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PART II
Then a cloud of constant misery began
for her. She worked mechanically, without thinking of what she was doing, with
one fixed idea in her head:
"Suppose people were to
know."
This continual feeling made her so incapable
of reasoning that she did not even try to think of any means of avoiding the
disgrace that she knew must ensue, which was irreparable and drawing nearer
every day, and which was as sure as death itself. She got up every morning long
before the others and persistently tried to look at her figure in a piece of
broken looking-glass, before which she did her hair, as she was very anxious to
know whether anybody would notice a change in her, and, during the day, she
stopped working every few minutes to look at herself from top to toe, to see
whether her apron did not look too short.
The months went on, and she scarcely
spoke now, and when she was asked a question, did not appear to understand; but
she had a frightened look, haggard eyes and trembling hands, which made her
master say to her occasionally: "My poor girl, how stupid you have grown
lately."
In church she hid behind a pillar, and
no longer ventured to go to confession, as she feared to face the priest, to
whom she attributed superhuman powers, which enabled him to read people's
consciences; and at meal times the looks of her fellow servants almost made her
faint with mental agony; and she was always fancying that she had been found
out by the cowherd, a precocious and cunning little lad, whose bright eyes
seemed always to be watching her.
One morning the postman brought her a
letter, and as she had never received one in her life before she was so upset
by it that she was obliged to sit down. Perhaps it was from him? But, as she
could not read, she sat anxious and trembling with that piece of paper, covered
with ink, in her hand. After a time, however, she put it into her pocket, as
she did not venture to confide her secret to any one. She often stopped in her
work to look at those lines written at regular intervals, and which terminated
in a signature, imagining vaguely that she would suddenly discover their
meaning, until at last, as she felt half mad with impatience and anxiety, she went to the schoolmaster, who told her to sit
down and read to her as follows:
"MY DEAR DAUGHTER: I
write to tell you that I am very ill. Our neighbor, Monsieur Dentu, begs you to
come, if you can.
"From your affectionate
mother,
"CESAIRE DENTU, Deputy Mayor."
She did not say a word and went away,
but as soon as she was alone her legs gave way under her, and she fell down by
the roadside and remained there till night.
When she got back, she told the farmer
her bad news, and he allowed her to go home for as long as she liked, and
promised to have her work done by a charwoman and to take her back when she
returned.
Her mother died soon after she got
there, and the next day Rose gave birth to a seven-months child, a miserable
little skeleton, thin enough to make anybody shudder, and which seemed to be
suffering continually, to judge from the painful manner in which it moved its
poor little hands, which were as thin as a crab's legs; but it lived for all
that. She said she was married, but could not be burdened with the child, so
she left it with some neighbors, who promised to take great care of it, and she
went back to the farm.
But now in her heart, which had been
wounded so long, there arose something like brightness, an unknown love for
that frail little creature which she had left behind her, though there was
fresh suffering in that very love, suffering which she felt every hour and
every minute, because she was parted from her child. What pained her most, however, was the mad longing to kiss it, to press it
in her arms, to feel the warmth of its little body against her breast. She
could not sleep at night; she thought of it the whole day long, and in the
evening, when her work was done, she would sit in front of the fire and gaze at
it intently, as people do whose thoughts are far away.
They began to talk about her and to
tease-her about her lover. They asked her whether he was tall, handsome and
rich. When was the wedding to be and the christening? And often she ran away to
cry by herself, for these questions seemed to hurt her like the prick of a pin;
and, in order to forget their jokes, she began to work still more
energetically, and, still thinking of her child, she sought some way of saving
up money for it, and determined to work so that her master would be obliged to
raise her wages.
By degrees she almost monopolized the
work and persuaded him to get rid of one servant girl, who had become useless
since she had taken to working like two; she economized in the bread, oil and
candles; in the corn, which they gave to the chickens too extravagantly, and in
the fodder for the horses and cattle, which was rather wasted. She was as
miserly about her master's money as if it had been her own; and, by dint of
making good bargains, of getting high prices for all their produce, and by
baffling the peasants' tricks when they offered anything for sale, he, at last,
entrusted her with buying and selling everything, with the direction of all the
laborers, and with the purchase of provisions necessary for the household; so
that, in a short time, she became. indispensable to
him. She kept such a strict eye on everything about her that, under her
direction, the farm prospered wonderfully, and for five miles around people
talked of "Master Vallin's servant," and the farmer himself said
everywhere: "That girl is worth more than her weight in gold."
But time passed by, and her wages
remained the same. Her hard work was accepted as something that was due from
every good servant, and as a mere token of good will; and she began to think
rather bitterly that if the farmer could put fifty or a hundred crowns extra
into the bank every month, thanks to her, she was still only earning her two
hundred francs a year, neither more nor less; and so she made up her mind to
ask for an increase of wages. She went to see the schoolmaster three times
about it, but when she got there, she spoke about something else. She felt a
kind of modesty in asking for money, as if it were something disgraceful; but,
at last, one day, when the farmer was having breakfast by himself in the
kitchen, she said to him, with some embarrassment, that she wished to speak to
him particularly. He raised his head in surprise, with both his hands on the
table, holding his knife, with its point in the air, in one, and a piece of bread
in the other, and he looked fixedly at, the girl, who felt uncomfortable under
his gaze, but asked for a week's holiday, so that she might get away, as she
was not very well. He acceded to her request immediately, and then added, in
some embarrassment himself:
"When you come back, I
shall have something to say to you myself."
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