The Grip of Desire - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Happy Gyges, lend me your ring that I may a.s.sist mutely and invisibly at the sweet mysteries of the night toilette.
She is here! She has given and received the evening kiss. "Sleep well," her father and mother have said, and the child replies: "Oh, yes, I am very sleepy."
Then she quickly shuts the door and breathes a sigh of satisfaction. She is in her own room, she is alone!
Alone! do you believe it? If so, you would be greatly mistaken, for this is the time when she receives her own visitors, and often there is a numerous company.
Oh, be rea.s.sured: these guests will not be able to compromise her; they are secret, silent and invisible for all else but her; she alone sees them, talks to them and listens to them.
It is at the summons of her thought that they hasten there, pa.s.sive and obedient. Then she pa.s.ses them in review one by one; she examines them from head to foot, she clothes and unclothes them at her will; never has a Captain of infantry, under orders for parade, made a more minute inspection of his conscripts.
Sometimes they come all in a crowd, giving themselves up with her, in the mysterious comers of her imagination, to the wildest frolics. Young people with a stiff collar, beardless sublieutenants, c.o.xcombs with red hands, swells with white cuffs, little heads of wax and little souls of cardboard, run up, ran up, ye pretty puppets.
Dance my loves You are but dolls.
And she makes them dance on every cord and every tune.
But soon the figures are effaced and blend into one. The pomatumed band disappear into s.p.a.ce, whence there rises clearly the image of the chosen one.
He is young, he is dark or fair: she has seen him to-day; she looked at him, he smiled at her, he thinks her pretty.
Is she then always pretty? And quickly she goes to her mirror. Heavens! how badly her hair is done. How badly that ribbon sets! If she had put it in another place? And that little wandering lock; decidedly it must set off that. "Perhaps he would like me better if, instead of plaits, I had curls, and if instead of the brown dress, I put on the blue?"
He. Who is he? He is the imaginary lover, the handsome young man whom she has met in the street, he who turned round to look at her, or the one who was so charming at the last ball, or again the one who has just pa.s.sed the window.
Who is he? Does she know? It is the one she is waiting for. The first who presents himself who is _handsome, young, intelligent and rich_. What does the rest matter provided he possesses all these qualities, and all these qualities he must possess.
Often she has never even seen him, but he is charming, and she feels that she loves him already.
And there are the brilliant displays of the future appearing, the enchanted palaces which are built out of the chapters of novels which never will be finished.
And thus every evening--wild adventures in the young brain, intrigues in embryo, meetings full of mystery, delightful terrors with phantom lovers, until at length a very palpable one presents himself, and comes and knocks at the door of reality.
Sometimes he is very far from the cherished dream. He is neither young, nor handsome, nor rich, nor intelligent. She rather makes a face, but she ends by taking him. It is a man.
And meanwhile mamma has said as she kisses her daughter's forehead, "Sleep well, my daughter," and she murmurs to papa, "What an angel of candour!"
LXIX.
THE GUST OF WIND.
"I turned my eyes instinctively towards the lighted window, and through the curtains which were drawn, I distinctly caught sight of a woman, dressed in white, with her hair undone, and moving like one who knows that she is alone."
G. DROZ (_Monsieur, Madame, et Bebe_).
Suzanne's room ... but why should I describe the room?... let me describe Suzanne to you at this secret hour: I am sure that you would prefer me to do so.
The young people who read this, will do well to skip this chapter, it interests the men alone. Like the preacher who one day turned the women out of church, as he wanted to keep the men only, I warn over-chaste young ladies that these lines may shock....
Suzanne was preparing to go to bed.
To go to bed! That is not done quickly. You have, Mesdames, so many little things to do before going to bed. So Suzanne was going to and fro in her small room, attending to all these little details.
She was in a short petticoat, with her legs and arms bare and her little feet in slippers. I warned you that I had borrowed the ring of Gyges and I can tell you that I saw her calf and right above the knee, and all was like a sculptor's model. Beneath the thin, partly-open cambric her budding bosom rose and fell, marking a voluptuous valley on which, like the Shulamite's lover, one would never be weary to let one's kisses wander.
But on seeing the white plump shoulders, the graceful throat, and the neck on which was twisted a ma.s.s of little brown curls, and the back of velvet which had no other covering than the thick rolls of half-loosed hair, and the delicate hips which the little half-revealing petticoat closely pressed, one asked oneself where the kisses would run on for the longest time.
She was delicious like this and under every aspect, and undoubtedly she knew it, for every time she pa.s.sed before the large gla.s.s of her wardrobe, she looked at herself in it and smiled. And she was quite right, for it was indeed the sweetest of sights.
A pretty woman is never insensible to the sight of her own charms. See therefore, what a love they have for mirrors. Habit, which palls in so many things, never palls in this; for her it is a sight always charming and always fresh. Very different to the forgetful lover or the sated husband, whose eyes and senses are so quickly habituated, she never grows weary of finding out that she is pretty, and making herself so; in truth a constant homage, earnest and conscientious.
Suzanne then examined herself full face, in profile, in three-quarters view, and behind, attentively and conscientiously, like an amateur judging a work of art, who cries at length, "Yes, it is all good, it is all perfect, there is nothing amiss." One could have believed that she saw herself again for the first time after many years.
At length, when the survey was completed, and the toilette finished, she let her petticoat slip down, opened her bed, put one knee upon it, and, the upper part of her body leaning forward on her hands, prepared to get in.
The lamp on the night-table, close beside her, threw its light no longer on her face.
But at the same instant a little zephyr taking her astern, caused the white tissue which English-women never mention, to gently undulate.
She noticed then that she had forgotten to shut her window.
"Heavens," cried Marcel to himself, for it was he, who perched on the rise of the road and armed with his good opera-gla.s.s, had just been witness of what I have narrated.
LXX.
THE AMBUSCADE.
"Be not discouraged either before obstacles, or before ill-will. Wait patiently. The sacred hour will sound for you and all the ways will be made smooth."
(_Charge of Mgr. de Nancy_).
Drawing near to the window, Suzanne distinguished in front of her, behind the open-work palisade, a dark motionless figure.
She immediately recognized the Cure.
Alarmed and trembling, she hastily drew back; but she heard a gentle cough, as if someone was calling and was afraid of being surprised.
"What is happening?" she said to herself, "what is he doing there?"
She covered herself hurriedly with a dressing-gown and drew near the cas.e.m.e.nt again. Marcel, with his hat in his hand, bowed to her, and appeared to invite her by a sign to come down.