Madame Bovary - Page 178/262

"But I must see you again," he went on. "I wanted to tell you--"

"What?"

"Something--important--serious. Oh, no! Besides, you will not go; it is

impossible. If you should--listen to me. Then you have not understood

me; you have not guessed--"

"Yet you speak plainly," said Emma.

"Ah! you can jest. Enough! enough! Oh, for pity's sake, let me see you

once--only once!"

"Well--" She stopped; then, as if thinking better of it, "Oh, not here!"

"Where you will."

"Will you--" She seemed to reflect; then abruptly, "To-morrow at eleven

o'clock in the cathedral."

"I shall be there," he cried, seizing her hands, which she disengaged.

And as they were both standing up, he behind her, and Emma with her head

bent, he stooped over her and pressed long kisses on her neck.

"You are mad! Ah! you are mad!" she said, with sounding little laughs,

while the kisses multiplied.

Then bending his head over her shoulder, he seemed to beg the consent of

her eyes. They fell upon him full of an icy dignity.

Leon stepped back to go out. He stopped on the threshold; then he

whispered with a trembling voice, "Tomorrow!"

She answered with a nod, and disappeared like a bird into the next room.

In the evening Emma wrote the clerk an interminable letter, in which she

cancelled the rendezvous; all was over; they must not, for the sake of

their happiness, meet again. But when the letter was finished, as she

did not know Leon's address, she was puzzled.

"I'll give it to him myself," she said; "he will come."

The next morning, at the open window, and humming on his balcony, Leon

himself varnished his pumps with several coatings. He put on white

trousers, fine socks, a green coat, emptied all the scent he had into

his handkerchief, then having had his hair curled, he uncurled it again,

in order to give it a more natural elegance.

"It is still too early," he thought, looking at the hairdresser's

cuckoo-clock, that pointed to the hour of nine. He read an old fashion

journal, went out, smoked a cigar, walked up three streets, thought it

was time, and went slowly towards the porch of Notre Dame.

It was a beautiful summer morning. Silver plate sparkled in the

jeweller's windows, and the light falling obliquely on the cathedral

made mirrors of the corners of the grey stones; a flock of birds

fluttered in the grey sky round the trefoil bell-turrets; the square,

resounding with cries, was fragrant with the flowers that bordered its

pavement, roses, jasmines, pinks, narcissi, and tube-roses, unevenly

spaced out between moist grasses, catmint, and chickweed for the birds;

the fountains gurgled in the centre, and under large umbrellas, amidst

melons, piled up in heaps, flower-women, bare-headed, were twisting

paper round bunches of violets.