M. le Curé de Val-le-Roi, in
the province of Burgundy, where they make such excellent wine,
was a kindly and worthy man. He came of a good family - the Rosemondes
of Nièvre, and though his intelligence was perhaps not
of the highest order, his piety was sincere and his human understanding
very real.
On the tragic day of André Vallon's public punishment he
stood beside the whipping post the whole time that Marius Legendre
- the local butcher employed by the Commune to administer punishment
to juvenile offenders - was lamming into the boy. André,
with teeth set and eyes resolutely closed, appeared not to hear
the Curé's gentle words, exhorting him to patience and
humility.
Patience and humility, forsooth! Never was there a vainer exhortation.
It was only when it was all over and he was freed from the post
that André opened his eyes and cast a glowering, rankling
look around the market square. Legendre had thrown down the whip
and was handing the lad his shirt and coat. André snatched
them out of his hand, and Legendre - a worthy man, not unkind
- smiled indulgently. The two gendarmes stood at attention, waiting
for orders, their faces wooden and impassive. Part of the crowd
had already dispersed: the men silent and sullen, the women sniffing
audibly. The younger ones - girls and boys - muttered words of
pity or of wrath. Monseigneur was standing beside the door of
his coach, helping the ladies to step back into the carriage.
one of them - the one with the largnette - cast a final backward
glance at André; then piped in a high-pitched, flutelike
voice:
"See, my dear Charles, so would a fallen angel have looked
had the Almighty punished the rebels with thongs."
A man in the forefront of the crowd, close to Monseignuer's coach,
laughed obsequiously at the sally. André saw him. It was
Talon. Lucile stood beside her husband. When she met André's
glance, she, too, gave a laugh, but quickly turned her head away.
Then only did a groan rise from the boy's breast. It was a groan
of an overwhelming, impotent rage. His breath came whistling through
his teeth. He made a movement like a wild beast about to spring,
but instinctively the gendarmes had already placed each a hand
upon his shoulder and held him down. André was weak after
the punishment, though he would not have admitted it even to himself;
but his knees shook under him, and he nearly collapsed under the
heavy hands of the gendarmes. M. le Curé murmured gentle
words. "My son, remember that our Lord-"
André turned on him with a cry that was like a snarl. "Go
away! Go away!" he muttered hoarsely. "I hate you."
But the Curé did not go away. He stayed to help the lad
on with his shirt and coat; then, when André, avoiding
the crowd, went staggering round a back street and then down the
lane towards his mother's cottage, the kindly old priest followed
him at a short distance, ready to render assistance should the
boy be seized with giddiness and collapse on the way. Only when
he saw Marianne standing at the narrow garden gate waiting for
her son did he went his way back to his presbytery. Contrary to
his usual habit, he did not take his breviary out of his pocket
or murmur orisons while he walked. With his soutane hitched up
around his waist, he strode along, obviously buried in thought,
for now and again he would shake his head and then nod, as if
in secret communion with himself.
The results of M. le Curé's agitation were, firstly, a
lengthy interview with Monseigneur, and secondly a summons to
Marianne Vallon to bring her son André up to the château.
Monseigneur desired to see him.
André, of course, refused to go. "I hate him!"
he declared when M. le Curé came to announce what he thought
was great news for Marianne and the boy.
"Monseigneur," the priest had explained, "was interested.
He is always so kind and so gracious, but when I spoke to him
of André he was pleased to be genial, facetious; he toyed,
as one might say, with the idea of doing something for the boy.
Then there were the ladies. Madame la Marquise d'Epinay put in
a word here and there, so charming she was, so sprightly. She
spoke of André as the bronze Hermes, and though the latter
we know is nothing but a heathen god, and I would not care to
think that our André had any likeness to such idolatrous
things, I could not have it in my heart to reprove the witty lady,
especially as Monseigneur appeared more and more diverted. Then
Mademoiselle Aurore came in - such a pretty child - her governess
was with her, and I gathered at once she knew something about
our André - domestics will talk, you know, my good Marianne
- and Mademoiselle was even more interested than Monseigneur.
She put her little hands together and begged and begged of her
father that André might come up to the château, as
she desired to see him. And Monseigneur, who since the death of
Madame la Duchesse gives in to all the child's whims, gave me
permission to bring our André to him."
The good Curé spoke thus lenghily and uninterruptedly,
for Marianne, absorbed in her knitting, said never a word: she
was never much of a talker, and André only glowered and
muttered unintelligible words between his teeth. There was perhaps
something a little unctuous, a little complacent in M. le Curé's
verbiage. He was not forgetting that besides being the incumbent
of this poor little village, he was also by birth a Rosemonde
de Nièvre, and that by tradition and upbringing he belonged
to the same caste as Monseigneur le Duc de Marigny de Borne, whose
gracious sympathy in facour of "our André" he
had been fortunate enough to arouse.
"I hate him! I will not go!" was all that could be got
out of André that day. "You can drag me to that accursed
château," he went on sullenly, "as you did to
the whipping post, but willingly I will not go."
"But, my dear child," the Curé protested, "Monseigneur
said-"
"Whatever he said," the boy broke in with a snarl, like
an animal that is being teased, "may his words choke him!
- I hate him!"
"You are overwrought and agitated, my boy," the priest
said placing his well manicured podgy white hand on André's
shoulder, who promptly shook it off. "When the good God and
your dear patron saint have prevailed over your rebellious spirit,
you will realize how much Monseigneur's kindness and Mademoiselle
Aurore's intercession-"
"Don't speak to me of those women up at the château,"
André cried hoarsely, "or I shall see red!"
Marianne Vallon at this point put down her knitting. She knew
well enough that to carry on the discussion any further to-day
would only drive the boy to exasperation. All that he had gone
through in the past few days had, in a way, made a man of him,
but a man with all a child's unreasoning resentment at what he
deemed an injustice.
M. le Curé took the hint. With characteristic tact he changed
the subject of conversation, spoke to Marianne on village matters
- the washing of surplices which she had undertaken to do for
a small stipend, and finally took his leave, deliberately ignoring
André's ill manners and glowering looks. At the door, however,
he turned once more to where the boy sat, chin cupped in his hand,
staring dully into the gathering shadows.
"Remember, my dear child," he said with gentle earnestness;
all his small, worldly ways drowned in a flood of genuine sympathy,
"that your future does not belong entirely to yourself: your
sainted mother works her fingers to the bone so that you should
be clothed and fed. She performs menial tasks to which neither
by birth nor upbringing was she ever ordained. Think of her, my
lad, before you spurn the hand that can help you up the ladder
that may lead you to an honourable career and give you the chance
of repaying part of your debt to her."
Mother and son spoke little to each other during the rest of the
day. Marianne appeared more than usually busy with knitting and
sewing and spoke even less than was her wont. After sundown André
went out from a tramp in woods and fields. Ever since the fatal
day he had made a point of wandering over the countryside only
after dark. He dreaded to meet familiar faces in the country lanes,
dreaded to see either compassion or ridicule in the glances that
would meet his.
To-night his young soul was brimful with bitterness. Never before
had he felt such an all-embracing hatred for everything, and every
human being who had made possible the humiliation that had been
put upon him. Childlike, he wandered down the lane past the house
where lived talon and his wife, the prime authors of the whole
tragedy. He stood for a long time looking at the house. There
were lights in one or two of the window. The Talons were rich,
they could afford candles. They were people of consideration.
They got the ear of the Substitut and engineered his, André's,
lasting disgrace. He hated them - hated their house, their garden,
their flowers; he wished with all his might that some awful calamity
would overtake them.
The fields around were bathed in moonlight; the air was fragrant
and warm; a gentle breeze fluttered the branches of the forest
trees, causing a gentle murmur to fill the night with its subtle
sound. The scent of hay and clover rose from the adjoining meadows,
and from the depths of the wood there came from to time the melancholy
call of a night bird or the crackling of trigs under tiny, furtive
feet.
Only a very few days ago André would have revelled in all
that: the little cottontails scurrying past, the bard-door owl
flying by with great flapping of wings; fantastically shaped clouds
veiling from time to time the face of the moon. All would have
delighted him, those few short days ago. Now he had eyes only
for that house of evil. he watched its windows till the lights
were extinguished one by one, and then wished once more with all
his might that hideous nightmares should disturb the sleep of
those whom he hated so bitterly.
