Volume Three
Chapter XXXIX. Old and New Acquaintance
Fascinated as by a basilisk with three heads, I could not leave this clique,
the ground near them seemed to hold my feet. The canopy of entwined trees held
out shadow, the night whispered a pledge of protection, and an officious lamp
flashed just one beam to show me an obscure, safe seat, and then vanished. Let
me now briefly tell the reader all that, during the past dark fortnight, I have
been silently gathering from Rumour, respecting the origin and the object of M.
Emanuel's departure. The tale is short; and not new its alpha is Mammon, and its
omega Interest.
If Madame Walravens was as hideous as a Hindoo idol, she seemed also to
possess, in the estimation of these her votaries, an idol's consequence. The
fact was, she had been rich -- very rich; and though, for the present, without
the command of money, she was likely one day to be rich again. At Basseterre in
Guadaloupe, she possessed a large estate, received in dowry on her marriage
sixty years ago, sequestered since her husband's failure; but now, it was
supposed, cleared of claim, and, if duly looked after by a competent agent of
integrity, considered capable of being made, in a few years, largely
productive.
Père Silas took an interest in this prospective improvement for the
sake of religion and the Church, whereof Magloire Walravens was a devout
daughter. Madame Beck, distantly related to the hunchback and knowing her to be
without family of her own, had long brooded over contingencies with a mother's
calculating forethought, and, harshly treated as she was by Madame Walravens,
never ceased to court her for interest's sake. Madame Beck and the priest were
thus, for money reasons, equally and sincerely interested in the nursing of the
West Indian estate.
But the distance was great, and the climate hazardous. The competent and
upright agent wanted, must be a devoted man. Just such a man had Madame
Walravens retained for twenty years in her service, blighting his life, and then
living on him, like an old fungus; such a man had Père Silas trained,
taught, and bound to him by the ties of gratitude, habit and belief. Such a man
Madame Beck knew, and could in some measure influence. 'My pupil,' said
Père Silas, 'if he remains in Europe, runs risk of apostacy, for he has
become entangled with a heretic.' Madame Beck made also her private comment, and
preferred in her own breast her secret reason for desiring expatriation. The
thing she could not obtain, she desired not another to win: rather would she
destroy it. As to Madame Walravens, she wanted her money and her land, and knew
Paul, if he liked, could make the best and faithfullest steward: so the three
self-seekers banded and beset the one unselfish. They reasoned, they appealed,
they implored; on his mercy they cast themselves, into his hands they
confidingly thrust their interests. They asked but two or three years of
devotion -- after that, he should live for himself: one of the number, perhaps,
wished that in the meantime he might die.
No living being ever humbly laid his advantage at M. Emanuel's feet, or
confidingly put it into his hands, that he spurned the trust or repulsed the
repository. What might be his private pain or inward reluctance to leave Europe
-- what his calculations for his own future -- none asked, or knew, or reported.
All this was a blank to me. His conferences with his confessor I might guess;
the part duty and religion were made to play in the persuasions used, I might
conjecture. He was gone and had made no sign. There my knowledge closed.
With my head bent, and my forehead resting on my hands, I sat amidst grouped
tree stems and branching brushwood. Whatever talk passed amongst my neighbours,
I might hear, if I would; I was near enough; but for some time, there was scarce
motive to attend. They gossiped about the dresses, the music, the illuminations,
the fine night. I listened to hear them say, 'It is calm weather for his voyage;
the Antigua' (his ship) 'will sail prosperously.' No such remark fell; neither
the Antigua, nor her course, nor her passenger were named.
Perhaps the light chat scarcely interested old Madame Walravens more than it
did me; she appeared restless, turning her head now to this side, now that,
looking through the trees, and among the crowd, as if expectant of an arrival
and impatient of delay. 'Où sont-ils? Pourquoi ne viennent-ils?' I heard
her mutter more than once; and at last, as if determined to have an answer to
her question -- which hitherto none seemed to mind, she spoke aloud this phrase
-- a phrase brief enough, simple enough, but it sent a shock through me --
'Messieurs et mesdames,' said she, 'où donc est Justine Marie?'
'Justine Marie!' What was this? Justine Marie -- the dead nun -- where was
she? Why, in her grave, Madame Walravens -- what can you want with her? You
shall go to her, but she shall not come to you.
Thus I should have answered, had the response lain with me, but nobody
seemed to be of my mind; nobody seemed surprised, startled, or at a loss. The
quietest commonplace answer met the strange, the dead-disturbing, the Witch-of-
Endor query of the hunchback.
'Justine Marie,' said one, 'is coming; she is in the kiosk; she will be here
presently.'
Out of this question and reply sprang a change in the chat -- chat it still
remained -- easy, desultory, familiar gossip. Hint, allusion, comment, went
round the circle, but all so broken, so dependent on references to persons not
named, or circumstances not defined, that, listen as intently as I would -- and
I did listen now with a fated interest -- I could make out no more than that
some scheme was on foot, in which this ghostly Justine Marie -- dead or alive --
was concerned. This family junta seemed grasping at her somehow, for some
reason; there seemed question of a marriage, of a fortune, for whom I could not
quite make out -- perhaps for Victor Kint, perhaps for Josef Emanuel -- both
were bachelors. Once I thought the hints and jests rained upon a young fair-
haired foreigner of the party, whom they called Heinrich Mühler. Amidst all
the badinage, Madame Walravens still obtruded from time to time, hoarse, cross-
grained speeches; her impatience being diverted only by an implacable
surveillance of Désirée, who could not stir but the old woman menaced
her with her staff.
'Là voilà!' suddenly cried one of the gentlemen, 'voilà
Justine Marie qui arrive!'
This moment was for me peculiar. I called up to memory the pictured nun on
the panel; present to my mind was the sad love-story; I saw in thought the
vision of the garret, the apparition of the alley, the strange birth of the
berceau: I underwent a presentiment of discovery, a strong conviction of coming
disclosure. Ah! when imagination once runs riot where do we stop? What winter
tree so bare and branchless -- what way-side, hedge-munching animal so humble,
that Fancy, a passing cloud, and a struggling moonbeam, will not clothe it in
spirituality, and make of it a phantom?
With solemn force pressed on my heart, the expectation of mystery breaking
up: hitherto I had seen this spectre only through a glass darkly; now was I to
behold it face to face. I leaned forward; I looked.
The circle opened as if opening to admit a new and welcome member. At this
instant a torch chanced to be carried past; its blaze aided the pale moon in
doing justice to the crisis, in lighting to perfection the dénouement
pressing on. Surely those near me must have felt some little of the anxiety I
felt, in degree so unmeted. Of that group the coolest must have 'held his breath
for a time!' As for me, my life stood still.
It is over. The moment and the nun are come. The crisis and the revelation
are passed by.
The flambeau glares still within a yard, held up in a park-keeper's hand its
long eager tongue of flame almost licks the figure of the Expected -- there --
where she stands full in my sight? What is she like? What does she wear? How
does she look? Who is she?
There are many masks in the Park to-night, and as the hour wears late, so
strange a feeling of revelry and mystery begins to spread abroad, that scarce
would you discredit me, reader, were I to say that she is like the nun of the
attic, that she wears black skirts and white head-clothes, that she looks the
resurrection of the flesh, and that she is a risen ghost.
All falsities -- all figments! We will not deal in this gear. Let us be
honest, and cut, as heretofore, from the homely web of truth.
Homely, though, is an ill-chosen word. What I see is not precisely homely. A
girl of Villette stands there -- a girl fresh from her pensionnat. She is very
comely, with the beauty indigenous to this country. She looks well-nourished,
fair and fat of flesh. Her cheeks are round, her eyes good; her hair is
abundant. She is handsomely dressed. She is not alone; her escort consists of
three persons -- two being elderly; these she addresses as 'Mon Oncle' and 'Ma
Tante.' She laughs, she chats; good-humoured, buxom and blooming, she looks, at
all points, the bourgeoise belle.
So much for 'Justine Marie'; so much for ghosts and mystery: not that this
last was solved -- this girl certainly is not my nun; what I saw in the garret
and garden must have been taller by a span.
We have looked at the city belle; we have cursorily glanced at the
respectable old uncle and aunt. Have we a stray glance to give to the third
member of this company? Can we spare him a moment's notice? We ought to
distinguish him so far, reader; he has claims on us; we do not now meet him for
the first time. I clasped my hands very hard, and I drew my breath very deep I
held in the cry, I devoured the ejaculation. I forbade the start, I spoke and I
stirred no more than a stone; but I knew what I looked on; through the dimness
left in my eyes by many nights' weeping, I knew him. They said he was to sail by
the Antigua. Madame Beck said so. She lied, or she had uttered what was once
truth, and failed to contradict it when it became false. The Antigua was gone,
and there stood Paul Emanuel.
Was I glad? A huge load left me. Was it a fact to warrant joy? I know not.
Ask first what were the circumstances attendant on this respite? How far did
this delay concern me? Were there not those whom it might touch more nearly?
After all, who may this young girl, this Justine Marie, be? Not a stranger,
reader; she is known to me by sight; she visits at the Rue Fossette: she is
often of Madame Beck's Sunday parties. She is a relation of both the Becks and
Walravens; she derives her baptismal name from the sainted nun who would have
been her aunt had she lived: her patronymic is Sauveur; she is an heiress and an
orphan, and M. Emanuel is her guardian; some say her godfather. The family junta
wish this heiress to be married to one of their band -- which is it? Vital
question -- which is it?
I felt very glad now, that the drug administered in the sweet draught had
filled me with a possession which made bed and chamber intolerable. I always,
through my whole life, liked to penetrate to the real truth; I like seeking the
goddess in her temple, and handling the veil, and daring the dread glance. O
Titaness among deities! The covered outline of thine aspect sickens often
through its uncertainty, but define to us one trait, show us one lineament,
clear in awful sincerity; we may gasp in untold terror, but with that gasp we
drink in a breath of the divinity; our heart shakes, and its currents sway like
rivers lifted by earthquake, but we have swallowed strength. To see and know the
worst is to take from Fear her main advantage.
The Walravens' party, augmented in numbers, now became very gay. The
gentlemen fetched refreshments from the kiosk, all sat down on the turf under
the trees; they drank healths and sentiments; they laughed, they jested. M.
Emanuel underwent some raillery, half good-humoured, half; I thought, malicious,
especially on Madame Beck's part. I soon gathered that his voyage had been
temporarily deferred of his own will, without the concurrence, even against the
advice, of his friends; he had let the Antigua go, and had taken his berth in
the Paul et Virginie, appointed to sail a fortnight later. It was his reason for
this resolve which they teased him to assign, and which he would only vaguely
indicate as 'the settlement of a little piece of business which he had set his
heart upon.' What was this business? Nobody knew. Yes, there was one who seemed
partly, at least, in his confidence; a meaning look passed between him and
Justine Marie. 'La petite va m'aider -- n'est-ce pas?' said he. The answer was
prompt enough, God knows!
'Mais oui, je vous aiderai de tout mon coeur. Vous ferez de moi tout ce que
vous voudrez, mon parrain.'
And this dear 'parrain' took her hand and lifted it to his grateful lips.
Upon which demonstration, I saw the light-complexioned young Teuton, Heinrich
Mühler, grow restless, as if he did not like it. He even grumbled a few
words, whereat M. Emanuel actually laughed in his face, and with the ruthless
triumph of the assured conqueror, he drew his ward nearer to him.
M. Emanuel was indeed very joyous that night. He seemed not one whit subdued
by the change of scene and action impending. He was the true life of the party;
a little despotic perhaps, determined to be chief in mirth, as well as in
labour, yet from moment to moment proving indisputably his right of leadership.
His was the wittiest word, the pleasantest anecdote, the frankest laugh.
Restlessly active, after his manner, he multiplied himself to wait on all: but
oh! I saw which was his favourite. I saw at whose feet he lay on the turf; I saw
whom he folded carefully from the night air, whom he tended, watched and
cherished as the apple of his eye.
Still, hint and raillery flew thick, and still I gathered that while M. Paul
should be absent, working for others, these others, not quite ungrateful, would
guard for him the treasure he left in Europe. Let him bring them an Indian
fortune: they would give him in return a young bride and a rich inheritance. As
for the saintly consecration, the vow of constancy, that was forgotten: the
blooming and charming Present prevailed over the Past; and, at length, his nun
was indeed buried.
Thus it must be. The revelation was indeed come. Presentiment had not been
mistaken in her impulse: there is a kind of presentiment which never is
mistaken; it was I who had for a moment miscalculated; not seeing the true
bearing of the oracle, I had thought she muttered of vision when, in truth, her
prediction touched reality.
I might have paused longer upon what I saw; I might have deliberated ere I
drew inferences. Some, perhaps, would have held the premises doubtful, the
proofs insufficient; some slow sceptics would have incredulously examined ere
they conclusively accepted the project of a marriage between a poor and
unselfish man of forty, and his wealthy ward of eighteen; but far from me such
shifts and palliatives, far from me such temporary evasion of the actual, such
coward fleeing from the dread, the swift-footed, the all-overtaking Fact, such
feeble suspense of submission to her the sole sovereign, such paltering and
faltering resistance to the Power whose errand is to march conquering and to
conquer, such traitor defection from the TRUTH.
No. I hastened to accept the whole plan. I extended my grasp and took it all
in. I gathered it to me with a sort of rage of haste, and folded it round me, as
the soldier struck on the fields folds his colours about his breast. I invoked
Conviction to nail upon me the certainty, abhorred while embraced, to fix it
with the strongest spikes her strongest strokes could drive; and when the iron
had entered well my soul, I stood up, as I thought, renovated.
In my infatuation, I said, 'Truth, you are a good mistress to your faithful
servants! While a Lie pressed me, how I suffered! Even when the Falsehood was
still sweet, still flattering to the fancy, and warm to the feelings, it wasted
me with hourly torment. The persuasion that affection was won could not be
divorced from the dread that, by another turn of the wheel, it might be lost.
Truth stripped away Falsehood, and Flattery, and Expectancy, and here I stand --
free!'
Nothing remained now but to take my freedom to my chamber, to carry it with
me to my bed and see what I could make of it. The play was not yet, indeed,
quite played out. I might have waited and watched longer that love scene under
the trees, that sylvan courtship. Had there been nothing of love in the
demonstration, my Fancy in this hour was so generous, so creative, she could
have modelled for it the most salient lineaments, and given it the deepest life
and highest colour of passion. But I would not look; I had fixed my resolve, but
I would not violate my nature. And then -- something tore me so cruelly under my
shawl, something so dug into my side, a vulture so strong in beak and talon, I
must be alone to grapple with it. I think I never felt jealousy till now. This
was not like enduring the endearments of Dr. John and Paulina, against which
while I sealed my eyes and my ears, while I withdrew thence my thoughts, my
sense of harmony still acknowledged in it a charm. This was an outrage. The love
born of beauty was not mine; I had nothing in common with it: I could not dare
to meddle with, it, but another love, venturing diffidently into life after long
acquaintance, furnace-tried by pain, stamped by constancy, consolidated by
affection's pure and durable alloy, submitted by intellect to intellect's own
tests; and finally wrought up, by his own process, to his own unflawed
completeness, this Love that laughed at Passion, his fast frenzies and his hot
and hurried extinction, in this Love I had a vested interest; and whatever
tended either to its culture or its destruction, I could not view
impassibly.
I turned from the group of trees and the 'merrie companie' in its shade.
Midnight was long past; the concert was over, the crowds were thinning. I
followed the ebb. Leaving the radiant park and well-lit Haute-Ville (still well-
lit, this it seems was to be a 'nuit blanche' in Villette), I sought the dim
lower quarter.
Dim I should not say, for the beauty of moonlight -- forgotten in the park -
- here once more flowed in upon perception. High she rode, and calm and
stainlessly she shone. The music and the mirth of the fête, the fire and
bright hues of those lamps had outdone and outshone her for an hour, but now,
again, her glory and her silence triumphed. The rival lamps were dying: she held
her course like a white fate. Drum, trumpet, bugle, had uttered their clangour,
and were forgotten; with pencil-ray she wrote on heaven and on earth records for
archives everlasting. She and those stars seemed to me at once the types and
witnesses of truth all regnant. The night sky lit her reign: like its slow
wheeling progress, advanced her victory -- that onward movement which has been,
and is, and will be from eternity to eternity.
These oil-twinkling streets are very still: I like them for their lowliness
and peace. Homeward bound burghers pass me now and then, but these companies are
pedestrian, make little noise, and are soon gone. So well do I love Villette
under her present aspect, not willingly would I re-enter under a roof; but that
I am bent on pursuing my strange adventure to a successful close, and quietly
regaining my bed in the great dormitory, before Madame Beck comes home.
Only one street lies between me and the Rue Fossette; as I enter it, for the
first time, the sound of a carriage tears up the deep peace of this quarter. It
comes this way -- comes very fast. How loud sounds its rattle on the paved path!
The street is narrow, and I keep carefully to the causeway. The carriage
thunders past, but what do I see, or fancy I see, as it rushes by? Surely
something white fluttered from that window -- surely a hand waved a
handkerchief. Was that signal meant for me? Am I known? Who could recognise me?
That is not M. de Bassompierre's carriage, nor Mrs. Bretton's; and besides,
neither the Hôtel Crécy nor the château of La Terrasse lies in
that direction. Well, I have no time for conjecture; I must hurry home.
Gaining the Rue Fossette, reaching the pensionnat, all there was still; no
fiacre had yet arrived with Madame and Désirée. I had left the great
door ajar; should I find it thus? Perhaps the wind or some other accident may
have thrown it to with sufficient force to start the spring-bolt? In that case,
hopeless became admission; my adventure must issue in catastrophe. I lightly
pushed the heavy leaf; would it yield?
Yes. As soundless, as unresisting, as if some propitious genius had waited
on a sesame charm, in the vestibule within. Entering with bated breath, quietly
making all fast, shoelessly mounting the staircase, I sought the dormitory, and
reached my couch.
Ay! I reached it, and once more drew a free inspiration. The next moment, I
almost shrieked -- almost, but not quite, thank Heaven!
Throughout the dormitory, throughout the house, there reigned at this hour
the stillness of death. All slept, and in such hush, it seemed that none
dreamed. Stretched on the nineteen beds lay nineteen forms, at full length and
motionless. On mine -- the twentieth couch -- nothing ought to have lain I had
left it void, and void should have found it. What, then, do I see between the
half-drawn curtains? What dark, usurping shape, supine, long and strange? Is it
a robber who has made his way through the open street door, and lies there in
wait? It looks very black, I think it looks -- not human. Can it be a wandering
dog that has come in from the street and crept and nestled hither? Will it
spring, will it leap out if I approach? Approach I must. Courage! One step! --
My head reeled, for by the faint night-lamp, I saw stretched on my bed the
old phantom -- the NUN.
A cry at this moment might have ruined me. Be the spectacle what it might, I
could afford neither consternation, scream, nor swoon. Besides, I was not
overcome. Tempered by late incidents, my nerves disdained hysteria. Warm from
illuminations, and music, and thronging thousands, thoroughly lashed up by a new
scourge, I defied spectra. In a moment, without exclamation, I had rushed on the
haunted couch; nothing leaped out, or sprung, or stirred; all the movement was
mine, so was all the life, the reality, the substance, the force; as my instinct
felt. I tore her up -- the incubus! I held her on high -- the goblin! I shook
her loose -- the mystery! And down she fell -- down all around me -- down in
shreds and fragments -- and I trod upon her.
Here again -- behold the branchless tree, the unstabled Rosinante; the film
of cloud, the flicker of moonshine. The long nun proved a long bolster dressed
in a long black stole, and artfully invested with a white veil. The garments in
very truth, strange as it may seem, were genuine nun's garments, and by some
hand they had been disposed with a view to illusion. Whence came these
vestments? Who contrived this artifice? These questions still remained. To the
head-bandage was pinned a slip of paper: it bore in pencil these mocking words:
--
'The nun of the attic bequeaths to Lucy Snowe her wardrobe. She will be seen
in the Rue Fossette no more.'
And what and who was she that had haunted me? She, I had actually seen three
times? Not a woman of my acquaintance had the stature of that ghost. She was not
of female height. Not to any man I knew could the machination, for a moment, be
attributed.
Still mystified, beyond expression, but as thoroughly, as suddenly, relieved
from all sense of the spectral and unearthly; scorning also to wear out my brain
with the fret of a trivial though insoluble riddle, I just bundled together
stole, veil, and bandages, thrust them beneath my pillow, lay down, listened
till I heard the wheels of Madame's home-returning fiacre, then turned, and worn
out by many nights' vigils, conquered, too, perhaps, by the now reacting
narcotic, I deeply slept.