The Lerouge Case by Emile Gaboriau (the dot read aloud .txt) ๐
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- Author: Emile Gaboriau
Read book online ยซThe Lerouge Case by Emile Gaboriau (the dot read aloud .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Emile Gaboriau
Above her head was placed a little vessel, filled with ice water, which fell drop by drop upon her forehead, covered with large bluish spots. The table and mantel-piece were covered with little pots, medicine bottles, and half-emptied glasses. At the foot of the bed, a piece of rag stained with blood showed that the doctor had just had recourse to leeches.
Near the fireplace, where was blazing a large fire, a nun of the order of St. Vincent de Paul was kneeling, watching a saucepan. She was a young woman, with a face whiter than her cap. Her immovably placid features, her mournful look, betokened the renunciation of the flesh, and the abdication of all independence of thought.
Her heavy grey costume hung about her in large ungraceful folds. Every time she moved, her long chaplet of beads of coloured box-wood, loaded with crosses and copper medals, shook and trailed along the floor with a noise like a jingling of chains.
Dr. Herve was seated on a chair opposite the bed, watching, apparently with close attention, the nunโs preparations. He jumped up as Noel entered.
โAt last you are here,โ he said, giving his friend a strong grasp of the hand.
โI was detained at the Palais,โ said the advocate, as if he felt the necessity of explaining his absence; โand I have been, as you may well imagine, dreadfully anxious.โ
He leant towards the doctorโs ear, and in a trembling voice asked: โWell, is she at all better?โ
The doctor shook his head with an air of deep discouragement.
โShe is much worse,โ he replied: โsince morning bad symptoms have succeeded each other with frightful rapidity.โ
He checked himself. The advocate had seized his arm and was pressing it with all his might. Madame Gerdy stirred a little, and a feeble groan escaped her.
โShe heard you,โ murmured Noel.
โI wish it were so,โ said the doctor; โIt would be most encouraging. But I fear you are mistaken. However, we will see.โ He went up to Madame Gerdy, and, whilst feeling her pulse, examined her carefully; then, with the tip of his finger, he lightly raised her eyelid.
The eye appeared dull, glassy, lifeless.
โCome, judge for yourself; take her hand, speak to her.โ
Noel, trembling all over, did as his friend wished. He drew near, and, leaning over the bed, so that his mouth almost touched the sick womanโs ear, he murmured: โMother, it is I, Noel, your own Noel. Speak to me, make some sign, do you hear me, mother?โ
It was in vain; she retained her frightful immobility. Not a sign of intelligence crossed her features.
โYou see,โ said the doctor, โI told you the truth.โ
โPoor woman!โ sighed Noel, โdoes she suffer?โ
โNot at present.โ
The nun now rose; and she too came beside the bed.
โDoctor,โ said she: โall is ready.โ
โThen call the servant, sister, to help us. We are going to apply a mustard poultice.โ
The servant hastened in. In the arms of the two women, Madame Gerdy was like a corpse, whom they were dressing for the last time. She was as rigid as though she were dead. She must have suffered much and long, poor woman, for it was pitiable to see how thin she was. The nun herself was affected, although she had become habituated to the sight of suffering. How many invalids had breathed their last in her arms during the fifteen years that she had gone from pillow to pillow!
Noel, during this time, had retired into the window recess, and pressed his burning brow against the panes.
Of what was he thinking, while she who had given him so many proofs of maternal tenderness and devotion was dying a few paces from him? Did he regret her? was he not thinking rather of the grand and magnificent existence which awaited him on the other side of the river, at the Faubourg St. Germain? He turned abruptly round on hearing his friendโs voice.
โIt is done,โ said the doctor; โwe have only now to wait the effect of the mustard. If she feels it, it will be a good sign; if it has no effect, we will try cupping.โ
โAnd if that does not succeed?โ
The doctor answered only with a shrug of the shoulders, which showed his inability to do more.
โI understand your silence, Herve,โ murmured Noel. โAlas! you told me last night she was lost.โ
โScientifically, yes; but I do not yet despair. It is hardly a year ago that the father-in-law of one of our comrades recovered from an almost identical attack; and I saw him when he was much worse than this; suppuration had set in.โ
โIt breaks my heart to see her in this state,โ resumed Noel. โMust she die without recovering her reason even for one moment? Will she not recognise me, speak one word to me?โ
โWho knows? This disease, my poor friend, baffles all foresight. Each moment, the aspect may change, according as the inflammation affects such or such a part of the brain. She is now in a state of utter insensibility, of complete prostration of all her intellectual faculties, of coma, of paralysis so to say; to-morrow, she may be seized with convulsions, accompanied with a fierce delirium.โ
โAnd will she speak then?โ
โCertainly; but that will neither modify the nature nor the gravity of the disease.โ
โAnd will she recover her reason?โ
โPerhaps,โ answered the doctor, looking fixedly at his friend; โbut why do you ask that?โ
โAh, my dear Herve, one word from Madame Gerdy, only one, would be of such use to me!โ
โFor your affair, eh! Well, I can tell you nothing, can promise you nothing. You have as many chances in your favour as against you; only, do not leave her. If her intelligence returns, it will be only momentary, try and profit by it. But I must go,โ added the doctor; โI have still three calls to make.โ
Noel followed his friend. When they reached the landing, he asked: โYou will return?โ
โThis evening, at nine. There will be no need of me till then. All depends upon the watcher. But I have chosen a pearl. I know her well.โ
โIt was you, then, who brought this nun?โ
โYes, and without your permission. Are you displeased?โ
โNot the least in the world. Only I confessโโ
โWhat! you make a grimace. Do your political opinions forbid your having your mother, I should say
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