The Collected Stories of Colette (21 page)

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Authors: Colette

Tags: #Fiction, #Classics, #General, #Short Stories (Single Author)

BOOK: The Collected Stories of Colette
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“Oh, the countryside!” sighs the ingenue.
“Yes. If only one could sit down,” suggests the duenna, “my legs are pressing into my body.”
At the foot of a satin-boled beech we take a rest, inglorious and unattractive strollers. The men smoke; the women turn their eyes toward the blue perspectives of the alley, toward a blazing bush of rhododendrons, the color of red-hot embers, spreading over a neighboring lawn.
“For my part, the country just drains me . . .” says the comic with an unconcealed yawn, “makes me damned sleepy!”
“Yes, but it’s healthy tiredness,” decrees the pompous duenna.
The ingenue shrugs her plump shoulders. “Healthy tiredness! You make me sweat! Nothing ages a woman like living in the country, it’s a well-known fact.”
Slowly the undermanager extracts his pipe from his mouth, spits, then starts quoting: “
A melancholy feeling, not devoid of grandeur, surges from
 . . .”
“Oh, shut up!” grumbles the
jeune premier
, consulting his watch as if terrified of missing a stage entrance.
A lanky boy, tall and pale-faced, who plays odd-job parts, is watching the movements of a little “dung beetle” with steel-blue armor, teasing it with a long straw.
I take deep, exhaustive breaths, trying to detect and recapture forgotten smells that are wafted to me as from the depths of a clear well. Some elude me, and I am unable to remember their names.
None of us laughs, and if the
grande coquette
hums softly to herself, it is bound to be a broken, soulful little tune. We don’t feel at ease here: we are surrounded by too much beauty.
At the end of the avenue a friendly peacock appears, and behind his widespread fan we notice that the sky is turning pink. Evening is upon us. Slowly the peacock advances in our direction, like a courteous park-keeper whose task it is to evict us. Oh, surely we must fly! My companions are by now almost on the run.
“What if we missed it, children!”
We all know well enough that we shall not miss our train. But we are fleeing the beautiful garden, its silence and its peace, the lovely leisure, the solitude of which we are unworthy. We hurry toward the hotel, to the stifling dressing rooms, the blinding footlights. We scurry along, pressed for time, talkative, screeching like chickens, hurrying toward the illusion of living at high speed, of keeping warm, working hard, shunning thought, and refusing to be burdened with regrets, remorse, or memories.
Arrival and Rehearsal
Toward eleven o’clock we arrive at X, a large town (whose name is of no consequence), where we are fairly well paid and have to work hard; the pampered audiences demand “Star Numbers” straight from Paris. It is raining, one of those mild spring showers that induce drowsiness and reduce one’s calves to pulp.
The heavy lunch and the smoky atmosphere of the tavern, after a long night on the train, have turned me into a sulky little creature, reluctant to face the afternoon’s work. But Brague stands no trifling.
“Shuffle your guts, come on. The rehearsal’s at two sharp.”
“Bother! I’m going back to the hotel to get some sleep! Besides, I don’t like you addressing me in that tone of voice.”
“Apologies, Princess. I simply wanted to beg you to have the extreme kindness of stirring up your wits. Fresh plasters await us!”
“What plasters?”
“Those of the ‘Establishment.’ We’re opening cold tonight.”
I had forgotten. This evening we are to inaugurate a brand-new music hall, called the Atlantic, or the Gigantic, or the Olympic—in any case, the name of a liner. Three thousand seats, an American bar, attractions in the outer galleries during the intervals, and a gipsy band in the main hall! We’ll read about all these glories in tomorrow’s papers. In the meantime, it makes no difference to us, except that we are certain to cough in the dressing rooms, since new central heating never works, making the place either too hot or not warm enough.
I meekly follow Brague, who elbows his way along the North Avenue, cluttered with clerks and shopgirls, hurrying, like ourselves, to their factories. A nipping March sun makes the rainy air smoke, and my damp hair hangs limp, as in a steambath. Brague’s too-long overcoat flaps over his heels, gathering mud at each step. Taken at our face value we are just worth ten francs per evening: Brague, speckled with dirt; myself, drunk with sleep, sporting a Skye terrier’s hairdo!
I let my companion guide me, and half dozing, I run over in my mind a few comforting facts and figures. The rehearsal is fixed for two o’clock sharp; with delays, we can count on half past four. One and a half to two hours’ work with the orchestra and we should be back at the hotel about seven o’clock, there to dress, and dine, and return to the joint by nine; by a quarter to twelve I’ll be in my own clothes again and just in time for a lemonade in the tavern. Well! Let’s be reasonable and hope, God willing, that within ten little hours I shall once again be in a bed, with the right to sleep in it until lunchtime the next day! A bed, a nice fresh bed, with smoothly drawn sheets and a hot-water bottle at the end of it, soft to the feet like a live animal’s tummy.
Brague turns left—I turn left; he stops short—I stop short.
“Good Lord!” he exclaims, “it isn’t possible!”
Wide awake, I too judge at a glance that it really is not possible.
Huge dust carts, laden with sacks of plaster, obstruct the street. Scaffolding screens a light-colored building that looks blurred and barely condensed into shape, on which masons are hastily molding laurel wreaths, naked females, and Louis XVI garlands above a dark porch. Beyond this can be heard a tumult of inarticulate shouts, a battery of hammers, the screeching of saws, as though the whole assembly of the Niebelungen were busy at their forges.
“Is that it?”
“That is it.”
“Are you certain, Brague?”
In reply I receive a fulminating glance that should have been reserved solely for the Olympic’s improvident architect.
“I just meant, you’re certain we rehearse here?”
The rehearsal takes place. It passes all comprehension, but the rehearsal takes place. We go on through the dark porch under a sticky shower of liquid plaster; we jump over rolls of carpet in the process of being laid, its royal purple already bearing marks of muddy soles. We climb a temporary ladder leading, behind the stage floor, to the artistes’ dressing rooms, and finally we emerge, scared and deafened, in front of the orchestra.
About thirty performers are disporting themselves here. Bursts of music reach us during lulls in the hammering. On the conductor’s rostrum a lean, hairy, bearded human being beats time with arms, hands, and head, his eyes turned upward to the friezes with the ecstatic serenity of a deaf-mute.
There we are, a good fifteen “Numbers,” bewildered, and already discouraged. We have never met before, yet we recognize each other. Here is the
diseur
, paid eight francs a night, who doesn’t care a hoot what goes on.
“I don’t care a damn. I’m engaged as from this evening, and cash in as from this evening.”
There is the comic, with a face like a sneaky solicitor’s clerk, who talks of “going to law,” and foresees “a very interesting case.”
There is the German family, athletes of the flying trapeze, seven Herculean figures with childish features, affrighted, amazed, already worried by the fear of being thrown out of work.
There stands the little “songstress,” who’s always “out of luck,” the one who’s always in “trouble with the management,” and is supposed to have been robbed of “twenty thousand francs’ worth of jewelry” last month, Marseilles! Naturally she is also the one who’s lost her costume trunk on her way here and has had “words” with the proprietor of her hotel.
There is even, out in front, an extraordinary little man, looking worn, his cheeks furrowed by two deep ravines, a “star tenor” in his fifties, grown old in goodness knows what outlandish places. Indifferent to the noise, he rehearses implacably.
Every other minute he flings his arms wide to stop the orchestra, rushing from the double bass to the kettledrums, bent in two over the footlights. He looks like a stormy petrel riding the tempest. When he sings, he emits long shrill notes, metallic and malevolent, in an attempt to bring to life an obsolete repertory in which he impersonates, in turn, Pedro the Bandit, the lighthearted cavalier who forsakes Manon, the crazed villain and his sinister cackling at night on the moors. He scares me, but delights Brague, who instinctively reverts to his nomad fatalism.
Risking his luck in the general confusion, my companion lights the forbidden “fag” and lends an amused ear to the “vocal phenomenon,” a dark lady who spins out almost inaudible high C’s.
“She’s killing, isn’t she? Makes me feel as if I were listening through the wrong end of my opera glasses.”
His laughter is infectious. Mysteriously a comforting cheerfulness starts to spread among us. We feel the approach of night, of the hour when the lamps are lit, the hour of our real awakening, of our glory.

ANANKE
!” suddenly shouts the litigious comic, a highbrow in his way. “If we perform, we perform; and if we don’t . . . well, we don’t.”
With a ballet dancer’s leap he skims over the edge of the stage box, ready to give the electricians a helpful hand. The “out of luck” girl goes to crack an acid drop with the Herculean septet. My drowsiness has left me and I settle down on a roll of linoleum, side by side with the “vocal phenomenon,” who is all set to tell my fortune! Still another carefree hour ahead, empty of thought or plans.
Happy in our obtuse way, devoid of intuition or foresight, we give no thought to the future, to misfortune, to old age—or to the impending failure of this altogether too new and luxurious “Establishment,” which is due to go smash one month from today, precisely on “Saint-Pay-Day.”
A Bad Morning
Not one of us four feels fit to face the harsh light that falls from the glass roof like a vertical cold shower. It is nine in the morning; that is, dawn for the likes of us who go to bed late. Is it really possible that there can still exist, within a mile or so, a warm bed and a breakfast cup still steaming with the dregs of scented tea? I feel as if I shall never again lay myself down in my bed. I find this rehearsal room, the scene of our reluctant and too-early foregatherings, utterly depressing.
“Aah . . .” the lovely Bastienne yawns expressively.
Brague, the mimic, throws her a fearsome glance, as much as to say, “Serves you right.” He is pale and ill shaven, whereas the lovely Bastienne, battered and shrunk to nothing inside her sentry box of a coat, would wring the heart of anyone other than a good companion by the pink swelling under her eyes and her bloodless ears. Palestrier, the composer, his nose bright purple on a wan countenance, is the personification of a drunk who has spent the night unconscious in a police station. As for myself! Good God, a saber slash across one cheek, limp skeins of hair, and skin left dry by my lazy bloodstream! One might think we are showing off, exaggerating our disgrace, in a fit of witless sadism. “Serves you right,” say Brague’s eyes, probing my sunken cheeks; while mine retort, “You’re just such another wreck yourself.”
Instead of shortening the rehearsal of our mime, we fritter time away. Palestrier starts on a salacious story, which could be funny, were it not that the dead cigarette he keeps masticating imparts a most obnoxious smell to his every word. The stove roars yet does not heat the hall, and we peer into its small mica window, like chilled savages hoping for some miraculous sunrise.
“What do they burn in it? I wonder,” Palestrier hazards. “Newspaper logs, maybe, bound together with wire thread. I know how to make that stuff. I learned how from an old lady, the year I won my prize at the Conservatoire. She used to cough up three francs to make me play waltzes for her. There were times when I’d turn up, and she’d just say, ‘We’ll have no music today; my little bitch is nervy, and the piano puts her on edge!’ So she would invite me to help with the fuel provision—nothing but newspapers and wire. It was she, too, who taught me how to burnish brass. I certainly didn’t waste my time with her. In those days, providing I could feed, I would have clipped dogs and doctored cats!”

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