Jean-Christophe Journey's End - novelonlinefull.com
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"Oh! Oh! We've to go through it all over again!"
Christophe took her hands in his, kissed her, scolded her, spoke to her tenderly and roughly:
"You were going to die, to die, alone, without me!"
"Oh! You!" she said bitterly.
Her tone was as much as to say:
"You want to live."
He spoke harshly to her and tried to break down her will.
"You are mad!" he said. "You might have blown the house to pieces!"
"I wanted to," she said angrily.
He tried to play on her religious fears: that was the right note. As soon as he touched on it she began to scream and to beg him to stop. He went on pitilessly, thinking that it was the only means of bringing her back to the desire to live. She said nothing more, but lay sobbing convulsively. When he had done, she said in a tone of intense hatred:
"Are you satisfied now? You've done your work well. You've brought me to despair. And now, what am I to do?"
"Live," he said.
"Live!" she cried. "You don't know how impossible it is! You know nothing! You know nothing!"
He asked:
"What is it?"
She shrugged her shoulders:
"Listen."
In a few brief disconnected sentences she told him all that she had concealed from him: Babi's spying on her, the ashes, the scene with Sami, the carnival, the public insult that was before her. As she told her story she was unable to distinguish between the figments of her fear and what she had any reason to fear. He listened in utter consternation, and was no more capable than she of discerning between the real and the imaginary in her story. Nothing had ever been farther from his mind than to suspect how they were being dogged. He tried to understand: he could find nothing to say: against such enemies he was disarmed. Only he was conscious of a blind fury, a desire to strike and to destroy. He said:
"Why didn't you dismiss Babi?"
She did not deign to reply. Babi dismissed would have been even more venomous than Babi tolerated: and Christophe saw the idiocy of his question. His thoughts were in a whirl: he was trying to discover a way out, some immediate action upon which to engage. He clenched his fists and cried:
"I'll kill them?"
"Who?" she said, despising him for his futile words.
He lost all power of thought or action. He felt that he was lost in such a network of obscure treachery, in which it was impossible to clutch at anything since all were parties to it. He writhed.
"Cowards!" he cried, in sheer despair.
He slipped down on to his knees and buried his face against Anna.--They were silent for a little. She felt a mixture of contempt and pity for the man who could defend neither himself nor her. He felt Anna's limbs trembling with cold against his cheek. The window had been left open, and outside it was freezing: they could see the icy stars shivering in the sky that was smooth and gleaming as a mirror.
When she had fully tasted the bitter joy of seeing him as broken as herself, she said in a hard, weary voice:
"Light the candle."
He did so. Anna's teeth were chattering, she was sitting huddled up, with her arms tight folded across her chest and her knees up to her chin. He closed the window. Then he sat on the bed. He laid his hands on Anna's feet: they were cold as ice, and he warmed them with his hands and lips. She was softened.
"Christophe!" she said.
Her eyes were pitiful to see.
"Anna!" said he.
"What are we going to do?"
He looked at her and replied:
"Die."
She gave a cry of joy.
"Oh! You will? You will?... I shall not be alone!"
She kissed him.
"Did you think I was going to let you?"
She replied in a whisper:
"Yes."
A few moments later he questioned her with his eyes. She understood.
"In the bureau," she said. "On the right. The bottom drawer."
He went and looked. At the back of the drawer he found a revolver. Braun had bought it as a student. He had never made use of it. In an open box Christophe found some cartridges. He took them to the bed. Anna looked at them, and at once turned her eyes away to the wall.
Christophe waited, and then asked:
"You don't want to...?"
Anna turned abruptly:
"I will.... Quick!"
She thought:
"Nothing can save me now from the everlasting pit. A little more or less, it will be just the same."
Christophe awkwardly loaded the revolver.