<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">wherein we shall see revealed a dark and secret
mystery and learn how it comes about
that empires are often hurled against empires,
and ruin falls alike upon the victors
and the vanquished; and the wise reader
(if such there be—which i doubt) will meditate
upon this important utterance: "a
war is a matter of business"</span></p>
</div>
<div class='clearfix'><div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/imgt.jpg" width-obs="73" height-obs="80" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>HE Angels had dispersed. At the foot
of the slopes at Meudon, seated on
the grass, Arcade and Zita watched
the Seine flowing by the willows.</p>
<p>"In this world," said Arcade, "in
this world, which we call a cosmos, though it is
but a microcosm, no thinking being can imagine
that he is able to destroy even one atom. At the
utmost, all we can hope for is that we shall succeed
in modifying, here and there, the rhythm
of some group of atoms and the arrangement of
certain cells. That, when one thinks of it, must be
the limit of our great enterprise. And when we
shall have set up the Contradictor in the place of
Ialdabaoth, we shall have done no more.... Zita,
is the evil in the nature of things or in their arrange<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>ment?
That is what we ought to know. Zita, I
am profoundly troubled——"</p>
</div>
<p>"Arcade," replied Zita, "if to act we had to
know the secret of Nature, one would never act at
all. And neither would one live—since to live is
to act. Arcade, is your resolution failing you
already?"</p>
<p>Arcade assured the beautiful angel that he was
resolved to plunge the demiurge into eternal darkness.</p>
<p>A motor-car passed by on the road, followed by
a long trail of dust. It stopped before the two
angels, and the hooked nose of Baron Everdingen
appeared at the window.</p>
<p>"Good morning, my celestial friends, good morning,"
said the capitalist. "Sons of Heaven, I
am pleased to meet you. I have a word of importance
to say to you. Do not remain idle—do
not go to sleep. Arm! Arm! You may be surprised
by Ialdabaoth. You have a big war-fund.
Employ it without stint. I have just learnt that
the Archangel Michael has given large orders in
Heaven for thunderbolts and arrows. If you take
my advice you will procure fifty thousand more
electrophores. I will take the order. Good day,
angels. Long live the celestial country!"</p>
<p>And Baron Everdingen flew by the flowery
shores of Louveciennes in the company of a pretty
actress.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Is it true that they are taking up arms at the
demiurge's?" asked Arcade.</p>
<p>"It may be," replied Zita, "that up there another
Baron Everdingen is inciting to arms."</p>
<p>The guardian angel of young Maurice remained
pensive for some moments. Then he murmured:</p>
<p>"Can it be that we are the sport of financiers?"</p>
<p>"Pooh!" said the beautiful archangel. "War
is a business. It has always been a business."</p>
<p>Then they discussed at length the means of
executing their immense enterprise. Rejecting disdainfully
the anarchistic proceedings of Prince
Istar, they conceived a formidable and sudden
invasion of the kingdom of Heaven by their enthusiastic
and well-drilled troops.</p>
<p>Now Barattan, the innkeeper of La Jonchère, who
had let the entertainment-hall to the rebellious
angels, was in the employ of the secret police. In
the reports he furnished to the Prefecture he denounced
the members of this secret meeting as
meditating an attack on a certain person whom
they described as obtuse and cruel, and whom they
called <i>Alaballotte</i>. The agent believed this to be
a pseudonym denoting either the President of the
Republic or the Republic itself. The conspirators
had unanimously given voice to threats against <i>Alaballotte</i>,
and one of them, a very dangerous individual,
well-known in anarchist circles, who
had already several convictions against him on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
account of writings and speeches of a seditious
nature, and who was known as Prince Istar or the
<i>Quéroube</i>, had brandished a bomb of very small
calibre which seemed to contain a formidable
machine. The other conspirators were unknown
to Barattan, notwithstanding the fact that he
frequented revolutionary circles. Many among
them were very young men, mere beardless youths.
There were two who, it appeared, had spoken with
conspicuous vehemence; a certain Arcade, dwelling
in the Rue St. Jacques, and a woman of easy virtue
called Zita, living at Montmartre, both without
visible means of subsistence.</p>
<p>The affair seemed sufficiently serious to the Prefect
of Police to make him think it necessary to confer
without delay with the President of the Council.</p>
<p>The Third Republic was then going through
one of those climacteric periods during which the
French nation, enamoured of authority and worshipping
force, gave itself up for lost because it
was not governed enough, and clamoured loudly
for a saviour. The President of the Council, and
Minister of Justice, was only too eager to be that
longed-for saviour. Still, for him to play that
part it was first necessary that there should be a
danger to face. Thus the news of a plot was highly
welcome to him. He questioned the Prefect of
Police on the character and importance of the
affair. The Prefect of Police explained that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
people seemed to have money, intelligence, and
energy; but that they talked too much and were
too numerous to undertake secret and concerted
action. The Minister, leaning back in his arm-chair,
pondered on the matter. The Empire
writing-table at which he was seated, the ancient
tapestry which covered the walls, the clock and
the candelabra of the Restoration period—all, in
this traditional setting, reminded him of those
great principles of government which remain immutable
throughout the succession of <i>régimes</i>,
of stratagem and of bluff. After brief reflexion,
he concluded that the plot must be allowed to
grow and take shape, that it would even be fitting
to nurse it, to embroider it, to colour it, and only
to stifle it after having extracted every possible
advantage from it.</p>
<p>He instructed the Prefect of Police to watch the
affair closely, to render him an account of what
went on from day to day, and to confine himself
to the rôle of informer.</p>
<p>"I rely on your well-known prudence; observe,
and do not intervene."</p>
<p>The Minister lit a cigarette. He quite reckoned,
with the help of this plot, on silencing the Opposition,
strengthening his own influence, diminishing
that of his colleagues, humiliating the President of
the Republic, and becoming the saviour of his
country.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The Prefect of Police undertook to follow the
ministerial instructions, vowing inwardly all the
while to act in his own way. He had a watch put
upon the individuals pointed out by Barattan, and
commanded his agents not to intervene, come what
might. Perceiving that he was a marked man,
Prince Istar—who united prudence with strength—withdrew
the bombs from the gutter outside his window
where he had hidden them, and changing from
motor 'bus to tube, from tube to motor 'bus, and
choosing the most cunningly circuitous route, at length
deposited his machines with the angelic musician.</p>
<p>Every time he left his house in the Rue St. Jacques,
Arcade found a man of exaggerated smartness
at his door, with yellow gloves and in his tie
a diamond bigger than the Regent. Being a stranger
to the things of this world, the rebellious angel
paid no attention to the circumstance. But young
Maurice d'Esparvieu, who had undertaken the
task of guarding his guardian-angel, viewed this
gentleman with uneasiness, for he equalled in
assiduity and surpassed in vigilance that Monsieur
Mignon who had formerly allowed his inquisitive
gaze to wander from the rams' heads on
the Hôtel de la Sordière in the Rue Garancière to
the apse of the church of St. Sulpice. Maurice
came two and three times a day to see Arcade in
his furnished rooms, warning him of the danger,
and urging him to change his abode.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Every evening he took his angel to night restaurants,
where they supped with ladies of easy
virtue. There young d'Esparvieu would foretell
the issue of some coming glove-fight, and afterwards
exert himself to demonstrate to Arcade the
existence of God, the necessity for religion, and
the beauties of Christianity, and adjure him to
renounce his impious and criminal undertakings
wherefrom, he said, he would reap but bitterness
and disappointment.</p>
<p>"For really," said the young apologist, "if Christianity
were false it would be known."</p>
<p>The ladies approved of Maurice's religious sentiments,
and when the handsome Arcade uttered
some blasphemy in language they could understand,
they put their hands to their ears and bade him be
silent, for fear of being struck down with him.
For they believed that God, in his omnipotence
and sovereign goodness, taking sudden vengeance
against those who insulted him, was quite capable
of striking down the innocent with the guilty without
meaning it.</p>
<p>Sometimes the angel and his guardian took supper
with the angelic musician. Maurice, who remembered
from time to time that he was Bouchotte's
lover, was displeased to see Arcade taking
liberties with the singer. She had allowed
him to do so ever since the day when, the angelic
musician having had the little flowery couch re<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>paired,
Arcade and Bouchotte had made it a foundation
for their friendship. Maurice, who loved
Madame des Aubels a great deal, also loved Bouchotte
a little, and was rather jealous of Arcade.
Now jealousy is a feeling natural to man and beast,
and causes them, however slight the attack, keen
unhappiness. Therefore, suspecting the truth, which
Bouchotte's temperament and the angel's character
made sufficiently obvious, he overwhelmed
Arcade with sarcasm and abuse, reproaching him
with the immorality of his ways. Arcade answered,
tranquilly, that it was difficult to subject physiological
impulses to perfectly defined rules, and that
moralists encountered great difficulties in the case
of certain natural necessities.</p>
<p>"Moreover," added Arcade, "I freely acknowledge
that it is almost impossible systematically to
constitute a natural moral law. Nature has no
principles. She furnishes us with no reason to
believe that human life is to be respected. Nature,
in her indifference, makes no distinction between
good and evil."</p>
<p>"You see, then," replied Maurice, "that religion
is necessary."</p>
<p>"Moral law," replied the angel, "which is supposed
to be revealed to us, is drawn in reality
from the grossest empiricism. Custom alone regulates
morals. What Heaven prescribes is merely
the consecration of ancient customs. The divine<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
law, promulgated amid fireworks on some Mount
Sinai, is never anything but the codification of
human prejudice. And from this fact—namely,
that morals change—religions which endure for a
long time, such as Judæo-Christianity, vary their
moral law."</p>
<p>"At any rate," said Maurice, whose intelligence
was swelling visibly, "you will grant me that religion
prevents much profligacy and crime?"</p>
<p>"Except when it promotes crime—as, for instance,
the murder of Iphigenia."</p>
<p>"Arcade," exclaimed Maurice, "when I hear you
argue, I rejoice that I am not an intellectual."</p>
<p>Meanwhile Théophile, with his head bent over
the piano, his face hidden by the long fair veil of
his hair, bringing down from on high his inspired
hands on to the keys, was playing and singing the
full score of <i>Aline, Queen of Golconda</i>.</p>
<p>Prince Istar used to come to their friendly reunions,
his pockets filled with bombs and bottles
of champagne, both of which he owed to the liberality
of Baron Everdingen. Bouchotte received
the Kerûb with pleasure, since she saw in him the
witness and the trophy of the victory she had
gained on the little flowered couch. He was to her
as the severed head of Goliath in the hands of the
youthful David. And she admired the prince for
his cleverness as an accompanist, his vigour, which she
had subdued, and his prodigious capacity for drink.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>One night, when young d'Esparvieu took his
angel home in his car from Bouchotte's house to
the lodgings in the Rue St. Jacques, it was very
dark; before the door the diamond in the spy's
necktie glittered like a beacon; three cyclists standing
in a group under its rays made off in divers
directions at the car's approach. The angel took
no notice, but Maurice concluded that Arcade's
movements interested various important people
in the State. He judged the danger to be pressing,
and at once made up his mind.</p>
<p>The next morning he came to seek the suspect, to
take him to the Rue de Rome. The angel was in
bed. Maurice urged him to dress and to follow him.</p>
<p>"Come," said he. "This house is no longer safe
for you. You are watched. One of these days you
will be arrested. Do you wish to sleep in gaol? No?
Well, then, come. I will put you in a safe place."</p>
<p>The spirit smiled with some little compassion on
his naïve preserver.</p>
<p>"Do you not know," he said, "that an angel
broke open the doors of the prison where Peter
was confined, and delivered the apostle? Do you
believe me, Maurice, to be inferior in power to
that heavenly brother of mine, and do you suppose
that I am unable to do for myself what he did for
the fisherman of the lake of Tiberias?"</p>
<p>"Do not count on it, Arcade. He did it miraculously."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Or by a stroke of luck, as a modern historian of
the Church has it. But no matter. I will follow
you. Just allow me to burn a few letters and to
make a parcel of some books I shall need."</p>
<p>He threw some papers in the fire-place, put
several volumes in his pockets, and followed his
guide to the car, which was waiting for them not
far off, outside the College of France. Maurice
took the wheel. Imitating the Kerûb's prudence,
he made so many windings and turnings, and so
many rapid twists that he put all the swift and
numerous cyclists, speeding in pursuit, off the
scent. At length, having left wheelmarks in every
direction all over the town, he stopped in the Rue
de Rome, before the first-door flat, where the angel
had first appeared.</p>
<p>On entering the dwelling which he had left eighteen
months before to carry out his mission, Arcade
remembered the irreparable past, and breathing
in the scent used by Gilberte, his nostrils throbbed.
He asked after Madame des Aubels.</p>
<p>"She is very well," replied Maurice. "A little
plumper and very much more beautiful for it.
She still bears you a grudge for your forward behaviour.
I hope that she will one day forgive
you, as I have forgiven you, and that she will forget
your offence. But she is still very annoyed with
you."</p>
<p>Young d'Esparvieu did the honours of his flat to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
his angel with the manners of a well-bred man and
the tender solicitude of a friend. He showed him
the folding bed which was opened every evening
in the entrance hall and pushed into a dark cupboard
in the morning. He showed him the dressing-table,
with its accessories; the bath, the linen cupboard,
the chest of drawers; gave him the necessary information
regarding the heating and lighting; told
him that his meals would be brought and the rooms
cleaned by the concierge, and showed him which
bell to press when he required that person's services.
He told him also that he must consider himself at
home, and receive whom he wished.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span></p>
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