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who was

the last to remain.

 

She went away; she shut the door. Nana was left alone with upturned

face in the light cast by the candle. She was fruit of the charnel

house, a heap of matter and blood, a shovelful of corrupted flesh

thrown down on the pillow. The pustules had invaded the whole of

the face, so that each touched its neighbor. Fading and sunken,

they had assumed the grayish hue of mud; and on that formless pulp,

where the features had ceased to be traceable, they already

resembled some decaying damp from the grave. One eye, the left eye,

had completely foundered among bubbling purulence, and the other,

which remained half open, looked like a deep, black, ruinous hole.

The nose was still suppurating. Quite a reddish crush was peeling

from one of the cheeks and invading the mouth, which it distorted

into a horrible grin. And over this loathsome and grotesque mask of

death the hair, the beautiful hair, still blazed like sunlight and

flowed downward in rippling gold. Venus was rotting. It seemed as

though the poison she had assimilated in the gutters and on the

carrion tolerated by the roadside, the leaven with which she had

poisoned a whole people, had but now remounted to her face and

turned it to corruption.

 

The room was empty. A great despairing breath came up from the

boulevard and swelled the curtain.

 

“A BERLIN! A BERLIN! A BERLIN!”

 

THE MILLER’S DAUGHTER

CHAPTER I

THE BETROTHAL

 

Pere Merlier’s mill, one beautiful summer evening, was arranged for

a grand fete. In the courtyard were three tables, placed end to

end, which awaited the guests. Everyone knew that Francoise,

Merlier’s daughter, was that night to be betrothed to Dominique, a

young man who was accused of idleness but whom the fair sex for

three leagues around gazed at with sparkling eyes, such a fine

appearance had he.

 

Pere Merlier’s mill was pleasing to look upon. It stood exactly in

the center of Rocreuse, where the highway made an elbow. The

village had but one street, with two rows of huts, a row on each

side of the road; but at the elbow meadows spread out, and huge

trees which lined the banks of the Morelle covered the extremity of

the valley with lordly shade. There was not, in all Lorraine, a

corner of nature more adorable. To the right and to the left thick

woods, centenarian forests, towered up from gentle slopes, filling

the horizon with a sea of verdure, while toward the south the plain

stretched away, of marvelous fertility, displaying as far as the eye

could reach patches of ground divided by green hedges. But what

constituted the special charm of Rocreuse was the coolness of that

cut of verdure in the most sultry days of July and August. The

Morelle descended from the forests of Gagny and seemed to have

gathered the cold from the foliage beneath which it flowed for

leagues; it brought with it the murmuring sounds, the icy and

concentrated shade of the woods. And it was not the sole source of

coolness: all sorts of flowing streams gurgled through the forest;

at each step springs bubbled up; one felt, on following the narrow

pathways, that there must exist subterranean lakes which pierced

through beneath the moss and availed themselves of the smallest

crevices at the feet of trees or between the rocks to burst forth in

crystalline fountains. The whispering voices of these brooks were

so numerous and so loud that they drowned the song of the

bullfinches. It was like some enchanted park with cascades falling

from every portion.

 

Below the meadows were damp. Gigantic chestnut trees cast dark

shadows. On the borders of the meadows long hedges of poplars

exhibited in lines their rustling branches. Two avenues of enormous

plane trees stretched across the fields toward the ancient Chateau

de Gagny, then a mass of ruins. In this constantly watered district

the grass grew to an extraordinary height. It resembled a garden

between two wooded hills, a natural garden, of which the meadows

were the lawns, the giant trees marking the colossal flower beds.

When the sun’s rays at noon poured straight downward the shadows

assumed a bluish tint; scorched grass slept in the heat, while an

icy shiver passed beneath the foliage.

 

And there it was that Pere Merlier’s mill enlivened with its

ticktack a corner of wild verdure. The structure, built of plaster

and planks, seemed as old as the world. It dipped partially in the

Morelle, which rounded at that point into a transparent basin. A

sluice had been made, and the water fell from a height of several

meters upon the mill wheel, which cracked as it turned, with the

asthmatic cough of a faithful servant grown old in the house. When

Pere Merlier was advised to change it he shook his head, saying that

a new wheel would be lazier and would not so well understand the

work, and he mended the old one with whatever he could put his hands

on: cask staves, rusty iron, zinc and lead. The wheel appeared

gayer than ever for it, with its profile grown odd, all plumed with

grass and moss. When the water beat upon it with its silvery flood

it was covered with pearls; its strange carcass wore a sparkling

attire of necklaces of mother-of-pearl.

 

The part of the mill which dipped in the Morelle had the air of a

barbaric arch stranded there. A full half of the structure was

built on piles. The water flowed beneath the floor, and deep places

were there, renowned throughout the district for the enormous eels

and crayfish caught in them. Below the fall the basin was as clear

as a mirror, and when the wheel did not cover it with foam schools

of huge fish could be seen swimming with the slowness of a squadron.

Broken steps led down to the river near a stake to which a boat was

moored. A wooden gallery passed above the wheel. Windows opened,

pierced irregularly. It was a pell-mell of corners, of little

walls, of constructions added too late, of beams and of roofs, which

gave the mill the aspect of an old, dismantled citadel. But ivy had

grown; all sorts of clinging plants stopped the too-wide chinks and

threw a green cloak over the ancient building. The young ladies who

passed by sketched Pere Merlier’s mill in their albums.

 

On the side facing the highway the structure was more solid. A

stone gateway opened upon the wide courtyard, which was bordered to

the right and to the left by sheds and stables. Beside a well an

immense elm covered half the courtyard with its shadow. In the

background the building displayed the four windows of its second

story, surmounted by a pigeon house. Pere Merlier’s sole vanity was

to have this front plastered every ten years. It had just received

a new coating and dazzled the village when the sun shone on it at

noon.

 

For twenty years Pere Merlier had been mayor of Rocreuse. He was

esteemed for the fortune he had acquired. His wealth was estimated

at something like eighty thousand francs, amassed sou by sou. When

he married Madeleine Guillard, who brought him the mill as her

dowry, he possessed only his two arms. But Madeleine never repented

of her choice, so briskly did he manage the business. Now his wife

was dead, and he remained a widower with his daughter Francoise.

Certainly he might have rested, allowed the mill wheel to slumber in

the moss, but that would have been too dull for him, and in his eyes

the building would have seemed dead. He toiled on for pleasure.

 

Pere Merlier was a tall old man with a long, still face, who never

laughed but who possessed, notwithstanding, a very gay heart. He

had been chosen mayor because of his money and also on account of

the imposing air he could assume during a marriage ceremony.

 

Francoise Merlier was just eighteen. She did not pass for one of

the handsome girls of the district, as she was not robust. Up to

her fifteenth year she had been even ugly.

 

The Rocreuse people had not been able to understand why the daughter

of Pere and Mere Merlier, both of whom had always enjoyed excellent

health, grew ill and with an air of regret. But at fifteen, though

yet delicate, her little face became one of the prettiest in the

world. She had black hair, black eyes, and was as rosy as a peach;

her lips constantly wore a smile; there were dimples in her cheeks,

and her fair forehead seemed crowned with sunlight. Although not

considered robust in the district, she was far from thin; the idea

was simply that she could not lift a sack of grain, but she would

become plump as she grew older—she would eventually be as round and

dainty as a quail. Her father’s long periods of silence had made

her thoughtful very young. If she smiled constantly it was to

please others. By nature she was serious.

 

Of course all the young men of the district paid court to her, more

on account of her ecus than her pretty ways. At last she made a

choice which scandalized the community.

 

On the opposite bank of the Morelle lived a tall youth named

Dominique Penquer. He did not belong to Rocreuse. Ten years before

he had arrived from Belgium as the heir of his uncle, who had left

him a small property upon the very border of the forest of Gagny,

just opposite the mill, a few gunshots distant. He had come to sell

this property, he said, and return home. But the district charmed

him, it appeared, for he did not quit it. He was seen cultivating

his little field, gathering a few vegetables upon which he

subsisted. He fished and hunted; many times the forest guards

nearly caught him and were on the point of drawing up proces-verbaux

against him. This free existence, the resources of which the

peasants could not clearly discover, at length gave him a bad

reputation. He was vaguely styled a poacher. At any rate, he was

lazy, for he was often found asleep on the grass when he should have

been at work. The hut he inhabited beneath the last trees on the

edge of the forest did not seem at all like the dwelling of an

honest young fellow. If he had had dealings with the wolves of the

ruins of Gagny the old women would not have been the least bit

surprised. Nevertheless, the young girls sometimes risked defending

him, for this doubtful man was superb; supple and tall as a poplar,

he had a very white skin, with flaxen hair and beard which gleamed

like gold in the sun.

 

One fine morning Francoise declared to Pere Merlier that she loved

Dominique and would never wed any other man.

 

It may well be imagined what a blow this was to Pere Merlier. He

said nothing, according to his custom, but his face grew thoughtful

and his internal gaiety no longer sparkled in his eyes. He looked

gruff for a week. Francoise also was exceedingly grave. What

tormented Pere Merlier was to find out how this rogue of a poacher

had managed to fascinate his daughter. Dominique had never visited

the mill. The miller watched and saw the gallant on the other side

of the Morelle, stretched out upon the grass and feigning to be

asleep. Francoise could see him from her chamber window.

Everything was plain: they had fallen in love by casting sheep’s

eyes at each other over the mill wheel.

 

Another week went by. Francoise became more and more grave. Pere

Merlier still said nothing. Then one evening he

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