"What
are you doing out here, Edna? I thought I should find you in bed," said her
husband, when he discovered her lying there. He had walked up with Madame Lebrun
and left her at the house. His wife did not reply.
"Are you asleep?" he asked,
bending down close to look at her.
"No." Her eyes gleamed bright
and intense, with no sleepy shadows, as they looked into his.
"Do you know it is past one
o'clock? Come on," and he mounted the steps and went into their room.
"Edna!" called Mr. Pontellier
from within, after a few moments had gone by.
"Don't wait for me," she
answered. He thrust his head through the door.
"You will take cold out
there," he said, irritably. "What folly is this? Why don't you come in?"
"It isn't cold; I have my
shawl."
"The mosquitoes will devour
you."
"There are no mosquitoes."
She heard him moving about
the room; every sound indicating impatience and irritation. Another time she
would have gone in at his request. She would, through habit, have yielded to his
desire; not with any sense of submission or obedience to his compelling wishes,
but unthinkingly, as we walk, move, sit, stand, go through the daily treadmill
of the life which has been portioned out to us.
"Edna, dear, are you not
coming in soon?" he asked again, this time fondly, with a note of entreaty.
"No; I am going to stay out
here."
"This is more than folly," he
blurted out. "I can't permit you to stay out there all night. You must come in
the house instantly."
With a writhing motion she
settled herself more securely in the hammock. She perceived that her will had
blazed up, stubborn and resistant. She could not at that moment have done other
than denied and
resisted. She wondered if her husband had ever spoken to her like that
before, and if she had submitted to his command. Of course she had; she
remembered that she had. But she could not realize why or how she should have
yielded, feeling as she then did.
"Léonce, go to bed," she
said. "I mean to stay out here. I don't wish to go in, and I don't intend to.
Don't speak to me like that again; I shall not answer you."
Mr. Pontellier had prepared
for bed, but he slipped on an extra garment. He opened a bottle of wine, of
which he kept a small and select supply in a buffet of his own. He drank a glass
of the wine and went out on the gallery and offered a glass to his wife. She did
not wish any. He drew up the rocker, hoisted his slippered feet on the rail, and
proceeded to smoke a cigar. He smoked two cigars; then he went inside and drank
another glass of wine. Mrs. Pontellier again declined to accept a glass when it
was offered to her. Mr. Pontellier once more seated himself with elevated
feet, and after a reasonable interval of time smoked some more cigars.
Edna began to feel like one
who awakens gradually out of a dream, a delicious, grotesque, impossible dream,
to feel again the realities pressing into her soul. The physical need for sleep
began to overtake her; the exuberance which had sustained and exalted her spirit
left her helpless and yielding to the conditions which crowded her in.
The stillest hour of the
night had come, the hour before dawn, when the world seems to hold its breath.
The moon hung low, and had turned from silver to copper in the sleeping sky. The
old owl no longer hooted, and the water-oaks had ceased to moan as they bent
their heads.
Edna arose, cramped from
lying so long and still in the hammock. She tottered up the steps, clutching
feebly at the post before passing into the house.
"Are you coming in, Léonce?"
she asked, turning her face toward her husband.
"Yes, dear," he answered,
with a glance following a misty puff of smoke. "Just as soon as I have finished
my cigar."