THERESE RAQUIN
CHAPTER XXVIII
For two months, Therese and Laurent had been struggling in the anguish of
their union. One suffered through the other. Then hatred slowly gained them, and
they ended by casting angry glances at one another, full of secret menace.
Hatred was forced to come. They had loved like brutes, with hot passion,
entirely sanguineous. Then, amidst the enervation of their crime, their love had
turned to fright, and their kisses had produced a sort of physical terror. At
present, amid the suffering which marriage, which life in common imposed on
them, they revolted and flew into anger.
It was a bitter hatred, with terrible outbursts. They felt they were in the
way of one another, and both inwardly said that they would lead a tranquil
existence were they not always face to face. When in presence of each other, it
seemed as if an enormous weight were stifling them, and they would have liked to
remove this weight, to destroy it. Their lips were pinched, thoughts of violence
passed in their clear eyes, and a craving beset them to devour one another.
In reality, one single thought tormented them: they were irritated at their
crime, and in despair at having for ever troubled their lives. Hence all their
anger and hatred. They felt the evil incurable, that they would suffer for the
murder of Camille until death, and this idea of perpetual suffering exasperated
them. Not knowing whom to strike, they turned in hatred on one another.
They would not openly admit that their marriage was the final punishment of
the murder; they refused to listen to the inner voice that shouted out the truth
to them, displaying the story of their life before their eyes. And yet, in the
fits of rage that bestirred them, they both saw clearly to the bottom of their
anger, they were aware it was the furious impulse of their egotistic nature that
had urged them to murder in order to satisfy their desire, and that they had
only found in assassination, an afflicted and intolerable existence. They
recollected the past, they knew that their mistaken hopes of lust and peaceful
happiness had alone brought them to remorse. Had they been able to embrace one
another in peace, and live in joy, they would not have mourned Camille, they
would have fattened on their crime. But their bodies had rebelled, refusing
marriage, and they inquired of themselves, in terror, where horror and disgust
would lead them. They only perceived a future that would be horrible in pain,
with a sinister and violent end.
Then, like two enemies bound together, and who were making violent efforts to
release themselves from this forced embrace, they strained their muscles and
nerves, stiffening their limbs without succeeding in releasing themselves. At
last understanding that they would never be able to escape from their clasp,
irritated by the cords cutting into their flesh, disgusted at their contact,
feeling their discomfort increase at every moment, forgetful, and unable to bear
their bonds a moment longer, they addressed outrageous reproaches to one
another, in the hope of suffering loss, of dressing the wounds they inflicted on
themselves, by cursing and deafening each other with their shouts and
accusations.
A quarrel broke out every evening. It looked as though the murderers sought
opportunities to become exasperated so as to relax their rigid nerves. They
watched one another, sounded one another with glances, examined the wounds of
one another, discovering the raw parts, and taking keen pleasure in causing each
other to yell in pain. They lived in constant irritation, weary of themselves,
unable to support a word, a gesture or a look, without suffering and frenzy.
Both their beings were prepared for violence; the least display of impatience,
the most ordinary contrariety increased immoderately in their disordered
organism, and all at once, took the form of brutality. A mere nothing raised a
storm that lasted until the morrow. A plate too warm, an open window, a denial,
a simple observation, sufficed to drive them into regular fits of madness.
In the course of the discussion, they never failed to bring up the subject of
the drowned man. From sentence to sentence they came to mutual reproaches about
this drowning business at Saint-Ouen, casting the crime in the face of one
another. They grew excited to the pitch of fury, until one felt like murdering
the other. Then ensued atrocious scenes of choking, blows, abominable cries,
shameless brutalities. As a rule, Therese and Laurent became exasperated, in
this manner, after the evening meal. They shut themselves up in the dining-room,
so that the sound of their despair should not be heard. There, they could devour
one another at ease. At the end of this damp apartment, of this sort of vault,
lighted by the yellow beams of the lamp, the tone of their voices took harrowing
sharpness, amidst the silence and tranquillity of the atmosphere. And they did
not cease until exhausted with fatigue; then only could they go and enjoy a few
hours' rest. Their quarrels became, in a measure, necessary to them—a means of
procuring a few hours' rest by stupefying their nerves.
Madame Raquin listened. She never ceased to be there, in her armchair, her
hands dangling on her knees, her head straight, her face mute. She heard
everything, and not a shudder ran through her lifeless frame. Her eyes rested on
the murderers with the most acute fixedness. Her martyrdom must have been
atrocious. She thus learned, detail by detail, all the events that had preceded
and followed the murder of Camille. Little by little her ears became polluted
with an account of the filth and crimes of those whom she had called her
children.
These quarrels of the married couple placed her in possession of the most
minute circumstances connected with the murder, and spread out, one by one,
before her terrified mind, all the episodes of the horrible adventure. As she
went deeper into this sanguinary filth, she pleaded in her mind for mercy, at
times, she fancied she was touching the bottom of the infamy, and still she had
to descend lower. Each night, she learnt some new detail. The frightful story
continued to expand before her. It seemed like being lost in an interminable
dream of horror. The first avowal had been brutal and crushing, but she suffered
more from these repeated blows, from these small facts which the husband and
wife allowed to escape them in their fits of anger, and which lit up the crime
with sinister rays. Once a day, this mother heard the account of the murder of
her son; and, each day this account became more horrifying, more replete with
detail, and was shouted into her ears with greater cruelty and uproar.
On one occasion, Therese, taken aback with remorse, at the sight of this wan
countenance, with great tears slowly coursing down its cheeks, pointed out her
aunt to Laurent, beseeching him with a look to hold his tongue.
"Well, what of it? Leave me alone!" exclaimed the latter in a brutal tone,
"you know very well that she cannot give us up. Am I more happy than she is? We
have her cash, I have no need to constrain myself."
The quarrel continued, bitter and piercing, and Camille was killed over
again. Neither Therese nor Laurent dared give way to the thoughts of pity that
sometimes came over them, and shut the paralysed woman in her bedroom, when they
quarrelled, so as to spare her the story of the crime. They were afraid of
beating one another to death, if they failed to have this semi-corpse between
them. Their pity yielded to cowardice. They imposed ineffable sufferings on
Madame Raquin because they required her presence to protect them against their
hallucinations.
All their disputes were alike, and led to the same accusations. As soon as
one of them accused the other of having killed this man, there came a frightful
shock.
One night, at dinner, Laurent who sought a pretext for becoming irritable,
found that the water in the decanter was lukewarm. He declared that tepid water
made him feel sick, and that he wanted it fresh.
"I was unable to procure any ice," Therese answered dryly.
"Very well, I will deprive myself of drinking," retorted Laurent.
"This water is excellent," said she.
"It is warm, and has a muddy taste," he answered. "It's like water from the
river."
"Water from the river?" repeated Therese.
And she burst out sobbing. A juncture of ideas had just occurred in her mind.
"Why do you cry?" asked Laurent, who foresaw the answer, and turned pale.
"I cry," sobbed the young woman, "I cry because—you know why—Oh! Great God!
Great God! It was you who killed him."
"You lie!" shouted the murderer vehemently, "confess that you lie. If I threw
him into the Seine, it was you who urged me to commit the murder."
"I! I!" she exclaimed.
"Yes, you! Don't act the ignorant," he replied, "don't compel me to force you
to tell the truth. I want you to confess your crime, to take your share in the
murder. It will tranquillise and relieve me."
"But I did not drown Camille," she pleaded.
"Yes, you did, a thousand times yes!" he shouted. "Oh! You feign astonishment
and want of memory. Wait a moment, I will recall your recollections."
Rising from table, he bent over the young woman, and with crimson
countenance, yelled in her face:
"You were on the river bank, you remember, and I said to you in an undertone:
'I am going to pitch him into the water.' Then you agreed to it, you got into
the boat. You see that we murdered him together."
"It is not true," she answered. "I was crazy, I don't know what I did, but I
never wanted to kill him. You alone committed the crime."
These denials tortured Laurent. As he had said, the idea of having an
accomplice relieved him. Had he dared, he would have attempted to prove to
himself that all the horror of the murder fell upon Therese. He more than once
felt inclined to beat the young woman, so as to make her confess that she was
the more guilty of the two.
He began striding up and down, shouting and raving, followed by the piercing
eyes of Madame Raquin.
"Ah! The wretch! The wretch!" he stammered in a choking voice, "she wants to
drive me mad. Look, did you not come up to my room one evening, did you not
intoxicate me with your caresses to persuade me to rid you of your husband? You
told me, when I visited you here, that he displeased you, that he had the odour
of a sickly child. Did I think of all this three years ago? Was I a rascal? I
was leading the peaceful existence of an upright man, doing no harm to anybody.
I would not have killed a fly."
"It was you who killed Camille," repeated Therese with such desperate
obstinacy that she made Laurent lose his head.
"No, it was you, I say it was you," he retorted with a terrible burst of
rage. "Look here, don't exasperate me, or if you do you'll suffer for it. What,
you wretch, have you forgotten everything? You who maddened me with your
caresses! Confess that it was all a calculation in your mind, that you hated
Camille, and that you had wanted to kill him for a long time. No doubt you took
me as a sweetheart, so as to drive me to put an end to him."
"It is not true," said she. "What you relate is monstrous. You have no right
to reproach me with my weakness towards you. I can speak in regard to you, as
you speak of me. Before I knew you, I was a good woman, who never wronged a
soul. If I drove you mad, it was you made me madder still. Listen Laurent, don't
let us quarrel. I have too much to reproach you with."
"What can you reproach me with?" he inquired.
"No, nothing," she answered. "You did not save me from myself, you took
advantage of my surrender, you chose to spoil my life. I forgive you all that.
But, in mercy, do not accuse me of killing Camille. Keep your crime for
yourself. Do not seek to make me more terrified than I am already."
Laurent raised his hand to strike her in the face.
"Beat me, I prefer that," said she, "I shall suffer less."
And she advanced her head. But he restrained himself, and taking a chair, sat
down beside her.
"Listen," he began in a voice that he endeavoured to render calm, "it is
cowardly to refuse to take your share in the crime. You know perfectly well that
as we did the deed together, you know you are as guilty as I am. Why do you want
to make my load heavier, by saying you are innocent? If you were so, you would
not have consented to marry me. Just recall what passed during the two years
following the murder. Do you want a proof? If so I will go and relate everything
to the Public Prosecutor, and you will see whether we are not both condemned."
They shuddered, and Therese resumed:
"Men may, perhaps, condemn me, but Camille knows very well that you did
everything. He does not torment me at night as he does you."
"Camille leaves me in peace," said Laurent, pale and trembling, "it is you
who see him before you in your nightmares. I have heard you shout out."
"Don't say that," angrily exclaimed the young woman. "I have never shouted
out. I don't wish the spectre to appear. Oh! I understand, you want to drive it
away from yourself. I am innocent, I am innocent!"
They looked at one another in terror, exhausted with fatigue, fearing they
had evoked the corpse of the drowned man. Their quarrels invariably ended in
this way; they protested their innocence, they sought to deceive themselves, so
as to drive away their bad dreams. They made constant efforts, each in turn, to
reject the responsibility of the crime, defending themselves as though they were
before a judge and jury, and accusing one another.
The strangest part of this attitude was that they did not succeed in duping
themselves by their oaths. Both had a perfect recollection of all the
circumstances connected with the murder, and their eyes avowed what their lips
denied.
Their falsehoods were puerile, their affirmations ridiculous. It was the
wordy dispute of two wretches who lied for the sake of lying, without succeeding
in concealing from themselves that they did so. Each took the part of accuser in
turn, and although the prosecution they instituted against one another proved
barren of result, they began it again every evening with cruel tenacity.
They were aware that they would prove nothing, that they would not succeed in
effacing the past, and still they attempted this task, still they returned to
the charge, spurred on by pain and terror, vanquished in advance by overwhelming
reality. The sole advantage they derived from their disputes, consisted in
producing a tempest of words and cries, and the riot occasioned in this manner
momentarily deafened them.
And all the time their anger lasted, all the time they were accusing one
another, the paralysed woman never ceased to gaze at them. Ardent joy sparkled
in her eyes, when Laurent raised his broad hand above the head of Therese.