Authors: Georges Simenon
The whole family had agreed not to go into mourning, on account of the war. The women still had their mourning veils in their wardrobes and they could have put them on. But as Catherine, Lucien's wife, had said:
âCan you see us, Ãlise, queueing at the food-centre or pushing a cartful of potatoes through the streets with mourning veils on our heads?'
Désiré's suit was black. He had always dressed in dark clothes. Roger wore a mourning band on his fawn suit. Henceforth Chrétien Mamelin felt a stranger in his own home, since it now belonged to his son-in-law.
âPoor Papa! And he's never cared much for Marcel! If only he'd followed the advice we all gave him and handed the hat-shop over to Arthur, who's in the trade! He didn't want to leave Cécile and now Cécile has left him â¦'
It would not be long before Marcel married again: everybody was agreed about that. Désiré was the only one who had nothing to say. He had been badly shaken by the death of his favourite sister. When Ãlise started talking about it, you could feel that he was suffering and it was not long before he left the kitchen.
How had Ãlise managed to keep a secret for at least ten days when it must have been suffocating her? All that time, she had kissed her son as if there were nothing wrong, but she had watched him constantly; he had realized that, without being able to guess the reason. Several times, he had had a definite impression that she had something on her mind. He had not worried about it, for it had always been like that with his mother; you might say that it was like the novenas of Marthe or Léopold, whom nobody had seen for months. For several weeks she was gay, even merry, and full of attentions for everybody. Then, little by little, her face became more pointed and she started heaving sighs and darting furtive glances at people.
âNo, Désiré! I tell you there's nothing wrong. Why should there be anything wrong? You give me everything I need, don't you?'
This was a sign that the storm was close. It went on brewing for some time, waiting for an opportunity to break, a pretext which more often than not was utterly futile, without any connection with the real cause. And then came the scene: the tears, the endless reproaches, the fit of hysterics.
This time, it had come in connection with cheeses, the little Herve cheeses which they had brought back from Ãléonore Dafnet's and put in the cellar, where, so it was said, they could be kept for months. One afternoon when he had been alone in the house, Roger had eaten two of these cheeses, and he had said nothing about it, convinced that nobody would notice that two were missing out of so many.
This cheese incident was something else that Ãlise had kept to herself for two or three days.
âWhere are you going, Roger?'
âOut.'
âYou'd do better to do your homework.'
âI've done it already.'
âWho are you going to meet?'
âNobody. Friends of mine.'
âDon't you think it would be nicer of you to offer to go to the food-centre for me?'
He said nothing, determined not to do anything of the sort, for he had a rendezvous with Gaston Van de Waele.
âBut no! I know you! You prefer to wait until I'm spending the afternoon queueing in the sun to steal cheese from the cellar. No, don't go. I haven't finished yet. It's disgraceful, when a big strong man like your father has the same ration as us â¦'
âListen, Mother â¦'
âNo, Roger. You see, you've upset me too much and I've got to talk to you once for all. Your father's too good to you. It's stupid, the way he treats you. If I talk to him about you, he always takes your side.'
âPlease, Mother. Once we start, you know very well how it'll finish.'
âI was telling my sister Louisa about it yesterday â¦'
It was a bad sign that, for some time now, she had kept rushing off to Coronmeuse. But he did not realize as yet how serious it was. Ãlise herself did not know how to get to the point.
âLet's leave Aunt Louisa out of it,' he suggested. âI'd rather go to the food-centre and have done with it. Give me the cards and the shopping-bag.'
âAren't you ashamed of yourself, Roger?'
âI did wrong eating the cheeses, I admit that. There now. Are you satisfied?'
âI'm not talking about the cheeses. I'm talking about you. And all the prayers I've said for you to grow up a decent man.'
He went pale, and his heart missed a beat. He suddenly felt sure that his thefts from the till at Gruyelle-Marquant's had been discovered, that his grandfather had seen him and talked. He stood there, rigid, like a condemned man.
âCécile told me everything before she died. Poor thing! On her death-bed, she was still worrying about you and she begged me to keep an eye on your behaviour.'
âWhat was she interfering about?'
âDon't play the innocent, Roger. You know very well what it was. And to think that I pinched and scraped so that, in spite of the war, you should enjoy the country air at Embourg! Your poor cousin went to see you, without ever suspecting what you were doing with one of her pupils. When I heard about that, I thought I was going to go mad. I didn't want to believe it. And you boasted about it to Cécile while I was praying that my son â¦'
â⦠should remain pure until he married, I know.'
âYou've still got the heart to laugh at me?'
âNo, Mother, I'm not laughing. Let's just try not to be ridiculous. I tell you there's still time for us to stop. But soon you'll be rolling on the floor and saying things you'll regret afterwards.'
That had happened, of course. He in his turn had lost his temper. Why had he brought up Aunt Louisa, Ãvariste, Monique? He felt so bitter about the act of treachery committed by Cécile, who was dead, that he had rapidly become hateful. He preferred not to remember what he had said. Things had gone so far that a frantic Ãlise had ended up by screaming:
âI curse you, Roger, do you hear?'
She had thrown something at him, one of Désiré's shoes which she had just brought back from the cobbler's. He had rushed out of the house. It was just five o'clock. He had gone to meet his father, who had understood as soon as he had seen his face.
âWhat is it now, son?'
âA scene with Mother.'
âWhy do you always rub her up the wrong way? You know how nervy she is, and yet you insist on answering her back.'
âThis time it's worse than that. Aunt Cécile told her things I had told her in confidence as I would a friend. About girls. She was always asking me questions.'
He found it more embarrassing to broach this subject with his father than with his mother.
âYou've got a sweetheart? Is that it?'
âNot exactly. You know those novenas Mother and Aunt Louisa insist on offering up for me. Well, when Mother found out that they'd been useless â¦'
Désiré had not asked any more questions.
âCome along. Above all, if your mother talks about it again, don't answer her whatever you do, don't try to prove that you're right.'
âShe's in a dreadful state. You'll see.'
But nothing had happened that evening, thanks to the two lodgers sent by Ãléonore Dafnet who had arrived providentially. They were two girls who were as different from one another as the blonde and the brunette on the calendar at Aunt Louisa's. Ãlise made an effort to smile, in spite of her red eyes and the furious glances she shot at her son as soon as the others had their backs turned.
âExcuse me, Mesdemoiselles. I wasn't expecting you today and the house is at sixes and sevens. We've just lost one of my husband's sisters who has left three little children â¦'
Since then, they had been living in a tense, incoherent atmosphere. Why hadn't Roger had the courage to follow the advice which his father had given him?
âDon't go out for a few days. Do your best to help your mother. She appreciates little kindnesses so much. If you tackle her the right way, she'll have forgotten everything in a week.'
He did exactly the opposite, almost in spite of himself.
Then Désiré spoke severely to him.
âYour mother's right, Roger. At your age, you haven't any right to come home at midnight, or even two o'clock in the morning. You've dropped your studies. You're never to be seen with a book in your hand. You're out all the time, with unsuitable friends â¦'
But didn't Désiré seem to be telling him with a wink:
âI'm saying all this to have a little peace. I understand you. Isn't it enough for her that I stay at home every evening? I've stayed at home ever since I got married. But you are young. You have the whole of your life in front of you â¦'
Ãlise felt this and watched them like a hawk, trying to find some proof of their complicity.
âAsk him where he went yesterday. He must have been drinking and he brought up all his dinner. He can't deny it, because I found his suit covered with bits of vomit and I've had all the trouble in the world cleaning it.'
âAnswer, Roger. Where were you?'
âWith Gaston. It was the students' day.'
Gaston Van de Waele, who had enrolled at a commercial school where he rarely set foot, none the less regarded himself as a student, and every Friday evening he put on a green velvet cap with a long peak such as the university students wore. There were hundreds of them who met at the Pavillon de Flore where the performance was reserved for them.
Roger went with them. They made a rumpus. After the show, they formed up in crocodiles and went through the streets singing, climbing gas-lamps, ringing doorbells, and storming noisily into cafés and night-clubs. The evening nearly always finished in some place of ill-repute, with a riotous drinking session accompanied by animal noises and obscene army songs.
âThen ask him where he gets the money to go out like that.'
Roger blushed and replied rather too quickly:
âIt's Gaston who pays.'
âAnd you aren't ashamed to go on accepting your cousin's invitations? You aren't as proud as I thought you were. In any case, I'll have a word with Gaston. I'll forbid him to take you out.'
He avoided staying at home. He avoided his mother. He was afraid of the sad, anxious gaze of his father, who sometimes looked as if he were silently appealing to him. Did Désiré understand that if he thwarted his son, the result would be quicker and more disastrous than ever?
Meanwhile, it was on him that Ãlise's anger fell, and Roger knew it. The only respite his father had was when the two lodgers were in the kitchen, but they did not stay there long after their meals. They went up to their room or out to the cinema, never suspecting that their departure marked the end of Désiré's tranquillity.
Roger was as ashamed of this as if he had committed an act of treachery. The only thing which restrained him was the thought of his father alone with Ãlise in the kitchen, but a devil impelled him in spite of everything to do what he should have avoided.
âI hope that you will at least respect my lodgers?'
They were not exactly alluring. They were homespun country girls, and Roger would not have turned round to look at them in the street. One of them, Marie, who had a moon-shaped face and big vacant eyes, was in love with Roger, stupidly, hopelessly in love. The other, a skinny girl with red hair and her face plastered with make-up, played the coquette with disarming naïvety.
Out of defiance, he had made a rendezvous with them outside. He had waited for them on the corner of the street, a stone's-throw from the house. They had gone out together and had spent the whole evening poking fun at Ãlise and her novenas. Now, at dinner, they darted conspiratorial glances at one another and were hard put to it not to burst out laughing as they kicked each other under the table.
The catastrophe was inevitable. Roger had got to the point of hoping for it. He was constantly short of money. The last time he had gone out with the two lodgers, the redhead had slipped a note into his hand to pay for the cinema seats. He had paid her back the next day, but to do that he had had to borrow some money from Gaston, who had no more liqueurs to sell.
He had already sold half his school books to a bookseller in the Rue Saint-Paul. He had also sold the silver watch which his father had given him when he had started going to college.
Anything was preferable to the atmosphere at home, even the billiard saloon where, looking at himself in the mirrors, he gave himself the illusion of being a man. Hadn't he come to envy Stievens, who could not be said to be afraid of his mother's reproaches and who, one day when they were quarrelling, had calmly called her a whore?
It was the height of summer, and yet it seemed to him that everything around him was dark and menacing. He avoided the sunshine in the streets, and like Gaston Van de Waele sought the ambiguous chiaroscuro of certain disreputable cafés.
It often happened that he had no dinner. An economical restaurant had been set up for the undernourished population, where for one franc you were entitled to a substantial meal. It was a huge room in the old Palais de Glace, on the Boulevard de la Sauvenière, lit by the crude light coming through a glass ceiling. You queued in front of a succession of counters, receiving a plate here, a set of table utensils there, and passing cooking-pots from which girls ladled out soup, vegetables, meat and bread. After that, all that remained for you to do was to find a place in which to sit down at one of the deal tables.
Everything had the same insipid taste and, whatever the dish for the day might be, the same smell of rancid bacon and dish-water; but it was food all the same and there was plenty of fat in it.
Often Roger kept the franc and wandered through the streets with an empty stomach, in the midday sun, until it was time to go back to school.
Ãlise went to Le Bouhay every evening. She told her troubles to a confessor before whom she probably cried her eyes out and who must have formed a wonderful idea of Roger. As soon as she had a moment free, she rushed over to Coronmeuse, coming back with her unpleasant expression.