GERMINAL
PART VII
CHAPTER IV
ON the night that followed the collapse of the
Voreux M. Hennebeau started for Paris, wishing to
inform the directors in person before the
newspapers published the news. And when he
returned on the following day he appeared to be
quite calm, with his usual correct administrative
air. He had evidently freed himself from
responsibility; he did not appear to have
decreased in favour. On the contrary, the decree
appointing him officer of the Legion of Honour was
signed twenty-four hours afterwards.
But if the manager remained safe, the Company was
tottering beneath the terrible blow. It was not
the few million francs that had been lost, it was
the wound in the flank, the deep incessant fear of
the morrow in face of this massacre of one of
their mines. The Company was so impressed that
once more it felt the need of silence. What was
the good of stirring up this abomination? If the
villain were discovered, why make a martyr of him
in order that his awful heroism might turn other
heads, and give birth to a long line of
incendiaries and murderers? Besides, the real
culprit was not suspected. The Company came to
think that there was an army of accomplices, not
being able to believe that a single man could have
had courage and strength for such a task; and it
was precisely this thought which weighed on them,
this thought of an ever-increasing threat to the
existence of their mines. The manager had
received orders to organize a vast system of
espionage, and then to dismiss quietly, one by
one, the dangerous men who were suspected of
having had a hand in the crime. They contented
themselves with this method of purification--a
prudent and politic method.
There was only one immediate dismissal, that of
Dansaert, the head captain. Ever since the
scandal at Pierronne's house he had become
impossible. A pretext was made of his attitude in
danger, the cowardice of a captain abandoning his
men. This was also a prudent sop thrown to the
miners, who hated him.
Among the public, however, many rumours had
circulated, and the directors had to send a letter
of correction to one newspaper, contradicting a
story in which mention was made of a barrel of
powder lighted by the strikers. After a rapid
inquiry the Government inspector had concluded
that there had been a natural rupture of the
tubbing, occasioned by the piling up of the soil;
and the Company had preferred to be silent, and to
accept the blame of a lack of superintendence. In
the Paris press, after the third day, the
catastrophe had served to increase the stock of
general news; nothing was talked of but the men
perishing at the bottom of the mine, and the
telegrams published every morning were eagerly
read. At Montsou people grew pale and speechless
at the very name of the Voreux, and a legend had
formed which made the boldest tremble as they
whispered it. The whole country showed great pity
for the victims; visits were organized to the
destroyed pit, and whole families hastened up to
shudder at the ruins which lay so heavily over the
heads of the buried wretches.
Deneulin, who had been appointed divisional
engineer, came into the midst of the disaster on
beginning his duties; and his first care was to
turn the canal back into its bed, for this torrent
increased the damage every hour. Extensive works
were necessary, and he at once set a hundred men
to construct a dyke. Twice over the impetuosity
of the stream carried away the first dams. Now
pumps were set up and a furious struggle was going
on; step by step the vanished soil was being
violently reconquered.
But the rescue of the engulfed miners was a still
more absorbing work. Négrel was appointed
to attempt a supreme effort, and arms were not
lacking to help him; all the colliers rushed to
offer themselves in an outburst of brotherhood.
They forgot the strike, they did not trouble
themselves at all about payment; they might get
nothing, they only asked to risk their lives as
soon as there were mates in danger of death. They
were all there with their tools, quivering as they
waited to know where they ought to strike. Many
of them, sick with fright after the accident,
shaken by nervous tremors, soaked in cold sweats,
and the prey of continual nightmares, got up in
spite of everything, and were as eager as any in
their desire to fight against the earth, as though
they had a revenge to take on it. Unfortunately,
the difficulty began when the question arose, What
could be done? how could they go down? from what
side could they attack the rocks?
Négrel's opinion was that not one of the
unfortunate people was alive; the fifteen had
surely perished, drowned or suffocated. But in
these mine catastrophes the rule is always to
assume that buried men are alive, and he acted on
this supposition. The first problem which he
proposed to himself was to decide where they could
have taken refuge. The captains and old miners
whom he consulted were agreed on one point: in the
face of the rising water the men had certainly
come up from gallery to gallery to the highest
cuttings, so that they were, without doubt, driven
to the end of some upper passages. This agreed
with Father Mouque's information, and his confused
narrative even gave reason to suppose that in the
wild flight the band had separated into smaller
groups, leaving fugitives on the road at every
level. But the captains were not unanimous when
the discussion of possible attempts at rescue
arose. As the passages nearest to the surface
were a hundred and fifty metres down, there could
be no question of sinking a shaft.
Réquillart remained the one means of
access, the only point by which they could
approach. The worst was that the old pit, now
also inundated, no longer communicated with the
Voreux; and above the level of the water only a
few ends of galleries belonging to the first level
were left free. The pumping process would require
years, and the best plan would be to visit these
galleries and ascertain if any of them approached
the submerged passages at the end of which the
distressed miners were suspected to be. Before
logically arriving at this point, much discussion
had been necessary to dispose of a crowd of
impracticable plans.
Négrel now began to stir up the dust of the
archives; he discovered the old plans of the two
pits, studied them, and decided on the points at
which their investigations ought to be carried on.
Gradually this hunt excited him; he was, in his
turn, seized by a fever of devotion, in spite of
his ironical indifference to men and things. The
first difficulty was in going down at
Réquillart; it was necessary to clear out
the rubbish from the mouth of the shaft, to cut
down the mountain ash, and raze the sloes and the
hawthorns; they had also repair the ladders. Then
they began to feel around. The engineer, having
gone down with ten workmen, made them strike the
iron of their tools against certain parts of the
seam which he pointed out to them; and in deep
silence they each placed an ear to the coal,
listening for any distant blows to reply. But
they went in vain through every practicable
gallery; no echo returned to them. Their
embarrassment increased. At what spot should they
cut into the bed?
Towards whom should they go, since no once
appeared to be there? They persisted in seeking,
however, notwithstanding the exhaustion produced
by their growing anxiety.
From the first day, Maheude came in the morning to
Réquillart. She sat down on a beam in
front of the shaft, and did not stir from it till
evening. When a man came up, she rose and
questioned him with her eyes:
Nothing? No, nothing! And she sat down again,
and waited still, without a word, with hard, fixed
face. Jeanlin also, seeing that his den was
invaded, prowled around with the frightened air of
a beast of prey whose burrow will betray his
booty. He thought of the little soldier lying
beneath the rocks, fearing lest they should
trouble his sound sleep; but that side of the mine
was beneath the water, and, besides, their
investigations were directed more to the left, in
the west gallery. At first, Philoméne had
also come, accompanying Zacharie, who was one of
the gang; then she became wearied at catching
cold, without need or result, and went back to the
settlement, dragging through her days, a limp,
indifferent woman, occupied from morning to night
in coughing. Zacharie on the contrary, lived for
nothing else; he would have devoured the soil to
get back his sister. At night he shouted out that
he saw, her, he heard her, very lean from hunger,
her chest sore with calling for help. Twice he
had tried to dig without orders, saying that it
was there, that he was sure of it. The engineer
would not let him go down any more, and he would
not go away from the pit, from which he was driven
off; he could not even sit down and wait near his
mother, he was so deeply stirred by the need to
act, which drove him constantly on.
It was the third day. Négrel, in despair,
had resolved to abandon the attempt in the
evening. At midday, after lunch, when he came
back with his men to make one last effort, he was
surprised to see Zacharie, red and gesticulating,
come out of the mine shouting:
"She's there! She's replied to me! Come
along, quickly!"
He had slid down the ladders, in spite of the
watchman, and was declaring that he had heard
hammering over there, in the first passage of the
Guillaume seam.
"But we have already been twice in that
direction," Négrel observed,
sceptically. "Anyhow, we'll go and
see."
Maheude had risen, and had to be prevented from
going down. She waited, standing at the edge of
the shaft, gazing down into the darkness of the
hole.
Négrel, down below, himself struck three
blows, at long intervals. He then applied his ear
to the coal, cautioning the workers to be very
silent. Not a sound reached him, and he shook his
head; evidently the poor lad was dreaming. In a
fury, Zacharie struck in his turn, and listened
anew with bright eyes, and limbs trembling with
joy. Then the other workmen tried the experiment,
one after the other, and all grew animated,
hearing the distant reply quite clearly. The
engineer was astonished; he again applied his ear,
and was at last able to catch a sound of aerial
softness, a rhythmical roll scarcely to be
distinguished, the well-known cadence beaten by
the miners when they are fighting against the coal
in the midst of danger. The coal transmits the
sound with crystalline limpidity for a very great
distance. A captain who was there estimated that
the thickness of the block which separated them
from their mates could not be less than fifty
metres. But it seemed as if they could already
stretch out a hand to them, and general gladness
broke out. Négrel decided to begin at once
the work of approach.
When Zacharie, up above, saw Maheude again, they
embraced each other.
"It won't do to get excited," Pierronne,
who had come for a visit of inquisitiveness, was
cruel enough to say. "If Catherine isn't
there, it would be such a grief afterwards!"
That was true; Catherine might be somewhere else.
"Just leave me alone, will you? Damn
it!" cried Zacharie in a rage. "She's
there; I know it!"
Maheude sat down again in silence, with motionless
face, continuing to wait.
As soon as the story was spread at Montsou, a new
crowd arrived. Nothing was to be seen; but they
remained there all the same, and had to be kept at
a distance. Down below, the work went on day and
night. For fear of meeting an obstacle, the
engineer had had three descending galleries opened
in the seam, converging to the point where the
enclosed miners were supposed to be. Only one
pikeman could hew at the coal on the narrow face
of the tube; he was relieved every two hours, and
the coal piled in baskets was passed up, from hand
to hand, by a chain of men, increased as the hole
was hollowed out. The work at first proceeded
very quickly; they did six metres a day.
Zacharie had secured a place among the workers
chosen for the hewing. It was a post of honour
which was disputed over, and he became furious
when they wished to relieve him after his
regulation two hours of labour. He robbed his
mates of their turn, and refused to let go the
pick. His gallery was soon in advance of the
others. He fought against the coal so fiercely
that his breath could be heard coming from the
tube like the roar of a forge within his breast.
When he came out, black and muddy, dizzy with
fatigue, he fell to the ground and had to be
wrapped up in a covering. Then, still tottering,
he plunged back again, and the struggle began
anew--the low, deep blows, the stifled groans, the
victorious fury of massacre. The worst was that
the coal now became hard; he twice broke his tool,
and was exasperated that he could not get on so
fast. He suffered also from the heat, which
increased with every metre of advance, and was
unbearable at the end of this narrow hole where
the air could not circulate. A hand ventilator
worked well, but aeration was so inadequate that
on three occasions it was necessary to take out
fainting hewers who were being asphyxiated.
Négrel lived below with his men. His meals
were sent down to him, and he sometimes slept for
a couple of hours on a truss of straw, rolled in a
cloak. The one thing that kept them up was the
supplication of the wretches beyond, the call
which was sounded ever more distinctly to hasten
on the rescue. It now rang very clearly with a
musical sonority, as though struck on the plates
of a harmonica. It led them on; they advanced to
this crystalline sound as men advance to the sound
of cannon in battle. Every time that a pikeman
was relieved, Négrel went down and struck,
then applied his ear; and every time, so far, the
reply had come, rapid and urgent. He had no doubt
remaining; they were advancing in the right
direction, but with what fatal slowness! They
would never arrive soon enough. On the first two
days they had indeed hewn through thirteen metres;
but on the third day they fell to five, and then
on the fourth to three. The coal was becoming
closer and harder, to such an extent that they now
with difficulty struck through two metres. On the
ninth day, after superhuman efforts, they had
advanced thirty-two metres, and calculated that
some twenty must still be left before them. For
the prisoners it was the beginning of the twelfth
day; twelve times over had they passed twenty-four
hours without bread, without fire, in that icy
darkness! This awful idea moistened the eyelids
and stiffened the arm of the workers. It seemed
impossible that Christians could live longer. The
distant blows had become weaker since the previous
day, and every moment they trembled lest they
should stop.
Maheude came regularly every morning to sit at the
mouth of the shaft. In her arms she brought
Estelle, who could not remain alone from morning
to night. Hour by hour she followed the workers,
sharing their hopes and fears. There was feverish
expectation among the groups standing around, and
even as far as Montsou, with endless discussion.
Every heart in the district was beating down there
beneath the earth.
On the ninth day, at the breakfast hour, no reply
came from Zacharie when he was called for the
relay. He was like a madman, working on furiously
with oaths. Négrel, who had come up for a
moment, was not there to make him obey, and only a
captain and three miners were below. No doubt
Zacharie, infuriate with the feeble vacillating
light, which delayed his work, committed the
imprudence of opening his lamp, although severe
orders had been given for leakages of fire-damp
had taken place, and the gas remained in enormous
masses in these narrow, unventilated passages.
Suddenly, a roar of thunder was heard, and a spout
of fire darted out of the tube as from the mouth
of a cannon charged with grapeshot. Everything
flamed up and the air caught fire like powder,
from one end of the galleries to the other. This
torrent of flame carried away the captain and
three workers, ascended the pit, and leapt up to
the daylight in an eruption which split the rocks
and the ruins around. The inquisitive fled, and
Maheude arose, pressing the frightened Estelle to
her breast.
When Négrel and the men came back they were
seized by a terrible rage. They struck their
heels on the earth as on a stepmother who was
killing her children at random in the imbecile
whims of her cruelty. They were devoting
themselves, they were coming to the help of their
mates, and still they must lose some of their men!
After three long hours of effort and danger they
reached the galleries once more, and the
melancholy ascent of the victims took place.
Neither the captain nor the workers were dead, but
they were covered by awful wounds which gave out
an odour of grilled flesh; they had drunk of fire,
the burns had got into their throats, and they
constantly moaned and prayed to be finished off.
One of the three miners was the man who had
smashed the pump at Gaston-Marie with a final blow
of the shovel during the strike; the two others
still had scars on their hands, and grazed, torn
fingers from the energy with which they had thrown
bricks at the soldiers. The pale and shuddering
crowd took off their hats when they were carried
by.
Maheude stood waiting. Zacharie's body at last
appeared. The clothes were burnt, the body was
nothing but black charcoal, calcined and
unrecognizable. The head had been smashed by the
explosion and no longer existed. And when these
awful remains were placed on a stretcher, Maheude
followed them mechanically, her burning eyelids
without a tear. With Estelle drowsily lying in
her arms, she went along, a tragic figure, her
hair lashed by the wind. At the settlement
Philoméne seemed stupid; her eyes were
turned into fountains and she was quickly
relieved. But the mother had already returned
with the same step to Réquillart; she had
accompanied her son, she was returning to wait for
her daughter.
Three more days passed by. The rescue work had
been resumed amid incredible difficulties. The
galleries of approach had fortunately not fallen
after the fire-damp explosion; but the air was so
heavy and so vitiated that more ventilators had to
be installed. Every twenty minutes the pikemen
relieved one another. They were advancing;
scarcely two metres separated them from their
mates. But now they worked feeling cold at their
hearts, striking hard only out of vengeance; for
the noises had ceased, and the low, clear cadence
of the call no longer sounded. It was the twelfth
day of their labours, the fifteenth since the
catastrophe; and since the morning there had been
a death-like silence.
The new accident increased the curiosity at
Montsou, and the inhabitants organized excursions
with such spirit that the Grégoires decided
to follow the fashion. They arranged a party, and
it was agreed that they should go to the Voreux in
their carriage, while Madame Hennebeau took Lucie
and Jeanne there in hers. Deneulin would show
them over his yards and then they would return by
Réquillart, where Négrel would tell
them the exact state of things in the galleries,
and if there was still hope. Finally, they would
dine together in the evening.
When the Grégoires and their daughter
Cécile arrived at the ruined mine, toward
three o'clock, they found Madame Hennebeau already
there, in a sea-blue dress, protecting herself
under her parasol from the pale February sun. The
warmth of spring was in the clear sky. M.
Hennebeau was there with Deneulin, and she was
listening, with listless ear, to the account which
the latter gave her of the efforts which had been
made to dam up the canal. Jeanne, who always
carried a sketch-book with her, began to draw,
carried away by the horror of the subject; while
Lucie, seated beside her on the remains of a
wagon, was crying out with pleasure, and finding
it awfully jolly. The incomplete dam allowed
numerous leaks, and frothy streams fell in a
cascade down the enormous hole of the engulfed
mine. The crater was being emptied, however, and
the water, drunk by the earth, was sinking, and
revealing the fearful ruin at the bottom. Beneath
the tender azure of this beautiful day there lay a
sewer, the ruins of a town drowned and melted in
mud.
"And people come out of their way to see
that!" exclaimed M. Grégoire,
disillusioned.
Cécile, rosy with health and glad to
breathe so pure an air, was cheerfully joking,
while Madame Hennebeau made a little grimace of
repugnance as she murmured:
"The fact is, this is not pretty at
all."
The two engineers laughed. They tried to interest
the visitors, taking them round and explaining to
them the working of the pumps and the manipulation
of the stamper which drove in the piles. But the
ladies became anxious. They shuddered when they
knew that the pumps would have to work for six or
seven years before the shaft was reconstructed and
all the water exhausted from the mine. No, they
would rather think of something else; this
destruction was only good to give bad dreams.
"Let us go," said Madame Hennebeau,
turning towards her carriage.
Lucie and Jeanne protested. What! so soon! and
the drawing which was not finished. They wanted
to remain; their father would bring them to dinner
in the evening.
M. Hennebeau alone took his place with his wife in
the carriage, for he wished to question
Négrel.
"Very well! go on before," said M.
Grégoire. "We will follow you; we
have a little visit of five minutes to make over
there at the settlement. Go on, go on! we shall
be at Réquillart as soon as you."
He got up behind Madame Grégoire and
Cécile, and while the other carriage went
along by the canal, theirs gently ascended the
slope.
Their excursion was to be completed by a visit of
charity. Zacharie's death had filled them with
pity for this tragical Maheu family, about whom
the whole country was talking. They had no pity
for the father, that brigand, that slayer of
soldiers, who had to be struck down like a wolf.
But the mother touched them, that poor woman who
had just lost her son after having lost her
husband, and whose daughter was perhaps a corpse
beneath the earth; to say nothing of an invalid
grandfather, a child who was lame as the result of
a landslip, and a little girl who died of
starvation during the strike. So that, though
this family had in part deserved its misfortunes
by the detestable spirit it had shown, they had
resolved to assert the breadth of their charity,
their desire for forgetfulness and conciliation,
by themselves bringing an alms. Two parcels,
carefully wrapped up, had been placed beneath a
seat of the carriage.
An old woman pointed out to the coachman Maheude's
house, No. 16 in the second block. But when the
Grégoires alighted with the parcels, they
knocked in vain; at last they struck their fists
against the door, still without reply; the house
echoed mournfully, like a house emptied by grief,
frozen and dark, long since abandoned.
"There's no one there," said
Cécile, disappointed. "What a
nuisance! What shall we do with all this?"
Suddenly the door of the next house opened, and
that Levaque woman appeared.
"Oh, sir! I beg pardon, ma'am. Excuse me,
miss. It's the neighbour that you want? She's
not there; she's at Réquillart."
With a flow of words she told them the story,
repeating to them that people must help one
another, and that she was keeping Lénore
and Henri in her house to allow the mother to go
and wait over there. Her eyes had fallen on the
parcels, and she began to talk about her poor
daughter, who had become a widow, displaying her
own wretchedness, while her eyes shone with
covetousness. Then, in a hesitating way, she
muttered:
"I've got the key. If the lady and gentleman
would really like--The grandfather is there."
The Grégoires looked at her in
stupefaction. What! The grandfather was there!
But no one had replied. He was sleeping, then?
And when the Levaque made up her mind to open the
door, what they saw stopped them on the threshold.
Bonnemort was there alone, with large fixed eyes,
nailed to his chair in front of the cold
fireplace. Around him the room appeared larger
without the clock or the polished deal furniture
which formerly animated it; there only remained
against the green crudity of the walls the
portraits of the emperor and empress, whose rosy
lips were smiling with official benevolence. The
old man did not stir nor wink his eyelids beneath
the sudden light from the door; he seemed
imbecile, as though he had not seen all these
people come in. At his feet lay his plate,
garnished with ashes, such as is placed for cats
for ordure.
"Don't mind if he's not very polite,"
said the Levaque woman, obligingly. "Seems
he's broken something in his brain. It's a
fortnight since he left off speaking."
But Bonnemort was shaken by some agitation, a deep
scraping which seemed to arise from his belly, and
he expectorated into the plate a thick black
expectoration. The ashes were soaked into a coaly
mud, all the coal of the mine which he drew from
his chest. He had already resumed his immobility.
He stirred no more, except at intervals, to spit.
Uneasy, and with stomachs turned, the
Grégoires endeavoured to utter a few
friendly and encouraging words.
"Well, my good man," said the father,
"you have a cold, then?"
The old man, with his eyes to the wall, did not
turn his head. And a heavy silence fell once
more.
"They ought to make you a little gruel,"
added the mother.
He preserved his mute stiffness.
"I say, papa," murmured Cécile,
"they certainly told us he was an invalid;
only we did not think of it afterwards----"
She interrupted herself, much embarrassed. After
having placed on the table a pot-au-feu
and two bottles of wine, she undid the second
parcel and drew from it a pair of enormous boots.
It was the present intended for the grandfather,
and she held one boot in each hand, in confusion,
contemplating the poor man's swollen feet, which
would never walk more.
"Eh! they come a little late, don't they, my
worthy fellow?" said M. Grégoire
again, to enliven the situation. "It doesn't
matter, they're always useful."
Bonnemort neither heard nor replied, with his
terrible face as cold and as hard as a stone.
Then Cécile furtively placed the boots
against the wall. But in spite of her precautions
the nails clanked; and those enormous boots stood
oppressively in the room.
"He won't say thank you," said the
Levaque woman, who had cast a look of deep envy on
the boots. "Might as well give a pair of
spectacles to a duck, asking your pardon."
She went on; she was trying to draw the
Grégoires into her own house, where she
hoped to gain their pity. At last she thought of
a pretext; she praised Henri and Lénore,
who were so good, so gentle, and so intelligent,
answering like angels the questions that they were
asked. They would tell the lady and gentleman all
that they wished to know.
"Will you come for a moment, my child?"
asked the father, glad to get away.
"Yes, I'll follow you," she replied.
Cécile remained alone with Bonnemort. What
kept her there trembling and fascinated, was the
thought that she seemed to recognize this old man:
where then had she met this square livid face,
tattoed with coal? Suddenly she remembered; she
saw again a mob of shouting people who surrounded
her, and she felt cold hands pressing her neck.
It was he; she saw the man again; she looked at
his hands placed on his knees, the hands of an
invalid workman whose whole strength is in his
wrists, still firm in spite of age. Gradually
Bonnemort seemed to awake, he perceived her and
examined her in his turn. A flame mounted to his
cheeks, a nervous spasm drew his mouth, from which
flowed a thin streak of black saliva. Fascinated,
they remained opposite each other-- she
flourishing, plump, and fresh from the long
idleness and sated comfort of her race; he swollen
with water, with the pitiful ugliness of a
foundered beast, destroyed from father to son by a
century of work and hunger.
At the end of ten minutes, when the
Grégoires, surprised at not seeing
Cécile, came back into the Maheus' house,
they uttered a terrible cry. Their daughter was
lying on the ground, with livid face, strangled.
At her neck fingers had left the red imprint of a
giant's hand. Bonnemort, tottering on his dead
legs, had fallen beside her without power to rise.
His hands were still hooked, and he looked round
with his imbecile air and large open eyes. In his
fall he had broken his plate, the ashes were
spread round, the mud of the black expectoration
had stained the floor; while the great pair of
boots, safe and sound, stood side by side against
the wall.
It was never possible to establish the exact
facts. Why had Cécile come near? How
could Bonnemort, nailed to his chair, have been
able to seize her throat? Evidently, when he held
her, he must have become furious, constantly
pressing, overthrown with her, and stifling her
cries to the last groan. Not a sound, not a moan
had traversed the thin partition to the
neighbouring house. It seemed to be an outbreak
of sudden madness, a longing to murder before this
white young neck. Such savagery was stupefying in
an old invalid, who had lived like a worthy man,
an obedient brute, opposed to new ideas. What
rancour, unknown to himself, by some slow process
of poisoning, had risen from his bowels to his
brain? The horror of it led to the conclusion
that he was unconscious, that it was the crime of
an idiot.
The Grégoires, meanwhile, on their knees,
were sobbing, choked with grief. Their idolized
daughter, that daughter desired so long, on whom
they had lavished all their goods, whom they used
to watch sleeping, on tiptoe, whom they never
thought sufficiently well nourished, never
sufficiently plump! It was the downfall of their
very life; what was the good of living, now that
they would have to live without her?
The Levaque woman in distraction cried:
"Ah, the old beggar! what's he done there?
Who would have expected such a thing? And
Maheude, who won't come back till evening! Shall
I go and fetch her?"
The father and mother were crushed, and did not
reply.
"Eh? It will be better. I'll go."
But, before going, the Levaque woman looked at the
boots. The whole settlement was excited, and a
crowd was already hustling around. Perhaps they
would get stolen. And then the Maheus had no man,
now, to put them on. She quietly carried them
away. They would just fit Bouteloup's feet.
At Réquillart the Hennebeaus, with
Négrel, waited a long time for the
Grégoires. Négrel, who had come up
from the pit, gave details. They hoped to
communicate that very evening with the prisoners,
but they-would certainly find nothing but corpses,
for the death-like silence continued. Behind the
engineer, Maheude, seated on the beam, was
listening with white face, when the Levaque woman
came up and told her the old man's strange deed.
And she only made a sweeping gesture of impatience
and irritation. She followed her, however.
Madame Hennebeau was much affected. What an
abomination! That poor Cécile, so merry
that very day, so full of life an hour before! M.
Hennebeau had to lead his wife for a moment into
old Mouque's hovel. With his awkward hands he
unfastened her dress, troubled by the odour of
musk which her open bodice exhaled. And as with
streaming tears she clasped Négrel,
terrified at this death which cut short the
marriage, the husband watched them lamenting
together, and was delivered from one anxiety.
This misfortune would arrange everything; he
preferred to keep his nephew for fear of his
coachman.