Authors: Georges Simenon
How much coming and going these few words represented at the houses where students were lodged, how many innocent questions asked here and there! These students, Russians, Poles, Rumanians and Japanese, who came to study at the University of Liége, she followed them, in the street, with a miser's eye.
âI'd only need three, Valérie, not too rich because they would expect too much, but not too poor either. They'd be so happy with me!'
Was it her fault if that was her fate in life? She had just suffered a big disappointment. Just after four o'clock, in the middle of the Place du Congrès, then again at the end of the Pont de Bressoux, she had been the genuinely distressed mother who had lost her child. It was all Désiré's fault. He was Guillaume's brother. At two o'clock, when he had known everything, he had been a coward and kept quiet.
âMen, Valérie! They are so afraid of having their peace disturbed, their little habits changed!'
Désiré, who suspected nothing and who had won at whistâthe money went into the kittyâleft his friends at the Veldens' door. Ãlise recognized his footsteps, awoke Madame Smet, Valérie put her hat on, and the two friends kissed each other good night.
Désiré accompanied Valérie and Madame Smet to the tram-stop in the Place du Congrès. The three of them stood waiting in the soft shadows until the tram, swaying along the rails, braked in front of them with a tremendous din.
The windows of the tram, this fine night, looked pink. The heads inside no longer looked alive, or rather they seemed to belong to a different life, as if they were in a museum.
Désiré lit a cigarette. Everything was perfectly quiet under a sky studded with stars, the cigarette was good, and he would have been quite capable of sitting down on one of the benches in the square and staying there for a long time gazing at the Milky Way.
He had enjoyed seeing Guillaume again. That faint rectangle of light in the distance was the little café on the corner of the Rue Puits-en-Sock where he had learnt to play billiards. Roger had been impressed to see his father in shirtsleeves, just as he was at home, in the Rue Sohet office. He had drunk from his cup. He had tapped the keys of his typewriter and they had put some bulky year-books underneath him.
Désiré walked along. His forehead creased a little as he drew nearer home, for he suspected that Ãlise was annoyed with him about the red suit. And now she was by herself, waiting for him. There was a faint halo of light, coming from the kitchen, in the bedroom window.
He had left the door ajar when he had gone out with Valérie and her mother. He climbed the stairs, frowning as he saw a big patch of light, the kitchen door wide open, and heard the familiar sounds of an iron bucket. He found Ãlise on her knees, scrubbing the floor.
âWhat are you doing?'
She had the pale face, the sharp features of her bad days; her chest looked flatter than ever under the apron, and her hair was falling into her eyes.
âI have to do some of tomorrow's work tonight, seeing that I've got to go to L'Innovation.'
He understood. He did not know what to do with himself. She was doing it on purpose!
âCan I give you a hand?'
âIt isn't worth it. Go to bed. It only makes me later than ever, having your legs in the way.'
It was just like certain Sunday afternoons, when she was in a state of nerves and they were due to go out, only worse. She would burst into tears any minute now, but he could never foresee the exact moment, nor what would provoke the crisis. If he spoke, what he said would be too much. If he kept quiet â¦
âListen, Ãlise.'
âNo! Leave me alone! You can see I'm tired out. It's ten o'clock and I'm only just starting the cleaning. Not to mention the fact that your loud voice is going to wake the child.'
Wake the child! When it was always Désiré who sent him to sleep by playing the drummer-boy!
Who could find his way along the winding paths taken by Ãlise's mind? Did she even know herself by what route she was going to arrive at what she wanted?
âMy back has gone all numb.'
âLet me go and empty the slops at least.'
âYou'd only get your suit dirty and then I'd have to clean it!'
She scrubbed away as never before. She put a desperate strength into it, ghastly pale, a striking picture of human energy pushed to the point of paroxysm.
âThe doctor told me again last week â¦'
She started crying. There! Not much. Not sobbing. She was snivelling rather, with something like a quiet gleam of resignation shining through her tears. She was sniffling like a little girl, drying her eyes on a wet corner of her apron with its little blue checks.
âÃlise â¦'
âI know it doesn't matter to you, that you'll never have an affectionate word or a delicate thought for me. Have you ever once called me
darling
? You're a Mamelin, just like Guillaume! You make a good pair of brothers.'
Guillaume ⦠The red suit â¦
âWhen I think that the baby was at the point of death, with its bronchitis, and the carnival in the Rue Léopold, when I dedicated him to the Virgin! And Guillaume, the old fox, so proud of himself, goes and picks a suit in the brightest red there is! And you, you don't say a thing!'
âOh, come, Ãlise â¦'
âLeave me alone. I've got to get on with my work. You, you've finished at six o'clock. It doesn't matter to you that at ten o'clock at night I'm still scrubbing the floor or peeling the vegetables: you go off to play cards at the Veldens'.'
Once a week! He never went out apart from that! And then it was only because Madame Smet and Valérie were at home on Fridays!
âGo to bed!'
Slowly she got to her feet, sat down as if she were at the end of her tether, and leant forward with both arms on the table, sobbing so that he could not see her face, and pushing away the arm which was trying to encircle her shoulders.
âNo, Désiré, no! You're too selfish. All you think about is yourself, your peace of mind, your little life, and if anything happened to you tomorrow I'd have to go and work as a servant.'
Why as a servant? Had she been a servant when he had met her?
Try as she might, she could not manage to work herself up to a real crisis, to the kind of crisis in which she writhed about on the bed, clutching the blankets. Perhaps the trouble was that she had waited too long? She had better look at the red suit, then at the room all topsy-turvy around her, the bucket on the floor, half the room running with water â¦
âI'm tired out â¦'
âWell, there's only one thing to do, we'll get a charwoman in.'
âAnd how can we pay her? We've only got enough for the bare necessities.'
âWe'll have her for two hours a day, for the rough work.'
âNo, Désiré! Don't bother about me. I was saying just now to Valérie â¦'
That wounded him. What had she been saying to Valérie about their domestic affairs? Did he ever talk about her at the Veldens'?
She picked up the scrubbing-brush and the floorcloth, still snivelling without actually shedding any tears, and now she felt that the time had come, that a little later the atmosphere would have changed.
âIf only Roger were at nursery school â¦'
It was so unexpected ⦠And so trivial, such a little thing compared with what he had been expecting!
âI know perfectly well that for you, your son is sacred. Yet there are some younger ones than him who go to the sisters' school and Madame Pain herself decided this week â¦'
It was Ãlise who had persuaded Madame Pain to send Armand to nursery school. How patiently she had plotted and planned!
âWe'll talk seriously about it tomorrow. I don't say no.'
âBut you don't say yes either! And in the meantime, you're the one who's accustoming him to being carried, without worrying about the fact that when I'm alone with him he refuses to walk. As for Guillaume ⦠He struts around with his nephew, dresses him up like a clown ⦠They haven't got any children ⦠The two of them live only for themselves â¦'
Without saying a word, Désiré had taken off his jacket and removed his cuffs. He picked up a bucket of dirty water and went to empty it into the sink on the landing downstairs. When he came back, the kitchen looked greyer than usual, emptier too, and Ãlise really tired, really pitiful. He made an effort to smile.
âAll right then, it's agreed, we'll send Roger to school.'
She managed not to look triumphant, to stay weary and touching, and she soaked her floorcloth in the clean water.
âI'll go and see Sister Adonie tomorrow,' she said simply.
There was still a feeling of drying tears, of a scene which had nearly become unpleasant. The boy was tossing about in his bed. And meanwhile Valérie and her mother had arrived at their flat where Marie Smet was waiting for them, working at her sewing machine.
When Roger was going to school, Ãlise would be able to raise the question of lodgers again and Désiré would no longer reply:
âBut what about the boy? How can you look after lodgers and the boy at the same time?'
As for her backache and stomach-ache, she would take care of all that. That was her affair. She would get better, she would be as strong as anybody else.
Désiré suspected nothing, and when he went to bed, an hour later, after lowering the lamp and tracing a cross on his sleeping son's forehead, he did not know that the household in the Rue Pasteur had already ceased to exist, that their little home was dead, that after having left the Rue Puits-en-Sock for the Rue des Carmes and the Quai de Coronmeuse, he was going to lose that peace by which he set such store, the cosy hours by the fire, in slippers and shirtsleeves, with the child asleep behind the half-open door and the familiar sound of the potatoes which were being peeled falling one by one into the fresh water in the enamel bucket.
âGood night, Ãlise.'
âGood night, Désiré.'
She added, vaguely worried:
âAren't you going to kiss me?'
âYes ⦠Sorry â¦'
She was already running, in imagination, along all the streets in the district, looking for notices; she was counting rolls and buckets of coal at fifty centimes each; and she was peopling her house with respectable Russians and Polesâshe was going to pick them carefullyâwho would not be allowed to entertain women as they were in the Rue de la Province.
Free access to her house, no, never!
O
NE
morning when the milkman had not been by eight o'clock, Ãlise had asked Désiré:
âYou wouldn't care to take Roger to school?'
And that had been enough to create a new ritual. For with Désiré the repetition of the same action took on a ritual character, and the various stages of the day followed one after another as harmoniously as the priest's gestures accompanied by the organ.
It was hard to say whether it was the boy who gave his hand to his father, or whether it was the father who took his son by the hand: every morning, at the same time, on the doorstep of the house in the Rue de la Loi, the little fingers nestled inside Désiré's hand and the boy's legs tried to take three strides for every stride of the quiet giant.
With half her body hidden by the door, Ãlise leant out, following them with her eyes until they had turned the corner of the Rue Jean-d'Outremeuse where the barber was raising his shutters. Then, before vanishing into the warm solitude of the house, she made sure that the greengrocer whose trumpet could already be heard had not appeared yet round the other corner.
The nursery school was quite close, at the back of a peaceful courtyard, next to the rectory, an oasis of cobblestones which were noisier and bluer, of air which was clearer; there were geraniums dozing on the window-sills, and the passage leading to the sacristy, as cool and dark as a grotto, gave off a smell of incense.
Sister Adonie, so soft and gentle that she made you think of something good to eat, welcomed into her vast skirts with their clinking rosary the awkward chicks that were brought to her from every corner of the district, keeping a special smile for that Monsieur Mamelin who greeted her with such a splendid sweep of his hat.
While the mothers clutched their shawls around them and returned to the life of the district and the day's cares at the other end of the courtyard, the door closed on a quiet, cosy little world, four white walls adorned with images, canvases, plaits and samplers, red wool on holland.
In her full black robe with its folds covering her feet, Sister Adonie did not appear to walk but to glide along a little way above the ground.
Through the two windows the Dean could be seen, short and fat and purple-cheeked, walking along the garden paths with little steps, reading his breviary and stopping in the middle of every patch of sunshine.
It was hot. The black cylinder of a monumental stove stood in the middle of the classroom, with a black pipe leading off to imbed itself far away in the glaring whiteness of the wall. The little cans of white coffee which the children had brought for their ten o'clock snack were warming side by side, and, in their oval boxes, their sandwiches were turning dry, the butter was soaking into the bread, the bars of chocolate becoming covered with tiny drops which would end up by forming a sort of lacquer.
Some of the cans were white or blue enamel. Others were iron, like those of Velden's coppersmiths who, at midday, had their dinner on the pavement after paying the greengrocer two centimes for the boiling water they needed for their coffee.
âColoured cans are common,' Ãlise had stated.
She had not said that above all they were more expensive. Common too, in her opinion, were those sandwich tins decorated with scenes from
Little Red Riding Hood
or
Puss in Boots
.
On Roger's box, which was a discreet brown, there was nothing. Nor would Roger ever wear those check pinafores, pink for girls, blue for boys, which he hankered after so badly.