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PART IV
She married him. She felt as if she
were in a pit with inaccessible sides from which she could never get out, and
all kinds of misfortunes were hanging over her head, like huge rocks, which
would fall on the first occasion. Her husband gave her the impression of a man
whom she had robbed, and who would find it out some day or other. And then she
thought of her child, who was the cause of her misfortunes, but who was also
the cause of all her happiness on earth, and whom she went to see twice a year,
though she came back more unhappy each time.
But she gradually grew accustomed to her
life, her fears were allayed, her heart was at rest, and she lived with an
easier mind, though still with some vague fear floating in it. And so years went on, until the child was six. She was
almost happy now, when suddenly the farmer's temper grew very bad.
For two or three years he seemed to
have been nursing some secret anxiety, to be troubled by some care, some mental
disturbance, which was gradually increasing. He remained sitting at table after
dinner, with his head in his hands, sad and devoured by sorrow. He always spoke
hastily, sometimes even brutally, and it even seemed as if he had a grudge
against his wife, for at times he answered her roughly, almost angrily.
One day, when a neighbor's boy came for
some eggs, and she spoke rather crossly to him, as she was very busy, her
husband suddenly came in and said to her in his unpleasant voice: "If that
were your own child you would not treat him so." She was hurt and did not
reply, and then she went back into the house, with all her grief awakened afresh;
and at dinner the farmer neither spoke to her nor looked at her, and he seemed
to hate her, to despise her, to know something about the affair at last. In
consequence she lost her composure, and did not venture to remain alone with
him after the meal was over, but left the room and hastened to the church.
It was getting dusk; the narrow nave
was in total darkness, but she heard footsteps in the choir, for the sacristan
was preparing the tabernacle lamp for the night. That spot of trembling light,
which was lost in the darkness of the. arches, looked
to Rose like her last hope, and with her eyes fixed on it, she fell on her
knees. The chain rattled as the little lamp swung up into the air, and almost
immediately the small bell rang out the Angelus through the increasing mist.
She went up to him, as he was going out.
"Is Monsieur le Cure
at home?" she asked. "Of course he is; this is his dinnertime."
She trembled as she rang the bell of the parsonage. The priest was just sitting
down to dinner, and he made her sit down also. "Yes, yes, I know all about
it; your husband has mentioned the matter to me that brings you here." The
poor woman nearly fainted, and the priest continued: "What do you want, my
child?" And he hastily swallowed several spoonfuls of soup, some of which
dropped on to his greasy cassock. But Rose did not venture to say anything
more, and she got up to go, but the priest said: "Courage."
And she went out and returned to the farm
without knowing what she was doing. The farmer was waiting for her, as the
laborers had gone away during her absence, and she fell heavily at his feet,
and, shedding a flood of tears, she said to him: "What have you got
against me?"
He began to shout and to swear:
"What have I got against you? That I have no children,
by ---. When a man takes a wife it is not that they may live alone
together to the end of their days. That is what I have against you. When a cow
has no calves she is not worth anything, and when a woman has no children she
is also not worth anything."
She began to cry, and said: "It is
not my fault! It is not my fault!" He grew rather more
gentle when he heard that, and added: "I do not say that it is, but
it is very provoking, all the same."
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