Short Story by Guy de Maupassant
SOCIETY CALLED HIM HANDSOME SIGNOLES. HIS NAME was
Viscount Gontran-Joseph de Signoles.
An orphan, and possessed of an adequate income, he
cut a dash, as the saying is. He had a good figure and a good carriage, a
sufficient flow of words to pass for wit, a certain natural grace, an air of
nobility and pride, a gallant moustache and an eloquent eye, attributes which
women like.
He was in demand in drawing-rooms, sought after for
valses, and in men he inspired that smiling hostility which is reserved for
vital and attractive rivals. He had been suspected of several love-affairs of a
sort calculated to create a good opinion of a youngster. He lived a happy,
care-free life, in the most complete well-being of body and mind. He was known
to be a fine swordsman and a still finer shot with the pistol.
"When I come to fight a duel," he would
say, "I shall choose pistols. With that weapon, I'm sure of killing my
man."
One evening, he went to the theatre with two ladies,
quite young, friends of his, whose husbands were also of the party, and after
the performance he invited them to take ices at Tortoni's.
They had been sitting there for a few minutes when
he noticed a gentleman at a neighbouring table staring obstinately at one of
the ladies of the party. She seemed embarrassed and ill at ease, and bent her
head. At last she said to her husband:
"There's a man staring at me. I don't know him;
do you?"
The husband, who had seen nothing, raised his eyes,
but declared:
"No, not in the least."
Half smiling, half in anger, she replied:
"It's very annoying; the creature's spoiling my
ice."
Her husband shrugged his shoulders.
"Deuce take him, don't appear to notice it. If
we had to deal with all the discourteous people one meets, we'd never have done
with them."
But the Viscount had risen abruptly. He could not
permit this stranger to spoil an ice of his giving. It was to him that the
insult was addressed, since it was at his invitation and on his account that
his friends had come to the café. The affair was no business of anyone but
himself.
He went up to the man and said:
"You have a way of looking at those ladies,
sir, which I cannot stomach. Please be so good as to set a limit to your
persistence."
"You hold your tongue," replied the other.
"Take care, sir," retorted the Viscount,
clenching his teeth; "you'll force me to overstep the bounds of common
politeness."
The gentleman replied with a single word, a vile word
which rang across the café from one end to the other, and, like the release of
a spring, jerked every person present into an abrupt movement. All those with
their backs towards him turned round, all the rest raised their heads; three
waiters spun round on their heels like tops; the two ladies behind the counter
started, then the whole upper half of their bodies twisted round, as though
they were a couple of automata worked by the same handle.
There was a profound silence. Then suddenly a sharp
noise resounded in the air. The Viscount had boxed his adversary's ears. Every
one rose to intervene. Cards were exchanged.
Back in his home, the Viscount walked for several
minutes up and down his room with long quick strides. He was too excited to
think. A solitary idea dominated his mind: "a duel"; but as yet the
idea stirred in him no emotion of any kind. He had done what he was compelled
to do; he had shown himself to be what he ought to be. People would talk of it,
would approve of him, congratulate him. He repeated aloud, speaking as a man
speaks in severe mental distress:
"What a hound the fellow is!"
Then he sat down and began to reflect. In the
morning he must find seconds. Whom should he choose? He searched his mind for
the most important and celebrated names of his acquaintance. At last he decided
on the Marquis de la Tour-Noire and Colonel Bourdin, an aristocrat and a
soldier; they would do excellently. Their names would look well in the papers.
He realised that he was thirsty, and drank three glasses of water one after the
other; then he began to walk up and down again. He felt full of energy. If he
played the gallant, showed himself determined, insisted on the most strict and
dangerous arrangements, demanded a serious duel, a thoroughly serious duel, a
positively terrible duel, his adversary would probably retire and apologize.
He took up once more the card which he had taken
from his pocket and thrown down upon the table, and read it again as he had
read it before, in the café, at a glance, and in the cab, by the light of each
gas-lamp, on his way home.
"Georges Lamil, 51 rue Moncey." Nothing
more.
He examined the grouped letters; they seemed to him
mysterious, full of confused meaning. Georges Lamil? Who was this man? What did
he do? Why had he looked at the woman in that way? Was it not revolting that a
stranger, an unknown man, could thus disturb a man's life, without warning,
just because he chose to fix his insolent eyes upon a woman? Again the Viscount
repeated aloud:
"What a hound!"
Then he remained standing stock-still, lost in
thought, his eyes still fixed upon the card. A fury against this scrap of paper
awoke in him, a fury of hatred in which was mingled a queer sensation of uneasiness.
This sort of thing was so stupid! He took up an open knife which lay close at
hand and thrust it through the middle of the printed name, as though he had
stabbed a man.
So he must fight. Should he choose swords or
pistols?--for he regarded himself as the insulted party. With swords there
would be less risk, but with pistols there was a chance that his adversary
might withdraw. It is very rare that a duel with swords is fatal, for mutual
prudence is apt to restrain combatants from engaging at sufficiently close
quarters for a point to penetrate deeply. With pistols he ran a grave risk of
death; but he might also extricate himself from the affair with all the honours
of the situation and without actually coming to a meeting.
"I must be firm," he said. "He will
take flight."
The sound of his voice set him trembling, and he
looked round. He felt very nervous. He drank another glass of water, then began
to undress for bed.
As soon as he was in bed, he blew out the light and
closed his eyes.
"I've the whole of to-morrow," he thought,
"in which to set my affairs in order. I'd better sleep now, so that I
shall be quite calm."
He was very warm in the blankets, but he could not
manage to compose himself to sleep. He turned this way and that, lay for five
minutes upon his back, turned on to his left side, then rolled over on to his
right.
He was still thirsty. He got up to get a drink. A
feeling of uneasiness crept over him:
"Is it possible that I'm afraid?"
Why did his heart beat madly at each familiar sound
in his room? When the clock was about to strike, the faint squeak of the rising
spring made him start; so shaken he was that for several seconds afterwards he
had to open his mouth to get his breath.
He began to reason with himself on the possibility
of his being afraid.
"Shall I be afraid?"
No, of course he would not be afraid, since he was
resolved to see the matter through, and had duly made up his mind to fight and
not to tremble. But he felt so profoundly distressed that he wondered:
"Can a man be afraid in spite of himself?"
He was attacked by this doubt, this uneasiness, this
terror; suppose a force more powerful than himself, masterful, irresistible,
overcame him, what would happen? Yes, what might not happen? Assuredly he would
go to the place of the meeting, since he was quite ready to go. But supposing
he trembled? Supposing he fainted? He thought of the scene, of his reputation,
his good name.
There came upon him a strange need to get up and
look at himself in the mirror. He relit his candle. When he saw his face
reflected in the polished glass, he scarcely recognised it, it seemed to him as
though he had never yet seen himself. His eyes looked to him enormous; and he
was pale; yes, without doubt he was pale, very pale.
He remained standing in front of the mirror. He put
out his tongue, as though to ascertain the state of his health, and abruptly
the thought struck him like a bullet:
"The day after to-morrow, at this very hour, I
may be dead."
His heart began again its furious beating.
"The day after to-morrow, at this very hour, I
may be dead. This person facing me, this me I see in the mirror, will be no more.
Why, here I am, I look at myself, I feel myself alive, and in twenty-four hours
I shall be lying in that bed, dead, my eyes closed, cold, inanimate,
vanished."
He turned back towards the bed, and distinctly saw
himself lying on his back in the very sheets he had just left. He had the
hollow face of a corpse, his hands had the slackness of hands that will never
make another movement.
At that he was afraid of his bed, and, to get rid of
the sight of it, went into the smoking-room. Mechanically he picked up a cigar,
lit it, and began to walk up and down again. He was cold; he went to the bell
to wake his valet; but he stopped, even as he raised his hand to the rope.
"He will see that I am afraid."
He did not ring; he lit the fire. His hands shook a
little, with a nervous tremor, whenever they touched anything. His brain
whirled, his troubled thoughts became elusive, transitory, and gloomy; his mind
suffered all the effects of intoxication, as though he were actually drunk.
Over and over again he thought:
"What shall I do? What is to become of
me?"
His whole body trembled, seized with a jerky
shuddering; he got up and, going to the window, drew back the curtains.
Dawn was at hand, a summer dawn. The rosy sky
touched the town, its roofs and walls, with its own hue. A broad descending
ray, like the caress of the rising sun, enveloped the awakened world; and with
the light, hope--a gay, swift, fierce hope--filled the Viscount's heart! Was he
mad, that he had allowed himself to be struck down by fear, before anything was
settled even, before his seconds had seen those of this Georges Lamil, before
he knew whether he was going to fight?
He washed, dressed, and walked out with a firm step.
He repeated to himself, as he walked:
"I must be energetic, very energetic. I must
prove that I am not afraid."
His seconds, the Marquis and the Colonel, placed
themselves at his disposal, and after hearty handshakes discussed the
conditions.
"You are anxious for a serious duel? "
asked the Colonel.
"Yes, a very serious one," replied the
Viscount.
"You still insist on pistols?" said the
Marquis.
"Yes."
"You will leave us free to arrange the
rest?"
In a dry, jerky voice the Viscount stated:
"Twenty paces; at the signal, raising the arm,
and not lowering it. Exchange of shots till one is seriously wounded."
"They are excellent conditions," declared
the Colonel in a tone of satisfaction. "You shoot well, you have every
chance."
They departed. The Viscount went home to wait for
them. His agitation, momentarily quietened, was now growing minute by minute.
He felt a strange shivering, a ceaseless vibration, down his arms, down his
legs, in his chest; he could not keep still in one place, neither seated nor
standing. There was not the least moistening of saliva in his mouth, and at
every instant he made a violent movement of his tongue, as though to prevent it
sticking to his palate.
He was eager to have breakfast, but could not eat.
Then the idea came to him to drink in order to give himself courage, and he
sent for a decanter of rum, of which he swallowed six liqueur glasses full one
after the other.
A burning warmth flooded through his body, followed immediately
by a sudden dizziness of the mind and spirit.
"Now I know what to do," he thought.
"Now it is all right."
But by the end of an hour he had emptied the
decanter, and his state of agitation had once more become intolerable. He was
conscious of a wild need to roll on the ground, to scream, to bite. Night was
falling.
The ringing of a bell gave him such a shock that he
had not strength to rise and welcome his seconds.
He did not even dare to speak to them, to say
"Good evening" to them, to utter a single word, for fear they guessed
the whole thing by the alteration in his voice.
"Everything is arranged in accordance with the
conditions you fixed," observed the Colonel. "At first your adversary
claimed the privileges of the insulted party, but he yielded almost at once,
and has accepted everything. His seconds are two military men."
"Thank you," said the Viscount.
"Pardon us," interposed the Marquis,
"if we merely come in and leave again immediately, but we have a thousand
things to see to. We must have a good doctor, since the combat is not to end
until a serious wound is inflicted, and you know that pistol bullets are no
laughing-matter. We must appoint the ground, near a house to which we may carry
the wounded man if necessary, etc. In fact, we shall be occupied for two or
three hours arranging all that there is to arrange."
"Thank you," said the Viscount a second
time.
"You are all right?" asked the Colonel.
"You are calm?"
"Yes, quite calm, thank you."
The two men retired.
When he realised that he was once more alone, he
thought that he was going mad. His servant had lit the lamps, and he sat down
at the table to write letters. After tracing, at the head of a sheet:
"This is my will," he rose shivering and walked away, feeling
incapable of connecting two ideas, of taking a resolution, of making any
decision whatever.
So he was going to fight! He could no longer avoid
it. Then what was the matter with him? He wished to fight, he had absolutely
decided upon this plan of action and taken his resolve, and he now felt
clearly, in spite of every effort of mind and forcing of will, that he could
not retain even the strength necessary to get him to the place of meeting. He
tried to picture the duel, his own attitude and the bearing of his adversary.
From time to time his teeth chattered in his mouth
with a slight clicking noise. He tried to read, and took down Chateauvillard's
code of duelling. Then he wondered:
"Does my adversary go to shooting-galleries? Is
he well known? Is he classified anywhere? How can I find out?"
He bethought himself of Baron Vaux's book on
marksmen with the pistol, and ran through it from end to end. Georges Lamil was
not mentioned in it. Yet if the man were not a good shot, he would surely not
have promptly agreed to that dangerous weapon and those fatal conditions?
He opened, in passing, a case by Gastinne Renette
standing on a small table, and took out one of the pistols, then placed himself
as though to shoot and raised his arm. But he was trembling from head to foot
and the barrel moved in every direction.
At that, he said to himself:
"It's impossible. I cannot fight in this
state."
He looked at the end of the barrel, at the little,
black, deep hole that spits death; he thought of the disgrace, of the whispers
at the club, of the laughter in drawing-rooms, of the contempt of women, of the
allusions in the papers, of the insults which cowards would fling at him.
He was still looking at the weapon, and, raising the
hammer, caught a glimpse of a cap gleaming beneath it like a tiny red flame; By
good fortune or forgetfulness, the pistol had been left loaded. At the
knowledge, he was filled with a confused inexplicable sense of joy.
If, when face to face with the other man, he did not
show a proper gallantry and calm, he would be lost forever. He would be
sullied, branded with a mark of infamy, hounded out of society. And he would
not be able to achieve that calm, that swaggering poise; he knew it, he felt
it. Yet he was brave, since he wanted to fight I . . . He was brave, since. . .
.
The thought which hovered in him did not even fulfil
itself in his mind; but, opening his mouth wide, he thrust in the barrel of his
pistol with savage gesture until it reached his throat, and pressed on the
trigger.
When his valet ran in, at the sound of the report,
he found him lying dead upon his back. A shower of blood had splashed the white
paper on the table, and made a great red mark beneath these four words:
"This is my will."
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