<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter Six </h2>
<p>During the journeys he made to see her, Leon had often dined at the
chemist's, and he felt obliged from politeness to invite him in turn.</p>
<p>"With pleasure!" Monsieur Homais replied; "besides, I must invigorate my
mind, for I am getting rusty here. We'll go to the theatre, to the
restaurant; we'll make a night of it."</p>
<p>"Oh, my dear!" tenderly murmured Madame Homais, alarmed at the vague
perils he was preparing to brave.</p>
<p>"Well, what? Do you think I'm not sufficiently ruining my health living
here amid the continual emanations of the pharmacy? But there! that is the
way with women! They are jealous of science, and then are opposed to our
taking the most legitimate distractions. No matter! Count upon me. One of
these days I shall turn up at Rouen, and we'll go the pace together."</p>
<p>The druggist would formerly have taken good care not to use such an
expression, but he was cultivating a gay Parisian style, which he thought
in the best taste; and, like his neighbour, Madame Bovary, he questioned
the clerk curiously about the customs of the capital; he even talked slang
to dazzle the bourgeois, saying bender, crummy, dandy, macaroni, the
cheese, cut my stick and "I'll hook it," for "I am going."</p>
<p>So one Thursday Emma was surprised to meet Monsieur Homais in the kitchen
of the "Lion d'Or," wearing a traveller's costume, that is to say, wrapped
in an old cloak which no one knew he had, while he carried a valise in one
hand and the foot-warmer of his establishment in the other. He had
confided his intentions to no one, for fear of causing the public anxiety
by his absence.</p>
<p>The idea of seeing again the place where his youth had been spent no doubt
excited him, for during the whole journey he never ceased talking, and as
soon as he had arrived, he jumped quickly out of the diligence to go in
search of Leon. In vain the clerk tried to get rid of him. Monsieur Homais
dragged him off to the large Cafe de la Normandie, which he entered
majestically, not raising his hat, thinking it very provincial to uncover
in any public place.</p>
<p>Emma waited for Leon three quarters of an hour. At last she ran to his
office; and, lost in all sorts of conjectures, accusing him of
indifference, and reproaching herself for her weakness, she spent the
afternoon, her face pressed against the window-panes.</p>
<p>At two o'clock they were still at a table opposite each other. The large
room was emptying; the stove-pipe, in the shape of a palm-tree, spread its
gilt leaves over the white ceiling, and near them, outside the window, in
the bright sunshine, a little fountain gurgled in a white basin, where; in
the midst of watercress and asparagus, three torpid lobsters stretched
across to some quails that lay heaped up in a pile on their sides.</p>
<p>Homais was enjoying himself. Although he was even more intoxicated with
the luxury than the rich fare, the Pommard wine all the same rather
excited his faculties; and when the omelette au rhum* appeared, he began
propounding immoral theories about women. What seduced him above all else
was chic. He admired an elegant toilette in a well-furnished apartment,
and as to bodily qualities, he didn't dislike a young girl.</p>
<p>* In rum.<br/></p>
<p>Leon watched the clock in despair. The druggist went on drinking, eating,
and talking.</p>
<p>"You must be very lonely," he said suddenly, "here at Rouen. To be sure
your lady-love doesn't live far away."</p>
<p>And the other blushed—</p>
<p>"Come now, be frank. Can you deny that at Yonville—"</p>
<p>The young man stammered something.</p>
<p>"At Madame Bovary's, you're not making love to—"</p>
<p>"To whom?"</p>
<p>"The servant!"</p>
<p>He was not joking; but vanity getting the better of all prudence, Leon, in
spite of himself protested. Besides, he only liked dark women.</p>
<p>"I approve of that," said the chemist; "they have more passion."</p>
<p>And whispering into his friend's ear, he pointed out the symptoms by which
one could find out if a woman had passion. He even launched into an
ethnographic digression: the German was vapourish, the French woman
licentious, the Italian passionate.</p>
<p>"And negresses?" asked the clerk.</p>
<p>"They are an artistic taste!" said Homais. "Waiter! two cups of coffee!"</p>
<p>"Are we going?" at last asked Leon impatiently.</p>
<p>"Ja!"</p>
<p>But before leaving he wanted to see the proprietor of the establishment
and made him a few compliments. Then the young man, to be alone, alleged
he had some business engagement.</p>
<p>"Ah! I will escort you," said Homais.</p>
<p>And all the while he was walking through the streets with him he talked of
his wife, his children; of their future, and of his business; told him in
what a decayed condition it had formerly been, and to what a degree of
perfection he had raised it.</p>
<p>Arrived in front of the Hotel de Boulogne, Leon left him abruptly, ran up
the stairs, and found his mistress in great excitement. At mention of the
chemist she flew into a passion. He, however, piled up good reasons; it
wasn't his fault; didn't she know Homais—did she believe that he
would prefer his company? But she turned away; he drew her back, and,
sinking on his knees, clasped her waist with his arms in a languorous
pose, full of concupiscence and supplication.</p>
<p>She was standing up, her large flashing eyes looked at him seriously,
almost terribly. Then tears obscured them, her red eyelids were lowered,
she gave him her hands, and Leon was pressing them to his lips when a
servant appeared to tell the gentleman that he was wanted.</p>
<p>"You will come back?" she said.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"But when?"</p>
<p>"Immediately."</p>
<p>"It's a trick," said the chemist, when he saw Leon. "I wanted to interrupt
this visit, that seemed to me to annoy you. Let's go and have a glass of
garus at Bridoux'."</p>
<p>Leon vowed that he must get back to his office. Then the druggist joked
him about quill-drivers and the law.</p>
<p>"Leave Cujas and Barthole alone a bit. Who the devil prevents you? Be a
man! Let's go to Bridoux'. You'll see his dog. It's very interesting."</p>
<p>And as the clerk still insisted—</p>
<p>"I'll go with you. I'll read a paper while I wait for you, or turn over
the leaves of a 'Code.'"</p>
<p>Leon, bewildered by Emma's anger, Monsieur Homais' chatter, and, perhaps,
by the heaviness of the luncheon, was undecided, and, as it were,
fascinated by the chemist, who kept repeating—</p>
<p>"Let's go to Bridoux'. It's just by here, in the Rue Malpalu."</p>
<p>Then, through cowardice, through stupidity, through that indefinable
feeling that drags us into the most distasteful acts, he allowed himself
to be led off to Bridoux', whom they found in his small yard,
superintending three workmen, who panted as they turned the large wheel of
a machine for making seltzer-water. Homais gave them some good advice. He
embraced Bridoux; they took some garus. Twenty times Leon tried to escape,
but the other seized him by the arm saying—</p>
<p>"Presently! I'm coming! We'll go to the 'Fanal de Rouen' to see the
fellows there. I'll introduce you to Thornassin."</p>
<p>At last he managed to get rid of him, and rushed straight to the hotel.
Emma was no longer there. She had just gone in a fit of anger. She
detested him now. This failing to keep their rendezvous seemed to her an
insult, and she tried to rake up other reasons to separate herself from
him. He was incapable of heroism, weak, banal, more spiritless than a
woman, avaricious too, and cowardly.</p>
<p>Then, growing calmer, she at length discovered that she had, no doubt,
calumniated him. But the disparaging of those we love always alienates us
from them to some extent. We must not touch our idols; the gilt sticks to
our fingers.</p>
<p>They gradually came to talking more frequently of matters outside their
love, and in the letters that Emma wrote him she spoke of flowers, verses,
the moon and the stars, naive resources of a waning passion striving to
keep itself alive by all external aids. She was constantly promising
herself a profound felicity on her next journey. Then she confessed to
herself that she felt nothing extraordinary. This disappointment quickly
gave way to a new hope, and Emma returned to him more inflamed, more eager
than ever. She undressed brutally, tearing off the thin laces of her
corset that nestled around her hips like a gliding snake. She went on
tiptoe, barefooted, to see once more that the door was closed, then, pale,
serious, and, without speaking, with one movement, she threw herself upon
his breast with a long shudder.</p>
<p>Yet there was upon that brow covered with cold drops, on those quivering
lips, in those wild eyes, in the strain of those arms, something vague and
dreary that seemed to Leon to glide between them subtly as if to separate
them.</p>
<p>He did not dare to question her; but, seeing her so skilled, she must have
passed, he thought, through every experience of suffering and of pleasure.
What had once charmed now frightened him a little. Besides, he rebelled
against his absorption, daily more marked, by her personality. He
begrudged Emma this constant victory. He even strove not to love her;
then, when he heard the creaking of her boots, he turned coward, like
drunkards at the sight of strong drinks.</p>
<p>She did not fail, in truth, to lavish all sorts of attentions upon him,
from the delicacies of food to the coquettries of dress and languishing
looks. She brought roses to her breast from Yonville, which she threw into
his face; was anxious about his health, gave him advice as to his conduct;
and, in order the more surely to keep her hold on him, hoping perhaps that
heaven would take her part, she tied a medal of the Virgin round his neck.
She inquired like a virtuous mother about his companions. She said to him—</p>
<p>"Don't see them; don't go out; think only of ourselves; love me!"</p>
<p>She would have liked to be able to watch over his life; and the idea
occurred to her of having him followed in the streets. Near the hotel
there was always a kind of loafer who accosted travellers, and who would
not refuse. But her pride revolted at this.</p>
<p>"Bah! so much the worse. Let him deceive me! What does it matter to me? As
If I cared for him!"</p>
<p>One day, when they had parted early and she was returning alone along the
boulevard, she saw the walls of her convent; then she sat down on a form
in the shade of the elm-trees. How calm that time had been! How she longed
for the ineffable sentiments of love that she had tried to figure to
herself out of books! The first month of her marriage, her rides in the
wood, the viscount that waltzed, and Lagardy singing, all repassed before
her eyes. And Leon suddenly appeared to her as far off as the others.</p>
<p>"Yet I love him," she said to herself.</p>
<p>No matter! She was not happy—she never had been. Whence came this
insufficiency in life—this instantaneous turning to decay of
everything on which she leant? But if there were somewhere a being strong
and beautiful, a valiant nature, full at once of exaltation and
refinement, a poet's heart in an angel's form, a lyre with sounding chords
ringing out elegiac epithalamia to heaven, why, perchance, should she not
find him? Ah! how impossible! Besides, nothing was worth the trouble of
seeking it; everything was a lie. Every smile hid a yawn of boredom, every
joy a curse, all pleasure satiety, and the sweetest kisses left upon your
lips only the unattainable desire for a greater delight.</p>
<p>A metallic clang droned through the air, and four strokes were heard from
the convent-clock. Four o'clock! And it seemed to her that she had been
there on that form an eternity. But an infinity of passions may be
contained in a minute, like a crowd in a small space.</p>
<p>Emma lived all absorbed in hers, and troubled no more about money matters
than an archduchess.</p>
<p>Once, however, a wretched-looking man, rubicund and bald, came to her
house, saying he had been sent by Monsieur Vincart of Rouen. He took out
the pins that held together the side-pockets of his long green overcoat,
stuck them into his sleeve, and politely handed her a paper.</p>
<p>It was a bill for seven hundred francs, signed by her, and which Lheureux,
in spite of all his professions, had paid away to Vincart. She sent her
servant for him. He could not come. Then the stranger, who had remained
standing, casting right and left curious glances, that his thick, fair
eyebrows hid, asked with a naive air—</p>
<p>"What answer am I to take Monsieur Vincart?"</p>
<p>"Oh," said Emma, "tell him that I haven't it. I will send next week; he
must wait; yes, till next week."</p>
<p>And the fellow went without another word.</p>
<p>But the next day at twelve o'clock she received a summons, and the sight
of the stamped paper, on which appeared several times in large letters,
"Maitre Hareng, bailiff at Buchy," so frightened her that she rushed in
hot haste to the linendraper's. She found him in his shop, doing up a
parcel.</p>
<p>"Your obedient!" he said; "I am at your service."</p>
<p>But Lheureux, all the same, went on with his work, helped by a young girl
of about thirteen, somewhat hunch-backed, who was at once his clerk and
his servant.</p>
<p>Then, his clogs clattering on the shop-boards, he went up in front of
Madame Bovary to the first door, and introduced her into a narrow closet,
where, in a large bureau in sapon-wood, lay some ledgers, protected by a
horizontal padlocked iron bar. Against the wall, under some remnants of
calico, one glimpsed a safe, but of such dimensions that it must contain
something besides bills and money. Monsieur Lheureux, in fact, went in for
pawnbroking, and it was there that he had put Madame Bovary's gold chain,
together with the earrings of poor old Tellier, who, at last forced to
sell out, had bought a meagre store of grocery at Quincampoix, where he
was dying of catarrh amongst his candles, that were less yellow than his
face.</p>
<p>Lheureux sat down in a large cane arm-chair, saying: "What news?"</p>
<p>"See!"</p>
<p>And she showed him the paper.</p>
<p>"Well how can I help it?"</p>
<p>Then she grew angry, reminding him of the promise he had given not to pay
away her bills. He acknowledged it.</p>
<p>"But I was pressed myself; the knife was at my own throat."</p>
<p>"And what will happen now?" she went on.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's very simple; a judgment and then a distraint—that's about
it!"</p>
<p>Emma kept down a desire to strike him, and asked gently if there was no
way of quieting Monsieur Vincart.</p>
<p>"I dare say! Quiet Vincart! You don't know him; he's more ferocious than
an Arab!"</p>
<p>Still Monsieur Lheureux must interfere.</p>
<p>"Well, listen. It seems to me so far I've been very good to you." And
opening one of his ledgers, "See," he said. Then running up the page with
his finger, "Let's see! let's see! August 3d, two hundred francs; June
17th, a hundred and fifty; March 23d, forty-six. In April—"</p>
<p>He stopped, as if afraid of making some mistake.</p>
<p>"Not to speak of the bills signed by Monsieur Bovary, one for seven
hundred francs, and another for three hundred. As to your little
installments, with the interest, why, there's no end to 'em; one gets
quite muddled over 'em. I'll have nothing more to do with it."</p>
<p>She wept; she even called him "her good Monsieur Lheureux." But he always
fell back upon "that rascal Vincart." Besides, he hadn't a brass farthing;
no one was paying him now-a-days; they were eating his coat off his back;
a poor shopkeeper like him couldn't advance money.</p>
<p>Emma was silent, and Monsieur Lheureux, who was biting the feathers of a
quill, no doubt became uneasy at her silence, for he went on—</p>
<p>"Unless one of these days I have something coming in, I might—"</p>
<p>"Besides," said she, "as soon as the balance of Barneville—"</p>
<p>"What!"</p>
<p>And on hearing that Langlois had not yet paid he seemed much surprised.
Then in a honied voice—</p>
<p>"And we agree, you say?"</p>
<p>"Oh! to anything you like."</p>
<p>On this he closed his eyes to reflect, wrote down a few figures, and
declaring it would be very difficult for him, that the affair was shady,
and that he was being bled, he wrote out four bills for two hundred and
fifty francs each, to fall due month by month.</p>
<p>"Provided that Vincart will listen to me! However, it's settled. I don't
play the fool; I'm straight enough."</p>
<p>Next he carelessly showed her several new goods, not one of which,
however, was in his opinion worthy of madame.</p>
<p>"When I think that there's a dress at threepence-halfpenny a yard, and
warranted fast colours! And yet they actually swallow it! Of course you
understand one doesn't tell them what it really is!" He hoped by this
confession of dishonesty to others to quite convince her of his probity to
her.</p>
<p>Then he called her back to show her three yards of guipure that he had
lately picked up "at a sale."</p>
<p>"Isn't it lovely?" said Lheureux. "It is very much used now for the backs
of arm-chairs. It's quite the rage."</p>
<p>And, more ready than a juggler, he wrapped up the guipure in some blue
paper and put it in Emma's hands.</p>
<p>"But at least let me know—"</p>
<p>"Yes, another time," he replied, turning on his heel.</p>
<p>That same evening she urged Bovary to write to his mother, to ask her to
send as quickly as possible the whole of the balance due from the father's
estate. The mother-in-law replied that she had nothing more, the winding
up was over, and there was due to them besides Barneville an income of six
hundred francs, that she would pay them punctually.</p>
<p>Then Madame Bovary sent in accounts to two or three patients, and she made
large use of this method, which was very successful. She was always
careful to add a postscript: "Do not mention this to my husband; you know
how proud he is. Excuse me. Yours obediently." There were some complaints;
she intercepted them.</p>
<p>To get money she began selling her old gloves, her old hats, the old odds
and ends, and she bargained rapaciously, her peasant blood standing her in
good stead. Then on her journey to town she picked up nick-nacks
secondhand, that, in default of anyone else, Monsieur Lheureux would
certainly take off her hands. She bought ostrich feathers, Chinese
porcelain, and trunks; she borrowed from Felicite, from Madame Lefrancois,
from the landlady at the Croix-Rouge, from everybody, no matter where.</p>
<p>With the money she at last received from Barneville she paid two bills;
the other fifteen hundred francs fell due. She renewed the bills, and thus
it was continually.</p>
<p>Sometimes, it is true, she tried to make a calculation, but she discovered
things so exorbitant that she could not believe them possible. Then she
recommenced, soon got confused, gave it all up, and thought no more about
it.</p>
<p>The house was very dreary now. Tradesmen were seen leaving it with angry
faces. Handkerchiefs were lying about on the stoves, and little Berthe, to
the great scandal of Madame Homais, wore stockings with holes in them. If
Charles timidly ventured a remark, she answered roughly that it wasn't her
fault.</p>
<p>What was the meaning of all these fits of temper? He explained everything
through her old nervous illness, and reproaching himself with having taken
her infirmities for faults, accused himself of egotism, and longed to go
and take her in his arms.</p>
<p>"Ah, no!" he said to himself; "I should worry her."</p>
<p>And he did not stir.</p>
<p>After dinner he walked about alone in the garden; he took little Berthe on
his knees, and unfolding his medical journal, tried to teach her to read.
But the child, who never had any lessons, soon looked up with large, sad
eyes and began to cry. Then he comforted her; went to fetch water in her
can to make rivers on the sand path, or broke off branches from the privet
hedges to plant trees in the beds. This did not spoil the garden much, all
choked now with long weeds. They owed Lestiboudois for so many days. Then
the child grew cold and asked for her mother.</p>
<p>"Call the servant," said Charles. "You know, dearie, that mamma does not
like to be disturbed."</p>
<p>Autumn was setting in, and the leaves were already falling, as they did
two years ago when she was ill. Where would it all end? And he walked up
and down, his hands behind his back.</p>
<p>Madame was in her room, which no one entered. She stayed there all day
long, torpid, half dressed, and from time to time burning Turkish
pastilles which she had bought at Rouen in an Algerian's shop. In order
not to have at night this sleeping man stretched at her side, by dint of
manoeuvring, she at last succeeded in banishing him to the second floor,
while she read till morning extravagant books, full of pictures of orgies
and thrilling situations. Often, seized with fear, she cried out, and
Charles hurried to her.</p>
<p>"Oh, go away!" she would say.</p>
<p>Or at other times, consumed more ardently than ever by that inner flame to
which adultery added fuel, panting, tremulous, all desire, she threw open
her window, breathed in the cold air, shook loose in the wind her masses
of hair, too heavy, and, gazing upon the stars, longed for some princely
love. She thought of him, of Leon. She would then have given anything for
a single one of those meetings that surfeited her.</p>
<p>These were her gala days. She wanted them to be sumptuous, and when he
alone could not pay the expenses, she made up the deficit liberally, which
happened pretty well every time. He tried to make her understand that they
would be quite as comfortable somewhere else, in a smaller hotel, but she
always found some objection.</p>
<p>One day she drew six small silver-gilt spoons from her bag (they were old
Roualt's wedding present), begging him to pawn them at once for her, and
Leon obeyed, though the proceeding annoyed him. He was afraid of
compromising himself.</p>
<p>Then, on, reflection, he began to think his mistress's ways were growing
odd, and that they were perhaps not wrong in wishing to separate him from
her.</p>
<p>In fact someone had sent his mother a long anonymous letter to warn her
that he was "ruining himself with a married woman," and the good lady at
once conjuring up the eternal bugbear of families, the vague pernicious
creature, the siren, the monster, who dwells fantastically in depths of
love, wrote to Lawyer Dubocage, his employer, who behaved perfectly in the
affair. He kept him for three quarters of an hour trying to open his eyes,
to warn him of the abyss into which he was falling. Such an intrigue would
damage him later on, when he set up for himself. He implored him to break
with her, and, if he would not make this sacrifice in his own interest, to
do it at least for his, Dubocage's sake.</p>
<p>At last Leon swore he would not see Emma again, and he reproached himself
with not having kept his word, considering all the worry and lectures this
woman might still draw down upon him, without reckoning the jokes made by
his companions as they sat round the stove in the morning. Besides, he was
soon to be head clerk; it was time to settle down. So he gave up his
flute, exalted sentiments, and poetry; for every bourgeois in the flush of
his youth, were it but for a day, a moment, has believed himself capable
of immense passions, of lofty enterprises. The most mediocre libertine has
dreamed of sultanas; every notary bears within him the debris of a poet.</p>
<p>He was bored now when Emma suddenly began to sob on his breast, and his
heart, like the people who can only stand a certain amount of music, dozed
to the sound of a love whose delicacies he no longer noted.</p>
<p>They knew one another too well for any of those surprises of possession
that increase its joys a hundred-fold. She was as sick of him as he was
weary of her. Emma found again in adultery all the platitudes of marriage.</p>
<p>But how to get rid of him? Then, though she might feel humiliated at the
baseness of such enjoyment, she clung to it from habit or from corruption,
and each day she hungered after them the more, exhausting all felicity in
wishing for too much of it. She accused Leon of her baffled hopes, as if
he had betrayed her; and she even longed for some catastrophe that would
bring about their separation, since she had not the courage to make up her
mind to it herself.</p>
<p>She none the less went on writing him love letters, in virtue of the
notion that a woman must write to her lover.</p>
<p>But whilst she wrote it was another man she saw, a phantom fashioned out
of her most ardent memories, of her finest reading, her strongest lusts,
and at last he became so real, so tangible, that she palpitated wondering,
without, however, the power to imagine him clearly, so lost was he, like a
god, beneath the abundance of his attributes. He dwelt in that azure land
where silk ladders hang from balconies under the breath of flowers, in the
light of the moon. She felt him near her; he was coming, and would carry
her right away in a kiss.</p>
<p>Then she fell back exhausted, for these transports of vague love wearied
her more than great debauchery.</p>
<p>She now felt constant ache all over her. Often she even received
summonses, stamped paper that she barely looked at. She would have liked
not to be alive, or to be always asleep.</p>
<p>On Mid-Lent she did not return to Yonville, but in the evening went to a
masked ball. She wore velvet breeches, red stockings, a club wig, and
three-cornered hat cocked on one side. She danced all night to the wild
tones of the trombones; people gathered round her, and in the morning she
found herself on the steps of the theatre together with five or six masks,
debardeuses* and sailors, Leon's comrades, who were talking about having
supper.</p>
<p>* People dressed as longshoremen.<br/></p>
<p>The neighbouring cafes were full. They caught sight of one on the harbour,
a very indifferent restaurant, whose proprietor showed them to a little
room on the fourth floor.</p>
<p>The men were whispering in a corner, no doubt consorting about expenses.
There were a clerk, two medical students, and a shopman—what company
for her! As to the women, Emma soon perceived from the tone of their
voices that they must almost belong to the lowest class. Then she was
frightened, pushed back her chair, and cast down her eyes.</p>
<p>The others began to eat; she ate nothing. Her head was on fire, her eyes
smarted, and her skin was ice-cold. In her head she seemed to feel the
floor of the ball-room rebounding again beneath the rhythmical pulsation
of the thousands of dancing feet. And now the smell of the punch, the
smoke of the cigars, made her giddy. She fainted, and they carried her to
the window.</p>
<p>Day was breaking, and a great stain of purple colour broadened out in the
pale horizon over the St. Catherine hills. The livid river was shivering
in the wind; there was no one on the bridges; the street lamps were going
out.</p>
<p>She revived, and began thinking of Berthe asleep yonder in the servant's
room. Then a cart filled with long strips of iron passed by, and made a
deafening metallic vibration against the walls of the houses.</p>
<p>She slipped away suddenly, threw off her costume, told Leon she must get
back, and at last was alone at the Hotel de Boulogne. Everything, even
herself, was now unbearable to her. She wished that, taking wing like a
bird, she could fly somewhere, far away to regions of purity, and there
grow young again.</p>
<p>She went out, crossed the Boulevard, the Place Cauchoise, and the
Faubourg, as far as an open street that overlooked some gardens. She
walked rapidly; the fresh air calming her; and, little by little, the
faces of the crowd, the masks, the quadrilles, the lights, the supper,
those women, all disappeared like mists fading away. Then, reaching the
"Croix-Rouge," she threw herself on the bed in her little room on the
second floor, where there were pictures of the "Tour de Nesle." At four
o'clock Hivert awoke her.</p>
<p>When she got home, Felicite showed her behind the clock a grey paper. She
read—</p>
<p>"In virtue of the seizure in execution of a judgment."</p>
<p>What judgment? As a matter of fact, the evening before another paper had
been brought that she had not yet seen, and she was stunned by these words—</p>
<p>"By order of the king, law, and justice, to Madame Bovary." Then, skipping
several lines, she read, "Within twenty-four hours, without fail—"
But what? "To pay the sum of eight thousand francs." And there was even at
the bottom, "She will be constrained thereto by every form of law, and
notably by a writ of distraint on her furniture and effects."</p>
<p>What was to be done? In twenty-four hours—tomorrow. Lheureux, she
thought, wanted to frighten her again; for she saw through all his
devices, the object of his kindnesses. What reassured her was the very
magnitude of the sum.</p>
<p>However, by dint of buying and not paying, of borrowing, signing bills,
and renewing these bills that grew at each new falling-in, she had ended
by preparing a capital for Monsieur Lheureux which he was impatiently
awaiting for his speculations.</p>
<p>She presented herself at his place with an offhand air.</p>
<p>"You know what has happened to me? No doubt it's a joke!"</p>
<p>"How so?"</p>
<p>He turned away slowly, and, folding his arms, said to her—</p>
<p>"My good lady, did you think I should go on to all eternity being your
purveyor and banker, for the love of God? Now be just. I must get back
what I've laid out. Now be just."</p>
<p>She cried out against the debt.</p>
<p>"Ah! so much the worse. The court has admitted it. There's a judgment.
It's been notified to you. Besides, it isn't my fault. It's Vincart's."</p>
<p>"Could you not—?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing whatever."</p>
<p>"But still, now talk it over."</p>
<p>And she began beating about the bush; she had known nothing about it; it
was a surprise.</p>
<p>"Whose fault is that?" said Lheureux, bowing ironically. "While I'm
slaving like a nigger, you go gallivanting about."</p>
<p>"Ah! no lecturing."</p>
<p>"It never does any harm," he replied.</p>
<p>She turned coward; she implored him; she even pressed her pretty white and
slender hand against the shopkeeper's knee.</p>
<p>"There, that'll do! Anyone'd think you wanted to seduce me!"</p>
<p>"You are a wretch!" she cried.</p>
<p>"Oh, oh! go it! go it!"</p>
<p>"I will show you up. I shall tell my husband."</p>
<p>"All right! I too. I'll show your husband something."</p>
<p>And Lheureux drew from his strong box the receipt for eighteen hundred
francs that she had given him when Vincart had discounted the bills.</p>
<p>"Do you think," he added, "that he'll not understand your little theft,
the poor dear man?"</p>
<p>She collapsed, more overcome than if felled by the blow of a pole-axe. He
was walking up and down from the window to the bureau, repeating all the
while—</p>
<p>"Ah! I'll show him! I'll show him!" Then he approached her, and in a soft
voice said—</p>
<p>"It isn't pleasant, I know; but, after all, no bones are broken, and,
since that is the only way that is left for you paying back my money—"</p>
<p>"But where am I to get any?" said Emma, wringing her hands.</p>
<p>"Bah! when one has friends like you!"</p>
<p>And he looked at her in so keen, so terrible a fashion, that she shuddered
to her very heart.</p>
<p>"I promise you," she said, "to sign—"</p>
<p>"I've enough of your signatures."</p>
<p>"I will sell something."</p>
<p>"Get along!" he said, shrugging his shoulders; "you've not got anything."</p>
<p>And he called through the peep-hole that looked down into the shop—</p>
<p>"Annette, don't forget the three coupons of No. 14."</p>
<p>The servant appeared. Emma understood, and asked how much money would be
wanted to put a stop to the proceedings.</p>
<p>"It is too late."</p>
<p>"But if I brought you several thousand francs—a quarter of the sum—a
third—perhaps the whole?"</p>
<p>"No; it's no use!"</p>
<p>And he pushed her gently towards the staircase.</p>
<p>"I implore you, Monsieur Lheureux, just a few days more!" She was sobbing.</p>
<p>"There! tears now!"</p>
<p>"You are driving me to despair!"</p>
<p>"What do I care?" said he, shutting the door.</p>
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