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<h2> CHAPTER XIX </h2>
<p>In the meanwhile, the secret work of Therese and Laurent was productive of
results. The former had assumed a woeful and despairing demeanour which at
the end of a few days alarmed Madame Raquin. When the old mercer inquired
what made her niece so sad, the young woman played the part of an
inconsolable widow with consummate skill. She spoke in a vague manner of
feeling weary, depressed, of suffering from her nerves, without making any
precise complaint. When pressed by her aunt with questions, she replied
that she was well, that she could not imagine what it was that made her so
low-spirited, and that she shed tears without knowing why.</p>
<p>Then, the constant choking fits of sobbing, the wan, heartrending smiles,
the spells of crushing silence full of emptiness and despair, continued.</p>
<p>The sight of this young woman who was always giving way to her grief, who
seemed to be slowly dying of some unknown complaint, ended by seriously
alarming Madame Raquin. She had, now, no one in the whole world but her
niece, and she prayed the Almighty every night to preserve her this
relative to close her eyes. A little egotism was mingled with this final
love of her old age. She felt herself affected in the slight consolations
that still assisted her to live, when it crossed her mind that she might
die alone in the damp shop in the arcade. From that time, she never took
her eyes off her niece, and it was with terror that she watched her
sadness, wondering what she could do to cure her of her silent despair.</p>
<p>Under these grave circumstances, she thought she ought to take the advice
of her old friend Michaud. One Thursday evening, she detained him in the
shop, and spoke to him of her alarm.</p>
<p>"Of course," answered the old man, with that frank brutality he had
acquired in the performance of his former functions, "I have noticed for
some time past that Therese has been looking sour, and I know very well
why her face is quite yellow and overspread with grief."</p>
<p>"You know why!" exclaimed the widow. "Speak out at once. If we could only
cure her!"</p>
<p>"Oh! the treatment is simple," resumed Michaud with a laugh. "Your niece
finds life irksome because she had been alone for nearly two years. She
wants a husband; you can see that in her eyes."</p>
<p>The brutal frankness of the former commissary, gave Madame Raquin a
painful shock. She fancied that the wound Therese had received through the
fatal accident at Saint-Ouen, was still as fresh, still as cruel at the
bottom of her heart. It seemed to her that her son, once dead, Therese
could have no thought for a husband, and here was Michaud affirming, with
a hearty laugh, that Therese was out of sorts because she wanted one.</p>
<p>"Marry her as soon as you can," said he, as he took himself off, "if you
do not wish to see her shrivel up entirely. That is my advice, my dear
lady, and it is good, believe me."</p>
<p>Madame Raquin could not, at first, accustom herself to the thought that
her son was already forgotten. Old Michaud had not even pronounced the
name of Camille, and had made a joke of the pretended illness of Therese.
The poor mother understood that she alone preserved at the bottom of her
heart, the living recollection of her dear child, and she wept, for it
seemed to her that Camille had just died a second time.</p>
<p>Then, when she had had a good cry, and was weary of mourning, she thought,
in spite of herself, of what Michaud had said, and became familiar with
the idea of purchasing a little happiness at the cost of a marriage which,
according to her delicate mind, was like killing her son again.</p>
<p>Frequently, she gave way to feelings of cowardice when she came face to
face with the dejected and broken-down Therese, amidst the icy silence of
the shop. She was not one of those dry, rigid persons who find bitter
delight in living a life of eternal despair. Her character was full of
pliancy, devotedness, and effusion, which contributed to make up her
temperament of a stout and affable good lady, and prompted her to live in
a state of active tenderness.</p>
<p>Since her niece no longer spoke, and remained there pale and feeble, her
own life became intolerable, while the shop seemed to her like a tomb.
What she required was to find some warm affection beside her, some
liveliness, some caresses, something sweet and gay which would help her to
wait peacefully for death. It was these unconscious desires that made her
accept the idea of marrying Therese again; she even forgot her son a
little. In the existence of the tomb that she was leading, came a sort of
awakening, something like a will, and fresh occupation for the mind. She
sought a husband for her niece, and this search gave her matter for
consideration.</p>
<p>The choice of a husband was an important business. The poor old lady
thought much more of her own comfort than of Therese. She wished to marry
her niece in order to be happy herself, for she had keen misgivings lest
the new husband of the young woman should come and trouble the last hours
of her old age. The idea that she was about to introduce a stranger into
her daily existence terrified her. It was this thought alone that stopped
her, that prevented her from talking openly with her niece about
matrimony.</p>
<p>While Therese acted the comedy of weariness and dejection with that
perfect hypocrisy she had acquired by her education, Laurent took the part
of a sensible and serviceable man. He was full of little attentions for
the two women, particularly for Madame Raquin, whom he overwhelmed with
delicate attention. Little by little he made himself indispensable in the
shop; it was him alone who brought a little gaiety into this black hole.
When he did not happen to be there of an evening, the old mercer searched
round her, ill at ease, as if she missed something, being almost afraid to
find herself face to face with the despairing Therese.</p>
<p>But Laurent only occasionally absented himself to better prove his power.
He went to the shop daily, on quitting his office, and remained there
until the arcade was closed at night. He ran the errands, and handed
Madame Raquin, who could only walk with difficulty, the small articles she
required. Then he seated himself and chatted. He had acquired the gentle
penetrating voice of an actor which he employed to flatter the ears and
heart of the good old lady. In a friendly way, he seemed particularly
anxious about the health of Therese, like a tender-hearted man who feels
for the sufferings of others. On repeated occasions, he took Madame Raquin
to one side, and terrified her by appearing very much alarmed himself at
the changes and ravages he said he perceived on the face of the young
woman.</p>
<p>"We shall soon lose her," he murmured in a tearful voice. "We cannot
conceal from ourselves that she is extremely ill. Ah! alas, for our poor
happiness, and our nice tranquil evenings!"</p>
<p>Madame Raquin listened to him with anguish. Laurent even had the audacity
to speak of Camille.</p>
<p>"You see," said he to the mercer, "the death of my poor friend has been a
terrible blow to her. She had been dying for the last two years, since
that fatal day when she lost Camille. Nothing will console her, nothing
will cure her. We must be resigned."</p>
<p>These impudent falsehoods made the old lady shed bitter tears. The memory
of her son troubled and blinded her. Each time the name of Camille was
pronounced, she gave way, bursting into sobs. She would have embraced the
person who mentioned her poor boy. Laurent had noticed the trouble, and
outburst of tender feeling that this name produced. He could make her weep
at will, upset her with such emotion that she failed to distinguish the
clear aspect of things; and he took advantage of this power to always hold
her pliant and in pain in his hand, as it were.</p>
<p>Each evening in spite of the secret revolt of his trembling inner being,
he brought the conversation to bear on the rare qualities, on the tender
heart and mind of Camille, praising his victim with most shameless
impudence. At moments, when he found the eyes of Therese fixed with a
strange expression on his own, he shuddered, and ended by believing all
the good he had been saying about the drowned man. Then he held his
tongue, suddenly seized with atrocious jealousy, fearing that the young
widow loved the man he had flung into the water, and whom he now lauded
with the conviction of an enthusiast.</p>
<p>Throughout the conversation Madame Raquin was in tears, and unable to
distinguish anything around her. As she wept, she reflected that Laurent
must have a loving and generous heart. He alone remembered her son, he
alone still spoke of him in a trembling and affected voice. She dried her
eyes, gazing at the young man with infinite tenderness, and feeling that
she loved him as her own child.</p>
<p>One Thursday evening, Michaud and Grivet were already in the dining-room,
when Laurent coming in, approached Therese, and with gentle anxiety
inquired after her health. He seated himself for a moment beside her,
performing for the edification of the persons present, his part of an
alarmed and affectionate friend. As the young couple sat close together,
exchanging a few words, Michaud, who was observing them, bent down, and
said in a low voice to the old mercer, as he pointed to Laurent:</p>
<p>"Look, there is the husband who will suit your niece. Arrange this
marriage quickly. We will assist you if it be necessary."</p>
<p>This remark came as a revelation to Madame Raquin. She saw, at once, all
the advantages she would derive, personally, from the union of Therese and
Laurent. The marriage would tighten the bonds already connecting her and
her niece with the friend of her son, with that good-natured fellow who
came to amuse them in the evening.</p>
<p>In this manner, she would not be introducing a stranger into her home, she
would not run the risk of unhappiness. On the contrary, while giving
Therese a support, she added another joy to her old age, she found a
second son in this young man who for three years had shown her such filial
affection.</p>
<p>Then it occurred to her that Therese would be less faithless to the memory
of Camille by marrying Laurent. The religion of the heart is peculiarly
delicate. Madame Raquin, who would have wept to see a stranger embrace the
young widow, felt no repulsion at the thought of giving her to the comrade
of her son.</p>
<p>Throughout the evening, while the guests played at dominoes, the old
mercer watched the couple so tenderly, that they guessed the comedy had
succeeded, and that the denouement was at hand. Michaud, before
withdrawing, had a short conversation in an undertone with Madame Raquin.
Then, he pointedly took the arm of Laurent saying he would accompany him a
bit of the way. As Laurent went off, he exchanged a rapid glance with
Therese, a glance full of urgent enjoinment.</p>
<p>Michaud had undertaken to feel the ground. He found the young man very
much devoted to the two ladies, but exceedingly astonished at the idea of
a marriage between Therese and himself. Laurent added, in an unsteady tone
of voice, that he loved the widow of his poor friend as a sister, and that
it would seem to him a perfect sacrilege to marry her. The former
commissary of police insisted, giving numerous good reasons with a view to
obtaining his consent. He even spoke of devotedness, and went so far as to
tell the young man that it was clearly his duty to give a son to Madame
Raquin and a husband to Therese.</p>
<p>Little by little Laurent allowed himself to be won over, feigning to give
way to emotion, to accept the idea of this marriage as one fallen from the
clouds, dictated by feelings of devotedness and duty, as old Michaud had
said. When the latter had obtained a formal answer in the affirmative, he
parted with his companion, rubbing his hands, for he fancied he had just
gained a great victory. He prided himself on having had the first idea of
this marriage which would convey to the Thursday evenings all their former
gaiety.</p>
<p>While Michaud was talking with Laurent, slowly following the quays, Madame
Raquin had an almost identical conversation with Therese. At the moment
when her niece, pale and unsteady in gait, as usual, was about to retire
to rest, the old mercer detained her an instant. She questioned her in a
tender tone, imploring her to be frank, and confess the cause of the
trouble that overwhelmed her. Then, as she only obtained vague replies,
she spoke of the emptiness of widowhood, and little by little came to talk
in a more precise manner of the offer of a second marriage, concluding by
asking Therese, plainly, whether she had not a secret desire to marry
again.</p>
<p>Therese protested, saying that such a thought had never entered her mind,
and that she intended remaining faithful to Camille. Madame Raquin began
to weep. Pleading against her heart, she gave her niece to understand that
despair should not be eternal; and, finally, in response to an exclamation
of the young woman saying she would never replace Camille, Madame Raquin
abruptly pronounced the name of Laurent. Then she enlarged with a flood of
words on the propriety and advantages of such an union. She poured out her
mind, repeating aloud all she had been thinking during the evening,
depicting with naive egotism, the picture of her final days of happiness,
between her two dear children. Therese, resigned and docile, listened to
her with bowed head, ready to give satisfaction to her slightest wish.</p>
<p>"I love Laurent as a brother," said she grievously, when her aunt had
ceased speaking. "But, as you desire it, I will endeavour to love him as a
husband. I wish to make you happy. I had hoped that you would have allowed
me to weep in peace, but I will dry my tears, as it is a question of your
happiness."</p>
<p>She kissed the old lady, who remained surprised and frightened at having
been the first to forget her son. As Madame Raquin went to bed, she sobbed
bitterly, accusing herself of having less strength than Therese, and of
desiring, out of egotism, a marriage that the young widow accepted by
simple abnegation.</p>
<p>The following morning, Michaud and his old friend had a short conversation
in the arcade, before the door of the shop, where they communicated to one
another the result of their efforts, and agreed to hurry matters on by
forcing the young people to become affianced the same evening.</p>
<p>At five o'clock, Michaud was already in the shop when Laurent entered. As
soon as the young man had seated himself, the former commissary of police
said in his ear:</p>
<p>"She accepts."</p>
<p>This blunt remark was overheard by Therese who remained pale, with her
eyes impudently fixed on Laurent. The two sweethearts looked at each other
for a few seconds as if consulting. Both understood that they must accept
the position without hesitation, and finish the business at one stroke.
Laurent, rising, went and took the hand of Madame Raquin, who made every
effort to restrain her tears.</p>
<p>"Dear mother," said he smiling, "I was talking about your felicity, last
night, with M. Michaud. Your children wish to make you happy."</p>
<p>The poor old lady, on hearing herself called "dear mother," allowed her
tears to flow. She quietly seized the hand of Therese and placed it in
that of Laurent, unable to utter a single word.</p>
<p>The two sweethearts shivered on feeling their skins touch, and remained
with their burning fingers pressed together, in a nervous clasp. After a
pause, the young man, in a hesitating tone, resumed:</p>
<p>"Therese, shall we give your aunt a bright and peaceful existence?"</p>
<p>"Yes," feebly replied the young woman, "we have a duty to perform."</p>
<p>Then Laurent, becoming very pale, turned towards Madame Raquin, and added:</p>
<p>"When Camille fell into the water, he shouted out to me: 'Save my wife, I
entrust her to you.' I believe I am acting in accordance with his last
wish in marrying Therese."</p>
<p>Therese, on hearing these words, let go the hand of Laurent. She had
received a shock like a blow in the chest. The impudence of her sweetheart
overwhelmed her. She observed him with a senseless look, while Madame
Raquin, half stifled by sobs, stammered:</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, my friend, marry her, make her happy; my son, from the depth of
his tomb, will thank you."</p>
<p>Laurent, feeling himself giving way, leant on the back of a chair, while
Michaud, who was himself moved to tears, pushed him towards Therese with
the remark:</p>
<p>"Kiss one another. It will be your betrothal."</p>
<p>When the lips of the young man came in contact with the cheeks of the
widow, he experienced a peculiarly uncomfortable feeling, while the latter
abruptly drew back, as if the two kisses of her sweetheart burnt her. This
was the first caress he had given her in the presence of witnesses. All
her blood rushed to her face, and she felt herself red and burning.</p>
<p>After this crisis, the two murderers breathed. Their marriage was decided
on. At last they approached the goal they had so long had in view.
Everything was settled the same evening. The Thursday following, the
marriage was announced to Grivet, as well as to Olivier and his wife.
Michaud, in communicating the news to them, did not conceal his delight.
He rubbed his hands, repeating as he did so:</p>
<p>"It was I who thought of it. It is I who have married them. You will see
what a nice couple they'll make!"</p>
<p>Suzanne silently embraced Therese. This poor creature, who was half dead,
and as white as a sheet, had formed a friendship for the rigid and sombre
young widow. She showed her a sort of childlike affection mingled with a
kind of respectful terror. Olivier complimented the aunt and niece, while
Grivet hazarded a few spicy jokes that met with middling success.
Altogether the company were delighted, enchanted, and declared that
everything was for the best; in reality all they thought about was the
wedding feast.</p>
<p>Therese and Laurent were clever enough to maintain a suitable demeanour,
by simply displaying tender and obliging friendship to one another. They
gave themselves an air of accomplishing an act of supreme devotedness.
Nothing in their faces betrayed a suspicion of the terror and desire that
disturbed them. Madame Raquin watched the couple with faint smiles, and a
look of feeble, but grateful goodwill.</p>
<p>A few formalities required fulfilling. Laurent had to write to his father
to ask his consent to the marriage. The old peasant of Jeufosse who had
almost forgotten that he had a son at Paris, answered him, in four lines,
that he could marry, and go and get hanged if he chose. He gave him to
understand that being resolved never to give him a sou, he left him master
of his body, and authorised him to be guilty of all imaginable follies. A
permission accorded in such terms, caused Laurent singular anxiety.</p>
<p>Madame Raquin, after reading the letter of this unnatural father, in a
transport of kind-heartedness, acted very foolishly. She made over to her
niece the 40,000 francs and more, that she possessed, stripping herself
entirely for the young couple, on whose affection she relied, with the
desire of being indebted to them for all her happiness.</p>
<p>Laurent brought nothing into the community, and he even gave it to be
understood that he did not always intend to remain in his present
employment, but would perhaps take up painting again. In any case, the
future of the little family was assured; the interest on the money put
aside added to the profit on the mercery business, would be sufficient to
keep three persons comfortably. As a matter of fact it was only just
sufficient to make them happy.</p>
<p>The preparations for the marriage were hurried on, the formalities being
abridged as much as possible, and at last the welcome day arrived.</p>
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