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Authors: Robert Merle

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BOOK: Heretic Dawn
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“Yes indeed!” I proclaimed. “Like a rat in straw!”

“So you’ll be returning to see us?” asked this mountain of a woman, her breath coming in short gasps between each word.

“Assuredly, good woman.”

“In that case, Monsieur,” she wheezed, “may I ask you not to give Babeau a sol for her gratuity or that amount to Babette?”

“Why ever not?” I asked in surprise.

“Because,” she panted, “you’re spoiling the both of them, giving them for scarcely an hour’s work half of what I give them for an entire day.”

“I’ll think about it,” I replied coldly, and immediately turned on my heels and walked away, disgusted with this miserly gorgon.

I have to admit that the grand’rue Saint-Honoré, which was my route, was much cleaner than many others in the capital, because it was lined with so many grand mansions belonging to the nobility, the Louvre being so close by, so that the paving stones tend to be relatively free of refuse. As I left the baths that morning, the air had something very piquant and exhilarating about it that I’ve never breathed anywhere else but in Paris, and which made you feel as though you had wings on your feet. Which is why, I imagine, the inhabitants of the city speak so abruptly and are so lively in their affairs and so heated in their passions, as if they were inebriated by the air they breathe into their lungs. And what’s more, despite the fact that at noon the air in the city could be as stifling as it was in Montpellier, the morning air was so cool and healing that you just wanted to warble like a bird, spread your wings and launch yourself into the silvery, misty light of the break of day, bursting with hope and as though drunk with life.

And so it was with me that morning, walking along the pavement with a spring in my step, forgetting for the moment my despicable doublet, which, like the poisonous tunic of Nessus, prevented any access to the king to ask his pardon. It’s true that in my mind, ever since Fogacer (who was so good and beneficent in the teeth of his impieties) had promised to find my Angelina, I saw her as if in a daydream, walking beside me with her languorous step, and turning her long elegant neck to look at me with her beautiful doe’s eyes, which nothing could ever equal in their tenderness.

Meanwhile, I couldn’t stop thinking as I walked here and there, window shopping in the Parisian manner, that there wasn’t a single shop in this street (where there are so many beautiful ones) that I wouldn’t have “licked the floor” of (as they say here), enjoying the curiosities displayed in each, so much so that I finally went into one and bought a top, amusing myself by taking it between my thumb and index finger and spinning it—just the way, as a child, I’d enjoyed the many tops Faujanet had carved for me, as well as some that were activated by pulling a string wound tightly round the middle. I paid two sols for this top that so delighted me, but then, remembering the nest where I’d developed my first feathers, my Huguenot conscience began to bother me about this crazy and ultimately useless expense (after all the money I’d spent in the baths), and, to calm this inner voice, I told myself that, when I returned to Mespech, I’d give this top to my little sister Catherine, though she was now sixteen and was probably more interested in turning men’s heads than spinning tops.

As I passed through the atelier of Maître Recroche, Coquillon, very focused on not working, gave me a smile from ear to ear and Baragran bid me a civil good morning, informing me that Miroul was out in the stable tending to the horses, but that my brothers, he surmised, weren’t up yet since he hadn’t heard them stirring. As for my little fly from hell, though she appeared refreshed and rested after
the eleven hours she’d slept in my chaste arms, she was sewing, sitting very straight on her stool, looking exceptionally pretty, but kept her eyes down as I passed, not giving me a look, a smile or a word of welcome.

However, no sooner had I retired to my micro-chamber than there came a knock on my door and Alizon appeared, her face expressionless and her black eyes shining more brilliantly than a ball of jade; she looked at me without a trace of love and a very stand-offish air and said:

“Monsieur, a chambermaid, who belongs, I believe, to the household of Monsieur de L’Étoile brought this letter here for you.”

She handed me the letter stiffly, and was turning to leave when I took her by her cold shoulder and exclaimed:

“Alison, what’s this? Are you angry with me?”

“Monsieur,” she replied, pulling away, her eyes now suddenly full of anger, “have you even looked at me? Am I so ugly and decrepit? Am I some slattern in a slum? Or an old hag on her filthy bed? Do you really think that the Baronne des Tourelles, when you take off her feathers, is more beautiful than me?”

“Not at all, Alizon,” I said, seeing where this anger was leading, “you’re a perfect beauty, young and smooth, clean as a new coin, comely and fresh, with breasts to die for!”

“You’re making fun of me, Monsieur,” she spat, her jade eyes throwing sparks at me. “I’m old, wrinkled and I stink. If I weren’t so awful would you ever have slept twelve hours by my side without taking what was yours?”

“But Alizon,” I protested, “how could I have done that after you made me ashamed to have bought you?”

“How could you have paid attention to me when I was angry? The wine was poured! You should have drunk it! And not offend me a second time by despising me!”

“Despise you! Quite the contrary, I respected you and didn’t want to trade coins for you!”

“Blessed Virgin!” she screamed, beside herself. “I don’t want that kind of respect! It cheapens my body, which, Monsieur, is more beautiful and smoother than those of your noble whores!”

“Alizon, no one knows this better that I, who saw you entirely naked!”

“Appetite comes by eating, not by looking!” cried Alizon, her claws out in her fury, and, not daring to scratch my face, she dug them into her own palms.

“Could I have awakened you, Alizon, when you were sleeping like a log?”

“A
log
!” she screamed, each of my words seeming only to increase her anger. “Am I a log? Would I have been a log when you took me? Oh, no! Here, Monsieur, take your money! I don’t want it!”

And ripping the three sols from her pocket, she sent them flying across the room, and after this demonstration stood there, arms crossed, defying me, trembling from head to foot and looking at me with fire in her eyes. I walked over to the door, leant against it and said calmly, “Alizon, pick up those coins. They’re not for you, they’re for Henriot.”

“What?” she said, all of a sudden softening. “You remember his name?”

“I remember his name and everything you told me about him: how he threw you such gracious smiles and glances while his nurse was suckling him, and how he would caress her breast with his little pink fingers.”

“Those are my same words!” she said with great feeling, and from the pillar of salt that she’d become, she turned back into a woman, saying softly, “Monsieur, do you like children?”

“I love them.”

“Oh, Monsieur,” she said in a voice trembling with tears, “I’m so sad that the experience of the baths came between us! I dreamt it could be another way. Do you despise me? Tell me!”

“Absolutely not! You only worked there out of necessity and not for greed.”

Going over to her, I took her in my arms and my little fly from hell let herself be comforted without any more buzzing or biting.

And while she quieted down like a wounded sparrow in the hollow of my hand, I held her close for a long moment, wondering whether or not I should lay her down on my bed; yet, despite the enormous desire I now felt for her, I abstained, thinking that Alizon might not be very happy about it later, having these three nasty sols between us that so wrecked everything, and that left us, whatever we did or didn’t do, all confused and ashamed. Meanwhile, as we stood there quietly, holding each other, and no act following upon the words we’d had, things might have become embarrassing had I not suddenly remembered the top I’d just purchased and wondered why I hadn’t thought of offering it to little Henriot.

“Oh, Monsieur,” she said, pulling away and laughing out loud (in part, I think, to hide her emotion), “that’s men for you! My little boy is much too young to play with a top! I’m going to keep it for him for when he’s old enough to enjoy it. Oh, Monsieur, thank you so much! You have such a generous heart!”

And throwing herself back in my arms she covered my face with little kisses. She then picked up the coins and repocketed them in her skirt, gave me another quick kiss, left my room with tears welling up in her eyes and fairly danced down the stairs.

I unfolded the letter Alizon had given me, and it was, indeed, as she had believed, from Pierre de L’Étoile, who begged me to join him for dinner that same day at eleven o’clock in his lodgings in the rue Trouvevache, where I would find other guests, who, “though not of the gentler sex, will not fail to please you: the very illustrious Ambroise Paré and the very learned Petrus Ramus, assuredly the most knowledgeable man in the kingdom in philosophy and mathematics”.

I could hardly contain my joy at this invitation: “Oh, the good L’Étoile!” I cried out loud, before going immediately to knock on my brothers’ door to tell them I wouldn’t be dining with them at midday at Gautier’s restaurant in the rue de la Truanderie. I found Giacomi standing at the tiny basin, washing his face, and Samson stretched out on the bed, completely naked, half asleep but looking very sad.

“Oh, my beloved brother,” he said as he got up to greet me with a hug, “I see little profit in being with you in this city that I like so little. I never see you, neither last night at dinner nor during the night you spent at the baths. And now you’re off to dine with Monsieur de L’Étoile, and this evening you’re invited to sup with the Baronne des Tourelles. At least promise me, Pierre, that you’ll stay there tonight given how dangerous the streets are after dark.”

Hearing this, Giacomi turned around and, as he towelled off his face, gave me a quick and knowing grin, having understood that my brother’s recommendation was absent of any malice.

“Samson, I promise you, at least as far as that is up to me,” I replied, with a wink at Giacomi. “But Samson, you have to be patient. We’re not in Mespech, where we spend all our time together day and night, never leaving each other, but in Paris, where diverse affairs and obligations necessarily cause us to go our different ways.”

“Well,” complained Samson, as he ran the fingers of his left hand through his copper-coloured hair, “if that’s the case, then, my brother, you should have left me in Montfort-l’Amaury in Maître Béqueret’s pharmacy. At least there I could have earned some money working in his shop, instead of wasting it as I do here in this modern Babylon. You don’t need my presence to ask for the king’s pardon, and what pleasure can I find in this Paris that’s so filthy and corrupted and whose inhabitants, so blind to the pure truth of Holy Scripture, worship stone idols carried through the streets? Oh, my brother, all I want is to leave as quickly as possible, like Lot, this ignominious Sodom
before the Lord visits His wrath on the leprosy of its iniquities and reduces it to ashes.”

Having said this, he turned away and went to wash in the little basin, leaving me speechless at this sombre sermon that predicted with apparent certainty the destruction of the capital. “Oh, my poor brother,” I thought, “how can you, in your zeal, have such a cruel thought? What do you know of the world, since you’re so blind? Do you flatter yourself in believing that Montpellier is less corrupt than Paris simply because it’s smaller? And don’t you remember that Lot himself, whom you like to call ‘just’ could resist neither wine nor the lascivious ardour of women?”

While Giacomi was dressing and Samson was washing, both had fallen silent, and I went to sit down on a stool, full of my thoughts, astonished at my brother’s fury, yet still able to admire his smooth, polished beauty, which Babette hadn’t needed to work on to make it conform to the current Parisian customs. I doubted as I looked at him that there was any connection between hair and strength, since Samson certainly possessed the latter without being able to lay claim to any of the former; Delilah, in her fatal designs, certainly wouldn’t have had to cut very much of his hair since, despite its profusion of curls, it was very short. Yet as beautiful as this feminine smoothness was, it did not hide his muscles—though they were not hard and bulging like Monsieur de Nançay’s, but enveloped in his pleasant rounded flesh, all of which suggested that Samson wasn’t a man so much by the hardness of his flesh as by the design of his body, with his large shoulders and slender waist.

Meanwhile, Giacomi had finished dressing, and made a sign that he wanted to speak with me, so I left their room and returned to mine, where the master-at-arms soon joined me.

“My brother,” he said, “why not let Samson leave for Montfortl-’Amaury, since he wants so much to go! He’s not in his element here,
since he’s developed
il dente avvelenato

and is so set and rigid in his beliefs that it’s dangerous for him to wander the streets, given how bitterly and stridently the Parisians hate the Huguenots.”

“Giacomi,” I agreed, “everything you’ve said I’ve been repeating to myself ever since the fanatics of the procession of Notre-Dame de la Carole nearly lynched him. And yet, I still can’t make up my mind. My father gave him into my care and I hesitate to send him so far away.”

“But you can’t watch out for him any better here than there. You’re so busy in Paris with so many different affairs,” he said with a smile, “that all Samson can do is sit around and mourn his distant glass bottles. Empty hours weigh on us much more than full ones.”

“But what about you, Giacomi?”

“Well,” he said, “it’s not the same for me! I’m going today to work in my new position as assistant to Sergeant Rabastens, which we discussed while you were with Monsieur de Nançay.”

“What, Giacomi?” I cried. “Assistant to Rabastens! You, a master-at-arms? You, a person of quality?”

“I’m not ashamed,” said Giacomi with a smile. “Rabastens is a good man, and I can’t live without working on my art, which is as necessary as my daily bread. And, to tell you the truth, life being as expensive as it is in Paris, I wouldn’t mind earning a few sols to help maintain my beloved brothers’ purse.”

BOOK: Heretic Dawn
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