GERMINAL
PART V
CHAPTER VI
SOBERED by Catherine's blows, Étienne had
remained at the head of his mates. But while he
was hoarsely urging them on to Montsou, he heard
another voice within him, the voice of reason,
asking, in astonishment, the meaning of all this.
He had not intended any of these things; how had
it happened that, having set out for Jean-Bart
with the object of acting calmly and preventing
disaster, he had finished this day of increasing
violence by besieging the manager's villa?
He it certainly was, however, who had just cried,
"Halt!" Only at first his sole idea had
been to protect the Company's Yards, which there
had been talk of sacking. And now that stones
were already grazing the facade of the villa, he
sought in vain for some lawful prey on which to
throw the band, so as to avoid greater
misfortunes. As he thus stood alone, powerless,
in the middle of the road, he was called by a man
standing on the threshold of the Estaminet Tison,
where the landlady had just put up the shutters in
haste, leaving only the door free.
"Yes, it's me. Will you listen?"
It was Rasseneur. Some thirty men and women,
nearly all belonging to the settlement of the
Deux-Cent-Quarante, who had remained at home in
the morning and had come in the evening for news,
had invaded this estaminet on the approach of the
strikers. Zacharie occupied a table with his
wife, Philoméne. Farther on, Pierron and
Pierronne, with their backs turned, were hiding
their faces. No one was drinking, they had simply
taken shelter.
Étienne recognized Rasseneur and was
turning away, when the latter added:
"You don't want to see me, eh? I warned you,
things are getting awkward. Now you may ask for
bread, they'll give you lead."
Then Étienne came back and replied:
"What troubles me is, the cowards who fold
their arms and watch us risking our skins."
"Your notion, then, is to pillage over
there?" asked Rasseneur.
"My notion is to remain to the last with our
friends, quit by dying together."
In despair, Étienne went back into the
crowd, ready to die. On the road, three children
were throwing stones, and he gave them a good
kick, shouting out to his comrades that it was no
good breaking windows.
Bébert and Lydie, who had rejoined Jeanlin,
were learning from him how to work the sling.
They each sent a flint, playing at who could do
the most damage. Lydie had awkwardly cracked the
head of a woman in the crowd, and the two boys
were loudly laughing. Bonnemort and Mouque,
seated on a bench, were gazing at them behind.
Bonnemort's swollen legs bore him so badly, that
he had great difficulty in dragging himself so
far; no one knew what curiosity impelled him, for
his face had the earthy look of those days when he
never spoke a word.
Nobody, however, any longer obeyed Étienne.
The stones, in spite of his orders, went on
hailing, and he was astonished and terrified by
these brutes he had unmuzzled, who were so slow to
move and then so terrible, so ferociously
tenacious in their rage. All the old Flemish
blood was there, heavy and placid, taking months
to get heated, and then giving itself up to
abominable savagery, listening to nothing until
the beast was glutted by atrocities. In his
southern land crowds flamed up more quickly, but
they did not effect so much. He had to struggle
with Levaque to obtain possession of his axe, and
he knew not how to keep back the Maheus, who were
throwing flints with both hands. The women,
especially, terrified him--the Levaque, Mouquette,
and the others-- who were agitated by murderous
fury, with teeth and nails out, barking like
bitches, and driven on by Mother Brulé,
whose lean figure dominated them.
But there was a sudden stop; a moment's surprise
brought a little of that calmness which
Étienne's supplications could not obtain.
It was simply the Grégoires, who had
decided to bid farewell to the lawyer, and to
cross the road to the manager's house; and they
seemed so peaceful, they so clearly had the air of
believing that the whole thing was a joke on the
part of their worthy miners, whose resignation had
nourished them for a century, that the latter, in
fact, left off throwing stones, for fear of
hitting this old gentleman and old lady who had
fallen from the sky. They allowed them to enter
the garden, mount the steps, and ring at the
barricaded door, which was by no means opened in a
hurry. Just then, Rose, the housemaid, was
returning, laughing at the furious workmen, all of
whom she knew, for she belonged to Montsou. And
it was she who, by striking her fists against the
door, at last forced Hippolyte to set it ajar. It
was time, for as the Grégoires disappeared,
the hail of stones began again. Recovering from
its astonishment, the crowd was shouting louder
than ever:
"Death to the bourgeois! Hurrah for the
people!"
Rose went on laughing, in the hall of the villa,
as though amused by the adventure, and repeated to
the terrified man-servant:
"They're not bad-hearted; I know them."
M. Grégoire methodically hung up his hat.
Then, when he had assisted Madame Grégoire
to draw off her thick cloth mantle, he said, in
his turn:
"Certainly, they have no malice at bottom.
When they have shouted well they will go home to
supper with more appetite."
At this moment M. Hennebeau came down from the
second floor. He had seen the scene, and came to
receive his guests in his usual cold and polite
manner. The pallor of his face alone revealed the
grief which had shaken him. The man was tamed;
there only remained in him the correct
administrator resolved to do his duty.
"You know," he said, "the ladies
have not yet come back."
For the first time some anxiety disturbed the
Grégoires. Cécile not come back!
How could she come back now if the miners were to
prolong their joking?
"I thought of having the place cleared,"
added M. Hennebeau. "But the misfortune is
that I'm alone here, and, besides, I do not know
where to send my servant to bring me four men and
a corporal to clear away this mob."
Rose, who had remained there, ventured to murmur
anew:
"Oh, sir! they are not bad-hearted!"
The manager shook his head, while the tumult
increased outside, and they could hear the dull
crash of the stones against the house.
"I don't wish to be hard on them, I can even
excuse them; one must be as foolish as they are to
believe that we are anxious to injure them. But
it is my duty to prevent disturbance. To think
that there are police all along the roads, as I am
told, and that I have not been able to see a
single man since the morning!"
He interrupted himself, and drew back before
Madame Grégoire, saying:
"Let me beg you, madame, do not stay here,
come into the drawing-room."
But the cook, coming up from below in
exasperation, kept them in the hall a few minutes
longer. She declared that she could no longer
accept any responsibility for the dinner, for she
was expecting from the Marchiennes pastrycook some
vol-au-vent crusts which she had ordered
for four o'clock. The pastrycook had evidently
turned aside on the road for fear of these
bandits. Perhaps they had even pillaged his
hampers. She saw the vol-au-vent
blockaded behind a bush, besieged, going to swell
the bellies of the three thousand wretches who
were asking for bread. In any case, monsieur was
warned; she would rather pitch her dinner into the
fire if it was to be spoilt because of the revolt.
"Patience, patience," said M. Hennebeau.
"All is not lost, the pastrycook may
come."
And as he turned toward Madame Grégoire,
opening the drawing-room door himself, he was much
surprised to observe, seated on the hall bench, a
man whom he had not distinguished before in the
deepening shade.
"What! you, Maigrat! what is it,
then?"
Maigrat arose; his fat, pale face was changed by
terror. He no longer possessed his usual calm
stolidity; he humbly explained that he had slipped
into the manager's house to ask for aid and
protection should the brigands attack his shop.
"You see that I am threatened myself, and
that I have no one," replied M. Hennebeau.
"You would have done better to stay at home
and guard your property."
"Oh! I have put up iron bars and left my
wife there." The manager showed impatience,
and did not conceal his contempt. A fine guard,
that poor creature worn out by blows!
"Well, I can do nothing; you must try to
defend yourself. I advise you to go back at once,
for there they are again demanding bread.
Listen!"
In fact, the tumult began again, and Maigrat
thought he heard his own name in the midst of the
cries. To go back was no longer possible, they
would have torn him to pieces. Besides, the idea
of his ruin overcame him. He pressed his face to
the glass panel of the door, perspiring and
trembling in anticipation of disaster, while the
Grégoires decided to go into the
drawing-room.
M. Hennebeau quietly endeavoured to do the honours
of his house. But in vain he begged his guests to
sit down; the close, barricaded room, lighted by
two lamps in the daytime, was filled with terror
at each new clamour from without. Amid the stuffy
hangings the fury of the mob rolled more
disturbingly, with vague and terrible menace.
They talked, however, constantly brought back to
this inconceivable revolt. He was astonished at
having foreseen nothing; and his information was
so defective that he specially talked against
Rasseneur, whose detestable influence, he said, he
was able to recognize. Besides, the gendarmes
would come; it was impossible that he should be
thus abandoned. As to the Grégoires, they
only thought about their daughter, the poor
darling who was so quickly frightened! Perhaps,
in face of the peril, the carriage had returned to
Marchiennes. They waited on for another quarter
of an hour, worn out by the noise in the street,
and by the sound of the stones from time to time
striking the closed shutters which rang out like
gongs. The situation was no longer bearable. M.
Hennebeau spoke of going out to chase away the
brawlers by himself, and to meet the carriage,
when Hippolyte appeared, exclaiming:
"Sir! sir, here is madame! They are killing
madame!" The carriage had not been able to
pass through the threatening groups in the
Réquillart lane. Négrel had carried
out his idea, walking the hundred metres which
separated them from the house, and knocking at the
little door which led to the garden, near the
common. The gardener would hear them, for there
was always someone there to open. And, at first,
things had gone perfectly;
Madame Hennebeau and the young ladies were already
knocking when some women, who had been warned,
rushed into the lane. Then everything was spoilt.
The door was not opened, and Négrel in vain
sought to burst it open with his shoulder. The
rush of women increased, and fearing they would be
carried away, he adopted the desperate method of
pushing his aunt and the girls before him, in
order to reach the front steps, by passing through
the besiegers. But this manoeuvre led to a
hustling. They were not left free, a shouting
band followed them, while the crowd floated up to
right and to left, without understanding, simply
astonished at these dressed-up ladies lost in the
midst of the battle. At this moment the confusion
was so great that it led to one of those curious
mistakes which can never be explained. Lucie and
Jeanne reached the steps, and slipped in through
the door, which the housemaid opened; Madame
Hennebeau had succeeded in following them, and
behind them Négrel at last came in, and
then bolted the door, feeling sure that he had
seen Cécile go in first. She was no longer
there, having disappeared on the way, so carried
away by fear, that she had turned her back to the
house, and had moved of her own accord into the
thick of danger.
At once the cry arose:
"Hurrah for the people! Death to the
bourgeois! To death with them!"
A few of those in the distance, beneath the veil
which hid her face, mistook her for Madame
Hennebeau; others said she was a friend of the
manager's wife, the young wife of a neighbouring
manufacturer who was execrated by his men. And
besides it mattered little, it was her silk dress,
her fur mantle, even the white feather in her hat,
which exasperated them. She smelled of perfume,
she wore a watch, she had the delicate skin of a
lazy woman who had never touched coal.
"Stop!" shouted Mother Brulé,
"we'll put it on your arse, that lace!"
"The lazy sluts steal it from us," said
the Levaque. "They stick fur on to their
skins while we are dying of cold. Just strip her
naked, to show her how to live!"
At once Mouquette rushed forward.
"Yes, yes! whip her!"
And the women, in this savage rivalry, struggled
and stretched out their rags, as though each were
trying to get a morsel of this rich girl. No
doubt her backside was not better made than any
one else's. More than one of them were rotten
beneath their gewgaws. This injustice had lasted
quite long enough; they should be forced to dress
themselves like workwomen, these harlots who dared
to spend fifty sous on the washing of a single
petticoat.
In the midst of these furies Cécile was
shaking with paralysed legs, stammering over and
over again the same phrase:
"Ladies! please! please! Ladies, please
don't hurt me!" But she suddenly uttered a
shrill cry; cold hands had seized her by the neck.
The rush had brought her near old Bonnemort, who
had taken hold of her. He seemed drunk from
hunger, stupefied by his long misery, suddenly
arousing himself from the resignation of half a
century, under the influence of no one knew what
malicious impulse. After having in the course of
his life saved a dozen mates from death, risking
his bones in fire-damps and landslips, he was
yielding to things which he would not have been
able to express, compelled to do thus, fascinated
by this young girl's white neck. And as on this
day he had lost his tongue, he clenched his
fingers, with his air of an old infirm animal
ruminating over his recollections.
"No! no!" yelled the women.
"Uncover her arse! out with her arse!"
In the villa, as soon as they had realized the
mishap, Négrel and M. Hennebeau bravely
reopened the door to run to Cécile's help.
But the crowd was now pressing against the garden
railings, and it was not easy to go out. A
struggle took place here, while the
Grégoires in terror stood on the steps.
"Let her be then, old man! It's the Piolaine
young lady," cried Maheude to the
grandfather, recognizing Cécile, whose veil
had been torn off by one of the women.
On his side, Étienne, overwhelmed at this
retaliation on a child, was trying to force the
band to let go their prey. An inspiration came to
him; he brandished the axe, which he had snatched
from Levaque's hands.
"To Maigrat's house, by God! there's bread
in there! Down to the earth with Maigrat's damned
shed!"
And at random he gave the first blow of the axe
against the shop door. Some comrades had followed
him--Levaque, Maheu, and a few others. But the
women were furious, and Cécile had fallen
from Bonnemort's fingers into Mother
Brulé's hands. Lydie and Bébert,
led by Jeanlin, had slipped on all fours between
her petticoats to see the lady's bottom. Already
the women were pulling her about; her clothes were
beginning to split, when a man on horseback
appeared, pushing on his animal, and using his
riding-whip on those who would not stand back
quick enough.
"Ah! rascals! You are going to flog our
daughters, are you?"
It was Deneulin who had come to the rendezvous for
dinner. He quickly jumped on to the road, took
Cécile by the waist, and, with the other
hand manipulating his horse with remarkable skill
and strength, he used it as a living wedge to
split the crowd, which drew back before the onset.
At the railing the battle continued. He passed
through, however, with some bruises. This
unforeseen assistance delivered Négrel and
M. Hennebeau, who were in great danger amid the
oaths and blows. And while the young man at last
led in the fainting Cécile, Deneulin
protected the manager with his tall body, and at
the top of the steps received a stone which nearly
put his shoulder out.
"That's it," he cried; "break my
bones now you've broken my engines!"
He promptly pushed the door to, and a volley of
flints fell against it.
"What madmen!" he exclaimed. "Two
seconds more, and they would have broken my skull
like an empty gourd. There is nothing to say to
them; what could you do? They know nothing, you
can only knock them down."
In the drawing-room, the Grégoires were
weeping as they watched Cécile recover.
She was not hurt, there was not even a scratch to
be seen, only her veil was lost. But their fright
increased when they saw before them their cook,
Mélanie, who described how the mob had
demolished Piolaine. Mad with fear she had run to
warn her masters. She had come in when the door
was ajar at the moment of the fray, without any
one noticing her; and in her endless narrative the
single stone with which Jeanlin had broken one
window-pane became a regular cannonade which had
crushed through the walls. Then M.
Grégoire's ideas were altogether upset:
they were murdering his daughter, they were razing
his house to the ground; it was, then, true that
these miners could bear him ill will, because he
lived like a worthy man on their labour?
The housemaid, who had brought in a towel and some
eau-de-Cologne, repeated:
"All the same it's queer, they're not
bad-hearted."
Madame Hennebeau, seated and very pale, had not
recovered from the shock to her feelings; and she
was only able to find a smile when Négrel
was complimented. Cécile's parents
especially thanked the young man, and the marriage
might now be regarded as settled. M. Hennebeau
looked on in silence, turning from his wife to
this lover whom in the morning he had been
swearing to kill, then to this young girl by whom
he would, no doubt, soon be freed from him. There
was no haste, only the fear remained with him of
seeing his wife fall lower, perhaps to some
lackey.
"And you, my little darlings," asked
Deneulin of his daughters; "have they broken
any of your bones?"
Lucie and Jeanne had been much afraid, but they
were pleased to have seen it all. They were now
laughing.
"By George!" the father went on,
"we've had a fine day! If you want a dowry,
you would do well to earn it yourselves, and you
may also expect to have to support me."
He was joking, but his voice trembled. His eyes
swelled with tears as his two daughters threw
themselves into his arms.
M. Hennebeau had heard this confession of ruin. A
quick thought lit up his face. Vandame would now
belong to Montsou; this was the hoped-for
compensation, the stroke of fortune which would
bring him back to favour with the gentlemen on the
directorate. At every crisis of his existence, he
took refuge in the strict execution of the orders
he had received; in the military discipline in
which he lived he found his small share of
happiness.
But they grew calm; the drawing-room fell back
into a weary peacefulness, with the quiet light of
its two lamps, and the warm stuffiness of the
hangings. What, then, was going on outside? The
brawlers were silent, and stones no longer struck
the house; one only heard deep, full blows, those
blows of the hatchet which one hears in distant
woods. They wished to find out, and went back
into the hall to venture a glance through the
glass panel of the door. Even the ladies went
upstairs to post themselves behind the blinds on
the first floor.
"Do you see that scoundrel, Rasseneur, over
there on the threshold of the public-house?"
said M. Hennebeau to Deneulin. "I had
guessed as much; he must be in it."
It was not Rasseneur, however, it was
Étienne, who was dealing blows from his axe
at Maigrat's shop. And he went on calling to the
men; did not the goods in there belong to the
colliers? Had they not the right to take back
their property from this thief who had exploited
them so long, who was starving them at a hint from
the Company? Gradually they all left the
manager's house, and ran up to pillage the
neighbouring shop. The cry, "Bread! bread!
bread!" broke out anew. They would find
bread behind that door. The rage of hunger
carried them away, as if they suddenly felt that
they could wait no longer without expiring on the
road. Such furious thrusts were made at the door
that at every stroke of the axe Étienne
feared to wound someone.
Meanwhile Maigrat, who had left the hall of the
manager's house, had at first taken refuge in the
kitchen; but, hearing nothing there, he imagined
some abominable attempt against his shop, and came
up again to hide behind the pump outside, when he
distinctly heard the cracking of the door and
shouts of pillage in which his own name was mixed.
It was not a nightmare, then. If he could not
see, he could now hear, and he followed the attack
with ringing ears; every blow struck him in the
heart. A hinge must have given way; five minutes
more and the shop would be taken. The thing was
stamped on his brain in real and terrible
images--the brigands rushing forward, then the
drawers broken open, the sacks emptied, everything
eaten, everything drunk, the house itself carried
away, nothing left, not even a stick with which he
might go and beg through the villages. No, he
would never allow them to complete his ruin; he
would rather leave his life there. Since he had
been here he noticed at a window of his house his
wife's thin silhouette, pale and confused, behind
the panes; no doubt she was watching the blows
with her usual silent air of a poor beaten
creature. Beneath there was a shed, so placed
that from the villa garden one could climb it from
the palings; then it was easy to get on to the
tiles up to the window. And the idea of thus
returning home now pursued him in his remorse at
having left. Perhaps he would have time to
barricade the shop with furniture; he even
invented other and more heroic defences--boiling
oil, lighted petroleum, poured out from above.
But this love of his property struggled against
his fear, and he groaned in the battle with
cowardice. Suddenly, on hearing a deeper blow of
the axe, he made up his mind. Avarice conquered;
he and his wife would cover the sacks with their
bodies rather than abandon a single loaf.
Almost immediately hooting broke out:
"Look! look!--The tom-cat's up there! After
the cat! after the cat!"
The mob had just seen Maigrat on the roof of the
shed. In his fever of anxiety he had climbed the
palings with agility in spite of his weight, and
without troubling over the breaking wood; and now
he was flattening himself along the tiles, and
endeavouring to reach the window. But the slope
was very steep; he was incommoded by his
stoutness, and his nails were torn. He would have
dragged himself up, however, if he had not begun
to tremble with the fear of stones; for the crowd,
which he could not see, continued to cry beneath
him:
"After the cat! after the cat!--Do for
him!"
And suddenly both his hands let go at once, and he
rolled down like a ball, leapt at the gutter, and
fell across the middle wall in such a way that, by
ill chance, he rebounded on the side of the road,
where his skull was broken open on the corner of a
stone pillar. His brain had spurted out. He was
dead. His wife up above, pale and confused behind
the window-panes, still looked out.
They were stupefied at first. Étienne
stopped short, and the axe slipped from his hands.
Maheu, Levaque, and the others forgot the shop,
with their eyes fixed on the wall along which a
thin red streak was slowly flowing down. And the
cries ceased, and silence spread over the growing
darkness.
All at once the hooting began again. It was the
women, who rushed forward overcome by the
drunkenness of blood.
"Then there is a good God, after all! Ah!
the bloody beast, he's done for!"
They surrounded the still warm body. They
insulted it with laughter, abusing his shattered
head, the dirty-chops, vociferating in the face of
death the long-stored rancour of their starved
lives.
"I owed you sixty francs, now you're paid,
thief!" said Maheude, enraged like the
others. "You won't refuse me credit any
more. Wait! wait! I must fatten you once
more!"
With her fingers she scratched up some earth, took
two handfuls and stuffed it violently into his
mouth.
"There! eat that! There! eat! eat! you
used to eat us"! The abuse increased, while
the dead man, stretched on his back, gazed
motionless with his large fixed eyes at the
immense sky from which the night was falling.
This earth heaped in his mouth was the bread he
had refused to give. And henceforth he would eat
of no other bread. It had not brought him luck to
starve poor people.
But the women had another revenge to wreak on him.
They moved round, smelling him like she-wolves.
They were all seeking for some outrage, some
savagery that would relieve them.
Mother Brulé's shrill voice was heard:
"Cut him like a tomcat!"
"Yes, yes, after the cat! after the cat!
He's done too much, the dirty beast!"
Mouquette was already unfastening and drawing off
the trousers, while the Levaque woman raised the
legs. And Mother Brulé with her dry old
hands separated the naked thighs and seized this
dead virility. She took hold of everything,
tearing with an effort which bent her lean spine
and made her long arms crack. The soft skin
resisted; she had to try again, and at last
carried away the fragment, a lump of hairy and
bleeding flesh, which she brandished with a laugh
of triumph.
"I've got it! I've got it!"
Shrill voices saluted with curses the abominable
trophy.
"Ah! swine! you won't fill our daughters
any more!"
"Yes! we've done with paying on your beastly
body; we shan't any more have to offer a backside
in return for a loaf."
"Here, I owe you six francs; would you like
to settle it? I'm quite willing, if you can do it
still!"
This joke shook them all with terrible gaiety.
They showed each other the bleeding fragment as an
evil beast from which each of them had suffered,
and which they had at last crushed, and saw before
them there, inert, in their power. They spat on
it, they thrust out their jaws, saying over and
over again, with furious bursts of contempt:
"He can do no more! he can do no more!--It's
no longer a man that they'll put away in the
earth. Go and rot then, good-for-nothing!"
Mother Brulé then planted the whole lump on
the end of her stick, and holding it in the air,
bore it about like a banner, rushing along the
road, followed, helter-skelter, by the yelling
troop of women. Drops of blood rained down, and
that pitiful flesh hung like a waste piece of meat
on a butcher's stall. Up above, at the window,
Madame Maigrat still stood motionless; but beneath
the last gleams of the setting sun, the confused
flaws of the window-panes distorted her white face
which looked as though it were laughing. Beaten
and deceived at every hour, with shoulders bent
from morning to night over a ledger, perhaps she
was laughing, while the band of women rushed along
with that evil beast, that crushed beast, at the
end of the stick.
This frightful mutilation was accomplished in
frozen horror. Neither Étienne nor Maheu
nor the others had had time to interfere; they
stood motionless before this gallop of furies. At
the door of the Estaminet Tison a few heads were
grouped--Rasseneur pale with disgust, Zacharie and
Philoméne stupefied at what they had seen.
The two old men, Bonnemort and Mouqe, were gravely
shaking their heads. Only Jeanlin was making fun,
pushing Bébert with his elbow, and forcing
Lydie to look up. But the women were already
coming back, turning round and passing beneath the
manager's windows. Behind the blinds the ladies
were stretching out their necks. They had not
been able to observe the scene, which was hidden
from them by the wall, and they could not
distinguish well in the growing darkness.
"What is it they have at the end of that
stick?" asked Cécile, who had grown
bold enough to look out.
Lucie and Jeanne declared that it must be a
rabbitskin.
"No, no," murmured Madame Hennebeau,
"they must have been pillaging a pork
butcher's, it seems to be a remnant of a
pig."
At this moment she shuddered and was silent.
Madame Grégoire had nudged her with her
knee. They both remained stupefied. The young
ladies, who were very pale, asked no more
questions, but with large eyes followed this red
vision through the darkness.
Étienne once more brandished the axe. But
the feeling of anxiety did not disappear; this
corpse now barred the road and protected the shop.
Many had drawn back. Satiety seemed to have
appeased them all. Maheu was standing by
gloomily, when he heard a voice whisper in his ear
to escape. He turned round and recognized
Catherine, still in her old overcoat, black and
panting. With a movement he repelled her. He
would not listen to her, he threatened to strike
her. With a gesture of despair she hesitated, and
then ran towards Étienne.
"Save yourself! save yourself! the
gendarmes are coming!"
He also pushed her away and abused her, feeling
the blood of the blows she had given him mounting
to his cheeks. But she would not be repelled; she
forced him to throw down the axe, and drew him
away by both arms, with irresistible strength.
"Don't I tell you the gendarmes are coming!
Listen to me. It's Chaval who has gone for them
and is bringing them, if you want to know. It's
too much for me, and I've come. Save yourself, I
don't want them to take you."
And Catherine drew him away, while, at the same
instant, a heavy gallop shook the street from
afar. Immediately a voice arose: "The
gendarmes! the gendarmes!" There was a
general breaking up, so mad a rush for life that
in two minutes the road was free, absolutely
clear, as though swept by a hurricane. Maigrat's
corpse alone made a patch of shadow on the white
earth. Before the Estaminet Tison, Rasseneur only
remained, feeling relieved, and with open face
applauding the easy victory of the sabres; while
in dim and deserted Montsou, in the silence of the
closed houses, the bourgeois remained with
perspiring skins and chattering teeth, not daring
to look out. The plain was drowned beneath the
thick night, only the blast furnaces and the coke
furnaces were burning against the tragic sky. The
gallop of the gendarmes heavily approached; they
came up in an indistinguishable sombre mass. And
behind them the Marchiennes pastrycook's vehicle,
a little covered cart which had been confided to
their care, at last arrived, and a small drudge of
a boy jumped down and quietly unpacked the crusts
for the vol-au-vent.