going to sleep, she had dreamed that she
would no longer refuse, quite overcome by
pleasure. Why, then, at the same idea to-day did
she feel repugnance and something like regret?
While he was tickling her neck with his moustache
so softly that she closed her eyes, the shadow of
another man, of the lad she had seen that morning,
passed over the darkness of her closed eyelids.
Catherine suddenly looked around her. Chaval had
conducted her into the ruins of Réquillart
and she recoiled, shuddering, from the darkness of
the fallen shed.
"Oh! no! oh, no!" she murmured,
"please let me go!" The fear of the male
had taken hold of her, that fear which stiffens
the muscles in an impulse of defence, even when
girls are willing, and feel the conquering
approach of man. Her virginity which had nothing
to learn took fright as at a threatening blow, a
wound of which she feared the unknown pain.
"No, no! I don't want to! I tell you that I
am too young. lt's true! Another time, when I am
quite grown up."
He growled in a low voice:
"Stupid! There's nothing to fear. What does
that matter?"
But without speaking more he had seized her firmly
and pushed her beneath the shed. And she fell on
her back on the old ropes; she ceased to protest,
yielding to the male before her time, with that
hereditary submission which from childhood had
thrown down in the open air all the girls of her
race. Her frightened stammering grew faint, and
only the ardent breath of the man was heard.
Étienne, however, had listened without
moving. Another who was taking the leap! And now
that he had seen the comedy he got up, overcome by
uneasiness, by a kind of jealous excitement in
which there was a touch of anger. He no longer
restrained himself; he stepped over the beams, for
those two were too much occupied now to be
disturbed. He was surprised, therefore, when he
had gone a hundred paces along the path, to find
that they were already standing up, and that they
appeared, like himself, to be returning to the
settlement. The man again had his arm round the
girl's waist, and was squeezing her, with an air
of gratitude, still speaking in her neck; and it
was she who seemed in a hurry, anxious to return
quickly, and annoyed at the delay.
Then Étienne was tormented by the desire to
see their faces. It was foolish, and he hastened
his steps, so as not to yield to it; but his feet
slackened of their own accord, and at the first
lamppost he concealed himself in the shade. He
was petrified by horror when he recognized
Catherine and lanky Chaval. He hesitated at
first: was it indeed she, that young girl in the
coarse blue dress, with that bonnet? Was that the
urchin whom he had seen in breeches, with her head
in the canvas cap? That was why she could pass so
near him without his recognizing her. But he no
longer doubted; he had seen her eyes again, with
their greenish limpidity of spring water, so clear
and so deep. What a wench! And he experienced a
furious desire to avenge himself on her with
contempt, without any motive. Besides, he did not
like her as a girl: she was frightful.
Catherine and Chaval had passed him slowly. They
did not know that they were watched. He held her
to kiss her behind the ear, and she began to
slacken her steps beneath his caresses, which made
her laugh. Left behind, Étienne was
obliged to follow them, irritated because they
barred the road and because in spite of himself he
had to witness these things which exasperated him.
It was true, then, what she had sworn to him in
the morning: she was not any one's mistress; and
he, who had not believed her, who had deprived
himself of her in order not to act like the other!
and who had let her be taken beneath his nose,
pushing his stupidity so far as to be dirtily
amused at seeing them! It made him mad! he
clenched his hands, he could have devoured that
man in one of those impulses to kill in which he
saw everything red.
The walk lasted for half an hour. When Chaval and
Catherine approached the Voreux they slackened
their pace still more; they stopped twice beside
the canal, three times along the pit-bank, very
cheerful now and occupied with little tender
games. Étienne was obliged to stop also
when they stopped, for fear of being perceived.
He endeavoured to feel nothing but a brutal
regret: that would teach him to treat girls with
consideration through being well brought up!
Then, after passing the Voreux, and at last free
to go and dine at Rasseneur's, he continued to
follow them, accompanying them to the settlement,
where he remained standing in the shade for a
quarter of an hour, waiting until Chaval left
Catherine to enter her home. And when he was
quite sure that they were no longer together, he
set off walking afresh, going very far along the
Marchiennes road, stamping, and thinking of
nothing, too stifled and too sad to shut himself
up in a room.
It was not until an hour later, towards nine
o'clock, that Étienne again passed the
settlement, saying to himself that he must eat and
sleep, if he was to be up again at four o'clock in
the morning. The village was already asleep, and
looked quite black in the night. Not a gleam
shone from the closed shutters, the house fronts
slept, with the heavy sleep of snoring barracks.
Only a cat escaped through the empty gardens. It
was the end of the day, the collapse of workers
falling from the table to the bed, overcome with
weariness and food.
At Rasseneur's, in the lighted room, an engine-man
and two day-workers were drinking. But before
going in Étienne stopped to throw one last
glance into the darkness. He saw again the same
black immensity as in the morning when he had
arrived in the wind. Before him the Voreux was
crouching, with its air of an evil beast, its
dimness pricked with a few lantern lights. The
three fires of the bank were burning in the air,
like bloody moons, now and then showing the vast
silhouettes of Father Bonnemort and his yellow
horse. And beyond, in the flat plain, shade had
submerged everything, Montsou, Marchiennes, the
forest of Vandame, the immense sea of beetroot and
of wheat, in which there only shone, like distant
lighthouses, the blue fires of the blast furnaces,
and the red fires of the coke ovens. Gradually
the night came on, the rain was now falling
slowly, continuously, burying this void in its
monotonous streaming. Only one voice was still
heard, the thick, slow respiration of the pumping
engine, breathing both by day and by night.