Four Short Stories By Emile Zola. Emile Zola

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Four Short Stories By Emile Zola - Emile Zola

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      “Ought not Monsieur Fauchery to come and lunch with us one of these days, Auguste?” said Rose Mignon.

      Mignon, who was toying with his watch chain, eyed the journalist for a second or two with his severe glance. Rose was out of her senses. As became a good manager, he would put a stop to such spendthrift courses. In return for a notice, well and good, but afterward, decidedly not. Nevertheless, as he was fully aware of his wife's wrongheadedness and as he made it a rule to wink paternally at a folly now and again, when such was necessary, he answered amiably enough:

      “Certainly, I shall be most happy. Pray come tomorrow, Monsieur Fauchery.”

      Lucy Stewart heard this invitation given while she was talking with Steiner and Blanche and, raising her voice, she remarked to the banker:

      “It's a mania they've all of them got. One of them even went so far as to steal my dog. Now, dear boy, am I to blame if you chuck her?”

      Rose turned round. She was very pale and gazed fixedly at Steiner as she sipped her coffee. And then all the concentrated anger she felt at his abandonment of her flamed out in her eyes. She saw more clearly than Mignon; it was stupid in him to have wished to begin the Jonquier ruse a second time—those dodgers never succeeded twice running. Well, so much the worse for him! She would have Fauchery! She had been getting enamored of him since the beginning of supper, and if Mignon was not pleased it would teach him greater wisdom!

      “You are not going to fight?” said Vandeuvres, coming over to Lucy Stewart.

      “No, don't be afraid of that! Only she must mind and keep quiet, or I let the cat out of the bag!”

      Then signing imperiously to Fauchery:

      “I've got your slippers at home, my little man. I'll get them taken to your porter's lodge for you tomorrow.”

      He wanted to joke about it, but she swept off, looking like a queen. Clarisse, who had propped herself against a wall in order to drink a quiet glass of kirsch, was seen to shrug her shoulders. A pleasant business for a man! Wasn't it true that the moment two women were together in the presence of their lovers their first idea was to do one another out of them? It was a law of nature! As to herself, why, in heaven's name, if she had wanted to she would have torn out Gaga's eyes on Hector's account! But la, she despised him! Then as La Faloise passed by, she contented herself by remarking to him:

      “Listen, my friend, you like 'em well advanced, you do! You don't want 'em ripe; you want 'em mildewed!”

      La Faloise seemed much annoyed and not a little anxious. Seeing Clarisse making game of him, he grew suspicious of her.

      “No humbug, I say,” he muttered. “You've taken my handkerchief. Well then, give it back!”

      “He's dreeing us with that handkerchief of his!” she cried. “Why, you ass, why should I have taken it from you?”

      “Why should you?” he said suspiciously. “Why, that you may send it to my people and compromise me.”

      In the meantime Foucarmont was diligently attacking the liqueurs. He continued to gaze sneeringly at Labordette, who was drinking his coffee in the midst of the ladies. And occasionally he gave vent to fragmentary assertions, as thus: “He's the son of a horse dealer; some say the illegitimate child of a countess. Never a penny of income, yet always got twenty-five louis in his pocket! Footboy to the ladies of the town! A big lubber, who never goes with any of 'em! Never, never, never!” he repeated, growing furious. “No, by Jove! I must box his ears.”

      He drained a glass of chartreuse. The chartreuse had not the slightest effect upon him; it didn't affect him “even to that extent,” and he clicked his thumbnail against the edge of his teeth. But suddenly, just as he was advancing upon Labordette, he grew ashy white and fell down in a heap in front of the sideboard. He was dead drunk. Louise Violaine was beside herself. She had been quite right to prophesy that matters would end badly, and now she would have her work cut out for the remainder of the night. Gaga reassured her. She examined the officer with the eye of a woman of experience and declared that there was nothing much the matter and that the gentleman would sleep like that for at least a dozen or fifteen hours without any serious consequences. Foucarmont was carried off.

      “Well, where's Nana gone to?” asked Vandeuvres.

      Yes, she had certainly flown away somewhere on leaving the table. The company suddenly recollected her, and everybody asked for her. Steiner, who for some seconds had been uneasy on her account, asked Vandeuvres about the old gentleman, for he, too, had disappeared. But the count reassured him—he had just brought the old gentleman back. He was a stranger, whose name it was useless to mention. Suffice it to say that he was a very rich man who was quite pleased to pay for suppers! Then as Nana was once more being forgotten, Vandeuvres saw Daguenet looking out of an open door and beckoning to him. And in the bedroom he found the mistress of the house sitting up, white-lipped and rigid, while Daguenet and Georges stood gazing at her with an alarmed expression.

      “What IS the matter with you?” he asked in some surprise.

      She neither answered nor turned her head, and he repeated his question.

      “Why, this is what's the matter with me,” she cried out at length; “I won't let them make bloody sport of me!”

      Thereupon she gave vent to any expression that occurred to her. Yes, oh yes, SHE wasn't a ninny—she could see clearly enough. They had been making devilish light of her during supper and saying all sorts of frightful things to show that they thought nothing of her! A pack of sluts who weren't fit to black her boots! Catch her bothering herself again just to be badgered for it after! She really didn't know what kept her from chucking all that dirty lot out of the house! And with this, rage choked her and her voice broke down in sobs.

      “Come, come, my lass, you're drunk,” said Vandeuvres, growing familiar. “You must be reasonable.”

      No, she would give her refusal now; she would stay where she was.

      “I am drunk—it's quite likely! But I want people to respect me!”

      For a quarter of an hour past Daguenet and Georges had been vainly beseeching her to return to the drawing room. She was obstinate, however; her guests might do what they liked; she despised them too much to come back among them.

      No, she never would, never. They might tear her in pieces before she would leave her room!

      “I ought to have had my suspicions,” she resumed.

      “It's that cat of a Rose who's got the plot up! I'm certain Rose'll have stopped that respectable woman coming whom I was expecting tonight.”

      She referred to Mme. Robert. Vandeuvres gave her his word of honor that Mme. Robert had given a spontaneous refusal. He listened and he argued with much gravity, for he was well accustomed to similar scenes and knew how women in such a state ought to be treated. But the moment he tried to take hold of her hands in order to lift her up from her chair and draw her away with him she struggled free of his clasp, and her wrath redoubled. Now, just look at that! They would never get her to believe that Fauchery had not put the Count Muffat off coming! A regular snake was that Fauchery, an envious sort, a fellow capable of growing mad against a woman and of destroying her whole happiness. For she knew this—the count had become madly devoted to her! She could have had him!

      “Him,

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