GERMINAL
PART VII
CHAPTER V
AT the bottom of the shaft the abandoned wretches
were yelling with terror. The water now came up
to their hips. The noise of the torrent dazed
them, the final falling in of the tubbing sounded
like the last crack of doom; and their
bewilderment was completed by the neighing of the
horses shut up in the stable, the terrible,
unforgettable death-cry of an animal that is being
slaughtered.
Mouque had let go Bataille. The old horse was
there, trembling, with its dilated eye fixed on
this water which was constantly rising. The
pit-eye was rapidly filling; the greenish flood
slowly enlarged under the red gleam of the three
lamps which were still burning under the roof.
And suddenly, when he felt this ice soaking his
coat, he set out in a furious gallop, and was
engulfed and lost at the end of one of the haulage
galleries.
Then there was a general rush, the men following
the beast.
"Nothing more to be done in this damned
hole!" shouted Mouque. "We must try at
Réquillart."
The idea that they might get out by the old
neighbouring pit if they arrived before the
passage was cut off, now carried them away. The
twenty hustled one another as they went in single
file, holding their lamps in the air so that the
water should not extinguish them. Fortunately,
the gallery rose with an imperceptible slope, and
they proceeded for two hundred metres, struggling
against the flood, which was not now gaining on
them. Sleeping beliefs reawakened in these
distracted souls; they invoked the earth, for it
was the earth that was avenging herself,
discharging the blood from the vein because they
had cut one of her arteries. An old man stammered
forgotten prayers, bending his thumbs backwards to
appease the evil spirits of the mine.
But at the first turning disagreement broke out;
the groom proposed turning to the left, others
declared that they could make a short cut by going
to the right. A minute was lost.
"Well, die there! what the devil does it
matter to me?" Chaval brutally exclaimed.
"I go this way."
He turned to the right, and two mates followed
him. The others continued to rush behind Father
Mouque, who had grown up at the bottom of
Réquillart. He himself hesitated, however,
not knowing where to turn. They lost their heads;
even the old men could no longer recognize the
passages, which lay like a tangled skein before
them. At every bifurcation they were pulled up
short by uncertainty, and yet they had to decide.
Étienne was running last, delayed by
Catherine, who was paralysed by fatigue and fear.
He would have gone to the right with Chaval, for
he thought that the better road; but he had not,
preferring to part from Chaval. The rush
continued, however; some of the mates had gone
from their side, and only seven were left behind
old Mouque.
"Hang on to my neck and I will carry
you," said Étienne to the young girl,
seeing her grow weak.
"No, let me be," she murmured. "I
can't do more; I would rather die at once."
They delayed and were left fifty metres behind; he
was lifting her, in spite of her resistance, when
the gallery was suddenly stopped up; an enormous
block fell in and separated them from the others.
The inundation was already soaking the soil, which
was shifting on every side. They had to retrace
their steps; then they no longer knew in what
direction they were going. There was an end of
all hope of escaping by Réquillart. Their
only remaining hope was to gain the upper
workings, from which they might perhaps be
delivered if the water sank.
Étienne at last recognized the Guillaume
seam.
"Good!" he exclaimed. "Now I know
where we are. By God! we were in the right road;
but we may go to the devil now! Here, let us go
straight on; we will climb up the passage."
The flood was beating against their breasts, and
they walked very slowly. As long as they had
light they did not despair, and they blew out one
of the lamps to economize the oil, meaning to
empty it into the other lamp. They had reached
the chimney passage, when a noise behind made them
turn. Was it some mates, then, who had also found
the road barred and were returning? A roaring
sound came from afar; they could not understand
this tempest which approached them, spattering
foam. And they cried out when they saw a gigantic
whitish mass coming out of the shadow and trying
to rejoin them between the narrow timbering in
which it was being crushed.
It was Bataille. On leaving the pit-eye he had
wildly galloped along the dark galleries. He
seemed to know his road in this subterranean town
which he had inhabited for eleven years, and his
eyes saw clearly in the depths of the eternal
night in which he had lived. He galloped on and
on, bending his head, drawing up his feet, passing
through these narrow tubes in the earth, filled by
his great body. Road succeeded to road,. and the
forked turnings were passed without any
hesitation. Where was he going? Over there,
perhaps, towards that vision of his youth, to the
mill where he had been born on the bank of the
Scarpe, to the confused recollection of the sun
burning in the air like a great lamp. He desired
to live, his beast's memory awoke; the longing to
breathe once more the air of the plains drove him
straight onwards to the discovery of that hole,
the exit beneath the warm sun into light.
Rebellion carried away his ancient resignation;
this pit was murdering him after having blinded
him. The water which pursued him was lashing him
on the flanks and biting him on the crupper. But
as he went deeper in, the galleries became
narrower, the roofs lower, and the walls
protruded. He galloped on in spite of everything,
grazing himself, leaving shreds of his limbs on
the timber. From every side the mine seemed to be
pressing on to him to take him and to stifle him.
Then Étienne and Catherine, as he came near
them, perceived that he was strangling between the
rocks. He had stumbled and broken his two front
legs. With a last effort, he dragged himself a
few metres, but his flanks could not pass; he
remained hemmed in and garrotted by the earth.
With his bleeding head stretched out, he still
sought for some crack with his great troubled
eyes.
The water was rapidly covering him; he began to
neigh with that terrible prolonged death-rattle
with which the other horses had already died in
the stable. It was a sight of fearful agony, this
old beast shattered and motionless, struggling at
this depth, far from the daylight. The flood was
drowning his mane, and his cry of distress never
ceased; he uttered it more hoarsely, with his
large open mouth stretched out. There was a last
rumble, the hollow sound of a cask which is being
filled; then deep silence fell.
"Oh, my God! take me away!" Catherine
sobbed. "Ah, my God! I'm afraid; I don't
want to die. Take me away! take me away!"
She had seen death. The fallen shaft, the
inundated mine, nothing had seized her with such
terror as this clamour of Bataille in agony. And
she constantly heard it; her ears were ringing
with it; all her flesh was shuddering with it.
"Take me away! take me away!"
Étienne had seized her and lifted her; it
was, indeed, time. They ascended the chimney
passage, soaked to the shoulders. He was obliged
to help her, for she had no strength to cling to
the timber. Three times over he thought that she
was slipping from him and falling back into that
deep sea of which the tide was roaring beneath
them. However, they were able to breathe for a
few minutes when they reached the first gallery,
which was still free. The water reappeared, and
they had to hoist themselves up again. And for
hours this ascent continued, the flood chasing
them from passage to passage, and constantly
forcing them to ascend. At the sixth level a
respite rendered them feverish with hope, and it
seemed that the waters were becoming stationary.
But a more rapid rise took place, and they had to
climb to the seventh and then to the eighth level.
Only one remained, and when they had reached it
they anxiously watched each centimetre by which
the water gained on them. If it did not stop they
would then die like the old horse, crushed against
the roof, and their chests filled by the flood.
Landslips echoed every moment. The whole mine was
shaken, and its distended bowels burst with the
enormous flood which gorged them. At the end of
the galleries the air, driven back, pressed
together and crushed, exploding terribly amid
split rocks and overthrown soil. It was a
terrifying uproar of interior cataclysms, a
remnant of the ancient battle when deluges
overthrew the earth, burying the mountains beneath
the plains.
And Catherine, shaken and dazed by this continuous
downfall, joined her hands, stammering the same
words without cessation:
"I don't want to die! I don't want to
die!"
To reassure her, Étienne declared that the
water was not now moving. Their flight had lasted
for fully six hours, and they would soon be
rescued. He said six hours without knowing, for
they had lost all count of time. In reality, a
whole day had already passed in their climb up
through the Guillaume seam.
Drenched and shivering, they settled themselves
down. She undressed herself without shame and
wrung out her clothes, then she put on again the
jacket and breeches, and let them finish drying on
her. As her feet were bare, he made her take his
own sabots. They could wait patiently now; they
had lowered the wick of the lamp, leaving only the
feeble gleam of a night-light. But their stomachs
were torn by cramp, and they both realized that
they were dying of hunger. Up till now they had
not felt that they were living. The catastrophe
had occurred before breakfast, and now they found
their bread-and-butter swollen by the water and
changed into sop. She had to become angry before
he would accept his share. As soon as she had
eaten she fell asleep from weariness, on the cold
earth. He was devoured by insomnia, and watched
over her with fixed eyes and forehead between his
hands.
How many hours passed by thus? He would have been
unable to say. All that he knew was that before
him, through the hole they had ascended, he had
seen the flood reappear, black and moving, the
beast whose back was ceaselessly swelling out to
reach them. At first it was only a thin line, a
supple serpent stretching itself out; then it
enlarged into a crawling, crouching flank; and
soon it reached them, and the sleeping girl's feet
were touched by it. In his anxiety he yet
hesitated to wake her. Was it not cruel to snatch
her from this repose of unconscious ignorance,
which was, perhaps, lulling her with a dream of
the open air and of life beneath the sun?
Besides, where could they fly? And he thought and
remembered that the upbrow established at this
part of the seam communicated end to end with that
which served the upper level. That would be a way
out. He let her sleep as long as possible,
watching the flood gain on them, waiting for it to
chase them away. At last he lifted her gently,
and a great shudder passed over her.
"Ah, my God! it's true! it's beginning
again, my God!" She remembered, she cried
out, again finding death so near.
"No! calm yourself," he whispered.
"We can pass, upon my word!"
To reach the upbrow they had to walk doubled up,
again wetted to the shoulders. And the climbing
began anew, now more dangerous, through this hole
entirely of timber, a hundred metres long. At
first they wished to pull the cable so as to fix
one of the carts at the bottom, for if the other
should come down during their ascent, they would
be crushed. But nothing moved, some obstacle
interfered with the mechanism. They ventured in,
not daring to make use of the cable which was in
their way, and tearing their nails against the
smooth framework. He came behind, supporting her
by his head when she slipped with torn hands.
Suddenly they came across the splinters of a beam
which barred the way. A portion of the soil had
fallen down and prevented them form going any
higher. Fortunately a door opened here and they
passed into a passage. They were stupefied to see
the flicker of a lamp in front of them. A man
cried wildly to them:
"More clever people as big fools as I
am!"
They recognized Chaval, who had found himself
blocked by the landslip which filled the upbrow;
his two mates who had set out with him had been
left on the way with fractured skulls. He was
wounded in the elbow, but had had the courage to
go back on his knees, take their lamps, and search
them to steal their bread-and-butter. As he
escaped, a final downfall behind his back had
closed the gallery.
He immediately swore that he would not share his
victuals with these people who came up out of the
earth. He would sooner knock their brains out.
Then he, too, recognized them; his anger fell, and
he began to laugh with a laugh of evil joy.
"Ah! it's you, Catherine! you've come a
cropper, and you want to join your man again.
Well, well! we'll play out the game
together."
He pretended not to see Étienne. The
latter, overwhelmed by this encounter, made a
gesture as though to protect the putter, who was
pressing herself against him. He must, however,
accept the situation. Speaking as though they had
left each other good friends an hour before, he
simply asked:
"Have you looked down below? We can't pass
through the cuttings, then?"
Chaval still grinned.
"Ah. bosh! the cuttings! They've fallen in
too; we are between two walls, a real mousetrap.
But you can go back by the brow if you are a good
diver."
The water, in fact, was rising; they could hear it
rippling. Their retreat was already cut off. And
he was right; it was a mousetrap, a gallery-end
obstructed before and behind by considerable falls
of earth. There was not one issue; all three were
walled up.
"Then you'll stay?" Chaval added,
jeeringly. "Well, it's the best you can do,
and if you'll just leave me alone, I shan't even
speak to you. There's still room here for two
men. We shall soon see which will die first,
provided they don't come to us, which seems a
tough job."
The young man said:
"If we were to hammer, they would hear us,
perhaps." "I'm tired of hammering.
Here, try yourself with this stone."
Étienne picked up the fragment of sandstone
which the other had already broken off, and
against the seam at the end he struck the miner's
call, the prolonged roll by which workmen in peril
signal their presence. Then he placed his ear to
listen. Twenty times over he persisted; no sound
replied.
During this time Chaval affected to be coolly
attending to his little household. First he
arranged the three lamps against the wall; only
one was burning, the others could be used later
on. Afterwards, he placed on a piece of timber
the two slices of bread-and-butter which were
still left. That was the sideboard; he could last
quite two days with that, if he were careful. He
turned round saying:
"You know, Catherine, there will be half for
you when you are famished."
The young girl was silent. It completed her
unhappiness to find herself again between these
two men.
And their awful life began. Neither Chaval nor
Étienne opened their mouths, seated on the
earth a few paces from each other. At a hint from
the former the latter extinguished his lamp, a
piece of useless luxury; then they sank back into
silence. Catherine was lying down near
Étienne, restless under the glances of her
former lover. The hours passed by; they heard the
low murmur of the water for ever rising; while
from time to time deep shocks and distant echoes
announced the final settling down of the mine.
When the lamp was empty and they had to open
another to light it, they were, for a moment,
disturbed by the fear of fire-damp; but they would
rather have been blown up at once than live on in
darkness. Nothing exploded, however; there was no
fire-damp. They stretched themselves out again,
and the hours continued to pass by.
A noise aroused Étienne and Catherine, and
they raised their heads. Chaval had decided to
eat; he had cut off half a slice of
bread-and-butter, and was chewing it slowly, to
avoid the temptation of swallowing it all. They
gazed at him, tortured by hunger.
"Well, do you refuse?" he said to the
putter, in his provoking way. "You're
wrong."
She had lowered her eyes, fearing to yield; her
stomach was torn by such cramps that tears were
swelling beneath her eyelids. But she understood
what he was asking; in the morning he had breathed
over her neck; he was seized again by one of his
old furies of desire on seeing her near the other
man. The glances with which he called her had a
flame in them which she knew well, the flame of
his crises of jealousy when he would fall on her
with his fists, accusing her of committing
abominations with her mother's lodger. And she
was not willing; she trembled lest, by returning
to him, she should throw these two men on to each
other in this narrow cave, where they were all in
agony together. Good God! why could they not end
together in comradeship!
Étienne would have died of inanition rather
than beg a mouthful of bread from Chaval. The
silence became heavy; an eternity seemed to be
prolonging itself with the slowness of monotonous
minutes which passed by, one by one, without hope.
They had now been shut up together for a day. The
second lamp was growing pale, and they lighted the
third.
Chaval started on his second slice of
bread-and-butter, and growled:
"Come then, stupid!"
Catherine shivered. Étienne had turned
away in order to leave her free. Then, as she did
not stir, he said to her in a low voice:
"Go, my child."
The tears which she was stifling then rushed
forth. She wept for a long time, without even
strength to rise, no longer knowing if she was
hungry, suffering with pain which she felt all
over her body. He was standing up, going backward
and forwards, vainly beating the miners call,
enraged at this remainder of life which he was
obliged to live here tied to a rival whom he
detested. Not even enough space to die away from
each other! As soon as he had gone ten paces he
must come back and knock up against this man. And
she, this sorrowful girl whom they were disputing
over even in the earth! She would belong to the
one who lived longest; that man would steal her
from him should he go first. There was no end to
it; the hours followed the hours; the revolting
promiscuity became worse, with the poison of their
breaths and the ordure of their necessities
satisfied in common. Twice he rushed against the
rocks as though to open them with his fists.
Another day was done, and Chaval had seated
himself near Catherine, sharing with her his last
half-slice. She was chewing the mouthfuls
painfully; he made her pay for each with a caress,
in his jealous obstinacy not willing to die until
he had had her again in the other man's presence.
She abandoned herself in exhaustion. But when he
tried to take her she complained.
"Oh, let me be! you're breaking my
bones."
Étienne, with a shudder, had placed his
forehead against the timber so as not to see. He
came back with a wild leap
"Let her be, by God!"
"Does it concern you?" said Chaval.
"She's my woman; I suppose she belongs to
me!"
And he took her again and pressed her, out of
bravado, crushing his red moustache against her
mouth, and continuing:
"Will you leave us alone, eh? Will you be
good enough to look over there if we are at
it?"
But Étienne, with white lips, shouted:
"If you don't let her go, I'll do for
you!"
The other quickly stood up, for he had understood
by the hiss of the voice that his mate was in
earnest. Death seemed to them too slow; it was
necessary that one of them should immediately
yield his place. It was the old battle beginning
over again, down in the earth where they would
soon sleep side by side; and they had so little
room that they could not swing their fists without
grazing them.
"Look out!" growled Chaval. "This
time I'll have you."
From that moment Étienne became mad. His
eyes seemed drowned in red vapour, his chest was
congested by the flow of blood. The need to kill
seized him irresistibly, a physical need, like the
irritation of mucus which causes a violent spasm
of coughing. It rose and broke out beyond his
will, beneath the pressure of the hereditary
disease. He had seized a sheet of slate in the
wall and he shook it and tore it out, a very
large, heavy piece. Then with both hands and with
tenfold strength he brought it down on Chaval's
skull.
The latter had not time to jump backwards. He
fell, his face crushed, his skull broken. The
brains had be-spattered the roof of the gallery,
and a purple jet flowed from the wound, like the
continuous jet of a spring. Immediately there was
a pool, which reflected the smoky star of the
lamp. Darkness was invading the walled-up cave,
and this body, lying on the earth, looked like the
black boss of a mass of rough coal.
Leaning over, with wide eyes, Étienne
looked at him. It was done, then; he had killed.
All his struggles came back to his memory
confusedly, that useless fight against the poison
which slept in his muscles, the slowly accumulated
alcohol of his race. He was, however, only
intoxicated by hunger; the remote intoxication of
his parents had been enough. His hair stood up
before the horror of this murder; and yet, in
spite of the revolt which came from his education,
a certain gladness made his heart beat, the animal
joy of an appetite at length satisfied. He felt
pride, too, the pride of the stronger man. The
little soldier appeared before him, with his
throat opened by a knife, killed by a child. Now
he, too, had killed.
But Catherine, standing erect, uttered a loud cry:
"My God! he is dead!"
"Are you sorry?" asked Étienne,
fiercely.
She was choking, she stammered. Then, tottering.
she threw herself into his arms.
"Ah, kill me too! Ah, let us both die!"
She clasped him, hanging to his shoulders, and he
clasped her; and they hoped that they would die.
But death was in no hurry, and they unlocked their
arms. Then, while she hid her eyes, he dragged
away the wretch, and threw him down the upbrow, to
remove him from the narrow space in which they
still had to live. Life would no longer have been
possible with that corpse beneath their feet. And
they were terrified when they heard it plunge into
the midst of the foam which leapt up. The water
had already filled that hole, then? They saw it;
it was entering the gallery.
Then there was a new struggle. They had lighted
the last lamp; it was becoming exhausted in
illuminating this flood, with its regular,
obstinate rise which never ceased. At first the
water came up to their ankles; then it wetted
their knees. The passage sloped up, and they took
refuge at the end. This gave them a respite for
some hours. But the flood caught them up, and
bathed them to the waist. Standing up, brought to
bay, with their spines close against the rock,
they watched it ever and ever increasing. When it
reached their mouths, all would be over. The
lamp, which they had fastened up, threw a yellow
light on the rapid surge of the little waves. It
was becoming pale; they could distinguish no more
than a constantly diminishing semicircle, as
though eaten away by the darkness which seemed to
grow with the flood; and suddenly the darkness
enveloped them. The lamp had gone out, after
having spat forth its last drop of oil. There was
now complete and absolute night, that night of the
earth which they would have to sleep through
without ever again opening their eyes to the
brightness of the sun.
"By God!" Étienne swore, in a low
voice.
Catherine, as though she had felt the darkness
seize her, sheltered herself against him. She
repeated, in a whisper, the miner's saying:
"Death is blowing out the lamp."
Yet in the face of this threat their instincts
struggled, the fever for life animated them. He
violently set himself to hollow out the slate with
the hook of the lamp, while she helped him with
her nails. They formed a sort of elevated bench,
and when they had both hoisted themselves up to
it, they found themselves seated with hanging legs
and bent backs, for the vault forced them to lower
their heads. They now only felt the icy water at
their heels; but before long the cold was at their
ankles, their calves, their knees, with its
invincible, truceless movement. The bench, not
properly smoothed, was soaked in moisture, and so
slippery that they had to hold themselves on
vigorously to avoid slipping off. It was the end;
what could they expect, reduced to this niche
where they dared not move, exhausted, starving,
having neither bread nor light? and they suffered
especially from the darkness, which would not
allow them to see the coming of death. There was
deep silence; the mine, being gorged with water,
no longer stirred. They had nothing beneath them
now but the sensation of that sea, swelling out
its silent tide from the depths of the galleries.
The hours succeeded one another, all equally
black; but they were not able to measure their
exact duration, becoming more and more vague in
their calculation of time. Their tortures, which
might have been expected to lengthen the minutes,
rapidly bore them away. They thought that they
had only been shut up for two days and a night,
when in reality the third day had already come to
an end. All hope of help had gone; no one knew
they were there, no one could come down to them.
And hunger would finish them off if the inundation
spared them. For one last time it occurred to
them to beat the call, but the stone was lying
beneath the water. Besides, who would hear them?
Catherine was leaning her aching head against the
seam, when she sat up with a start.
"Listen!" she said.
At first Étienne thought she was speaking
of the low noise of the ever-rising water. He
lied in order to quiet her.
"It's me you hear; I'm moving my legs."
"No, no; not that! Over there, listen!"
And she placed her ear to the coal. He
understood, and did likewise. They waited for
some seconds, with stifled breath. Then, very far
away and very weak, they heard three blows at long
intervals. But they still doubted; their ears
were ringing; perhaps it was the cracking of the
soil. And they knew not what to strike with in
answer.
Étienne had an idea.
"You have the sabots. Take them off and
strike with the heels."
She struck, beating the miner's call; and they
listened and again distinguished the three blows
far off. Twenty times over they did it, and
twenty times the blows replied. They wept and
embraced each other, at the risk of losing their
balance. At last the mates were there, they were
coming. An overflowing joy and love carried away
the torments of expectation and the rage of their
vain appeals, as though their rescuers had only to
split the rock with a finger to deliver them.
"Eh!" she cried merrily; "wasn't it
lucky that I leant my head?"
"Oh, you've got an ear!" he said in his
turn. "Now, I heard nothing."
From that moment they relieved each other, one of
them always listening, ready to answer at the
least signal. They soon caught the sounds of the
pick; the work of approaching them was beginning,
a gallery was being opened. Not a sound escaped
them. But their joy sank. In vain they laughed
to deceive each other; despair was gradually
seizing them. At first they entered into long
explanations; evidently they were being approached
from Réquillart. The gallery descended in
the bed; perhaps several were being opened, for
there were always three men hewing. Then they
talked less, and were at last silent when they
came to calculate the enormous mass which
separated them from their mates. They continued
their reflections in silence, counting the days
and days that a workman would take to penetrate
such a block. They would never be reached soon
enough; they would have time to die twenty times
over. And no longer venturing to exchange a word
in this redoubled anguish, they gloomily replied
to the appeals by a roll of the sabots, without
hope, only retaining the mechanical need to tell
the others that they were still alive.
Thus passed a day, two days. They had been at the
bottom six days. The water had stopped at their
knees, neither rising nor falling, and their legs
seemed to be melting away in this icy bath. They
could certainly keep them out for an hour or so,
but their position then became so uncomfortable
that they were twisted by horrible cramps, and
were obliged to let their feet fall in again.
Every ten minutes they hoisted themselves back by
a jerk on the slippery rock. The fractures of the
coal struck into their spines, and they felt at
the back of their necks a fixed intense pain,
through having to keep constantly bent in order to
avoid striking their heads. And their suffocation
increased; the air, driven back by the water, was
compressed into a sort of bell in which they were
shut up. Their voices were muffled, and seemed to
come from afar. Their ears began to buzz, they
heard the peals of a furious tocsin, the tramp of
a flock beneath a storm of hail, going on
unceasingly.
At first Catherine suffered horribly from hunger.
She pressed her poor shrivelled hands against her
breasts, her breathing was deep and hollow, a
continuous tearing moan, as though tongs were
tearing her stomach.
Étienne, choked by the same torture, was
feeling feverishly round him in the darkness, when
his fingers came upon a half-rotten piece of
timber, which his nails could crumble. He gave a
handful of it to the putter, who swallowed it
greedily. For two days they lived on this
worm-eaten wood, devouring it all, in despair when
it was finished, grazing their hands in the effort
to crush the other planks which were still solid
with resisting fibres. Their torture increased,
and they were enraged that they could not chew the
cloth of their clothes. A leather belt, which he
wore round the waist, relieved them a little. He
bit small pieces from it with his teeth, and she
chewed them, and endeavoured to swallow them.
This occupied their jaws, and gave them the
illusion of eating. Then, when the belt was
finished, they went back to their clothes, sucking
them for hours.
But soon these violent crises subsided; hunger
became only a low deep ache with the slow
progressive languor of their strength. No doubt
they would have succumbed if they had not had as
much water as they desired. They merely bent down
and drank from the hollow of the hand, and that
very frequently, parched by a thirst which all
this water could not quench.
On the seventh day Catherine was bending down to
drink, when her hand struck some floating body
before her.
"I say, look! What's this?"
Étienne felt in the darkness.
"I can't make out; it seems like the cover of
a ventilation door."
She drank, but as she was drawing up a second
mouthful the body came back, striking her hand.
And she uttered a terrible cry.
"My God! it's he!"
"Whom do you mean?"
"Him! You know well enough. I felt his
moustache." It was Chaval's corpse, risen
from the upbrow and pushed on to them by the flow.
Étienne stretched out his arm; he, too,
felt the moustache and the crushed nose, and
shuddered with disgust and fear. Seized by
horrible nausea, Catherine had spat out the water
which was still in her mouth. It seemed to her
that she had been drinking blood, and that all the
deep water before her was now that man's blood.
"Wait!" stammered Étienne.
"I'll push him off!"
He kicked the corpse, which moved off. But soon
they felt it again striking against their legs.
"By God! Get off!"
And the third time Étienne had to leave it.
Some current always brought it back. Chaval would
not go; he desired to be with them, against them.
It was an awful companion, at last poisoning the
air. All that day they never drank, struggling,
preferring to die. It was not until the next day
that their suffering decided them: they pushed
away the body at each mouthful and drank in spite
of it. It had not been worth while to knock his
brains out, for he came back between him and her,
obstinate in his jealousy. To the very end he
would be there, even though he was dead,
preventing them from coming together.
A day passed, and again another day. At every
shiver of the water Étienne perceived a
slight blow from the man he had killed, the simple
elbowing of a neighbour who is reminding you of
his presence. And every time it came he
shuddered. He continually saw it there, swollen,
greenish, with the red moustache and the crushed
face. Then he no longer remembered; he had not
killed him; the other man was swimming and trying
to bite him.
Catherine was now shaken by long endless fits of
crying, after which she was completely prostrated.
She fell at last into a condition of irresistible
drowsiness. He would arouse her, but she
stammered a few words and at once fell asleep
again without even raising her eyelids; and
fearing lest she should be drowned, he put his arm
round her waist. It was he now who replied to the
mates. The blows of the pick were now
approaching, he could hear them behind his back.
But his strength, too, was diminishing; he had
lost all courage to strike. They were known to be
there; why weary oneself more? It no longer
interested him whether they came or not. In the
stupefaction of waiting he would forget for hours
at a time what he was waiting for.
One relief comforted them a little: the water
sank, and Chaval's body moved off. For nine days
the work of their deliverance had been going on,
and they were for the first time taking a few
steps in the gallery when a fearful commotion
threw them to the ground. They felt for each
other and remained in each other's arms like mad
people, not understanding, thinking the
catastrophe was beginning over again. Nothing
more stirred, the sound of the picks had ceased.
In the corner where they were seated holding each
other, side by side, a low laugh came from
Catherine.
"It must be good outside. Come, let's go out
of here." Étienne at first struggled
against this madness. But the contagion was
shaking his stronger head, and he lost the exact
sensation of reality. All their senses seemed to
go astray, especially Catherine's. She was shaken
by fever, tormented now by the need to talk and
move. The ringing in her ears had become the
murmur of flowing water, the song of birds; she
smelled the strong odour of crushed grass, and
could see clearly great yellow patches floating
before her eyes, so large that she thought she was
out of doors, near the canal, in the meadows on a
fine summer day.
"Eh? how warm it is! Take me, then; let us
keep together. Oh, always, always!"
He pressed her, and she rubbed herself against him
for a long time, continuing to chatter like a
happy girl:
"How silly we have been to wait so long! I
would have liked you at once, and you did not
understand; you sulked. Then, do you remember, at
our house at night, when we could not sleep, with
our faces out listening to each other's breathing,
with such a longing to come together?"
He was won by her gaiety, and joked over the
recollection of their silent tenderness.
"You struck me once. Yes, yes, blows on both
cheeks!"
"It was because I loved you," she
murmured. "You see, I prevented myself from
thinking of you. I said to myself that it was
quite done with, and all the time I knew that one
day or another we should get together. It only
wanted an opportunity--some lucky chance. Wasn't
it so?"
A shudder froze him. He tried to shake off this
dream; then he repeated slowly:
"Nothing is ever done with; a little
happiness is enough to make everything begin
again."
"Then you'll keep me, and it will be all
right this time?"
And she slipped down fainting. She was so weak
that her low voice died out. In terror he kept
her against his heart.
"Are you in pain?"
She sat up surprised.
"No, not at all. Why?"
But this question aroused her from her dream. She
gazed at the darkness with distraction, wringing
her hands in another fit of sobbing.
"My God, my God, how black it is!"
It was no longer the meadows, the odour of the
grass, the song of larks, the great yellow sun; it
was the fallen, inundated mine, the stinking
gloom, the melancholy dripping of this cellar
where they had been groaning for so many days.
Her perverted senses now increased the horror of
it; her childish superstitions came back to her;
she saw the Black Man, the old dead miner who
returns to the pit to twist naughty girls' necks.
"Listen! did you hear?"
"No, nothing; I heard nothing."
"Yes, the Man--you know? Look! he is there.
The earth has let all the blood out of the vein to
revenge itself for being cut into; and he is
there--you can see him--look! blacker than night.
Oh, I'm so afraid, I'm so afraid!"
She became silent, shivering. Then in a very low
voice she whispered:
"No, it's always the other one."
"What other one?"
"Him who is with us; who is not alive."
The image of Chaval haunted her, she talked of him
confusedly, she described the dog's life she led
with him, the only day when he had been kind to
her at Jean-Bart, the other days of follies and
blows, when he would kill her with caresses after
having covered her with kicks.
"I tell you that he's coming, that he will
still keep us from being together! His jealousy
is coming on him again. Oh, push him off! Oh,
keep me close!"
With a sudden impulse she hung on to him, seeking
his mouth and pressing her own passionately to it.
The darkness lighted up, she saw the sun again,
and she laughed a quiet laugh of love. He
shuddered to feel her thus against his flesh, half
naked beneath the tattered jacket and trousers,
and he seized her with a reawakening of his
virility. It was at length their wedding night,
at the bottom of this tomb, on this bed of mud,
the longing not to die before they had had their
happiness, the obstinate longing to live and make
life one last time. They loved each other in
despair of everything, in death.
After that there was nothing more. Étienne
was seated on the ground, always in the same
corner, and Catherine was lying motionless on his
knees. Hours and hours passed by. For a long
time he thought she was sleeping; then he touched
her; she was very cold, she was dead. He did not
move, however, for fear of arousing her. The idea
that he was the first who had possessed her as a
woman, and that she might be pregnant, filled him
with tenderness. Other ideas, the desire to go
away with her, joy at what they would both do
later on, came to him at moments, but so vaguely
that it seemed only as though his forehead had
been touched by a breath of sleep. He grew
weaker, he only had strength to make a little
gesture, a slow movement of the hand, to assure
himself that she was certainly there, like a
sleeping child in her frozen stiffness.
Everything was being annihilated; the night itself
had disappeared, and he was nowhere, out of space,
out of time. Something was certainly striking
beside his head, violent blows were approaching
him; but he had been too lazy to reply, benumbed
by immense fatigue; and now he knew nothing, he
only dreamed that she was walking before him, and
that he heard the slight clank of her sabots. Two
days passed; she had not stirred; he touched her
with his mechanical gesture, reassured to find her
so quiet.
Étienne felt a shock. Voices were
sounding, rocks were rolling to his feet. When he
perceived a lamp he wept. His blinking eyes
followed the light, he was never tired of looking
at it, enraptured by this reddish point which
scarcely stained the darkness. But some mates
carried him away, and he allowed them to introduce
some spoonfuls of soup between his clenched teeth.
It was only in the Réquillart gallery that
he recognized someone standing before him, the
engineer, Négrel; and these two men, with
their contempt for each other--the rebellious
workman and the sceptical master--threw themselves
on each other's necks, sobbing loudly in the deep
upheaval of all the humanity within them. It was
an immense sadness, the misery of generations, the
extremity of grief into which life can fall.
At the surface, Maheude, stricken down near dead
Catherine, uttered a cry, then another, then
another--very long, deep, incessant moans.
Several corpses had already been brought up, and
placed in a row on the ground: Chaval, who was
thought to have been crushed beneath a landslip.
a trammer, and two hewers, also crushed, with
brainless skulls and bellies swollen with water.
Women in the crowd went out of their minds,
tearing their skirts and scratching their faces.
When Étienne was at last taken out, after
having been accustomed to the lamps and fed a
little, he appeared fleshless, and his hair was
quite white. People turned away and shuddered at
this old man. Maheude left off crying to stare at
him stupidly with her large fixed eyes.