Chapter
Two
IN the train taking him north, Mersault
stared at his hands. The train's speed
traced an onrush of heavy clouds across the lowering sky. Mersault was alone
in this overheated compartment - he had left suddenly in the middle of the
night, and with the dark morning hours ahead of him, he let the mild landscape
of Bohemia rush by, the impending rain between the tall silky poplars and the
distant factory chimneys filling him with an impulse to burst into tears. Then he looked at the white plaque with its
three sentences: Nicht hinauslehnen,
E pericoloso sporgersi, Il est dangereux
de se pencher au-dehors. He looked again at his hands, which lay like
living, wild animals on his knees: the left one long and supple, the right
thicker, muscular. He knew them,
recognized them, yet they were distinct from himself, as though capable of
actions in which his will had no part.
One came to rest against his forehead now, pressing against the fever
which throbbed in his temples. The other
slid down his jacket and took out of its pocket a cigarette that he immediately
discarded as soon as he became aware of an overpowering desire to vomit. His hands returned to his knees, palms
cupped, where they offered Mersault the emblem of his
life, indifferent once more and offered to anyone who would take it.
He
travelled for two days. But now it was
not an instinct of escape which drove him on.
The very monotony of the journey satisfied him. This train which was jolting him halfway
across Europe suspended him between two worlds - it had taken him abroad, and
would deposit him somewhere, draw him out of a life the very memory of which he
wanted to erase and lead him to the threshold of a new world where desire would
be king. Not for a single moment was Mersault bored. He
sat in his corner, rarely disturbed by anyone, stared at his hands, then at the
countryside, and reflected. He
deliberately extended his trip as far as
On
the morning of the second day, in the middle of a field, the train slowed
down.
A
few hours later he arrived in
Dear Children,
I'm writing
from
What are you up
to? Tell me about yourselves and
describe the sun to a miserable wretch who has no roots anywhere and who
remains your faithful
Patrice
Mersault
That
evening, having written his letter, he went back to the dance-hall. He had arranged to spend the evening with
Helen, one of the hostesses who knew a little French and understood his poor
German. Leaving the dance-hall at two in
the morning, he walked her home, made love efficiently, and awoke the next
morning against Helen's back, disinterestedly admiring her long hips and broad
shoulders. He got up without waking her,
slipped the money into her shoe. As he
was about to open the door, she called to him: 'But darling, you've made a
mistake.' He returned to the bed. And he had made a mistake. Unfamiliar with Austrian currency, he had
left a five-hundred shilling note instead of a hundred shillings. 'No,' he said smiling. 'It's for you - you were wonderful.' Helen's freckled face broke into a grin under
her rumpled blond hair; she jumped up on the bed and kissed him on both
cheeks. That kiss, doubtless the first
she had given him spontaneously, kindled a spark of emotion in Mersault. He made
her lie down, tucked her in, walked to the door again and looked back with a
smile. 'Goodbye,' he said. She opened her eyes wide above the sheet that
was pulled up to her nose and let him vanish without a word.
A
few days later Mersault received an answer postmarked
Dear Patrice,
We're in
Rose,
Claire, Catherine
P.S. Catherine protests against the word paternal. Catherine is living with us. If you approve, she can be your third
daughter.
He
decided to return to
In
the train heading across northern
Throughout
the crossing, staring at the water and the light on the water, first in the
morning then in the middle of the day and then in the evening, he matched his
heart against the slow pulse of the sky, and returned to himself. He scorned the vulgarity of certain
cures. Stretched out on the deck, he
realized that there could be no question of sleeping but that he must stay
awake, must remain conscious despite friends, despite the comfort of body and
soul. He had to create his happiness and
his justification. And doubtless the
task would be easier for him now. At the
strange peace that filled him as he watched the evening suddenly freshening
upon the sea, the first star slowly hardening in the sky, where the light died
out green to be reborn yellow, he realized that after this great tumult and
this fury, what was dark and wrong within him was gone now, yielding to the
clear water, transparent now, of a soul restored to kindness, to
resolution. He understood. How long he had craved a woman's love! And he was not made for love. All his life - the office on the docks, his
room and his nights of sleep there, the restaurant he went to, his mistress -
he had pursued single-mindedly a happiness which in his heart he believed was
impossible. In this he was no different
from everyone else. He had played at
wanting to be happy. Never had he sought
happiness with a conscious and deliberate desire. Never until the day ... And from that moment
on, because of a single act calculated in utter lucidity, his life had changed
and happiness seemed possible. Doubtless
he had given birth to this new being in suffering - but what was that suffering
compared to the degrading farce he had performed till now? He saw, for instance, that what had attracted
him to Marthe was vanity, not love. Even that miracle of the lips she offered him
was nothing more than the delighted astonishment of a power acknowledged and
awakened by conquest. The meaning of his
affair with Marthe consisted of the replacement of
that initial astonishment by a certainty, the triumph of vanity over
modesty. What he had loved in Marthe were those evenings when they would walk into the
cinema and men's eyes turned towards her, that moment when he offered her to
the world. What he loved in her was his
power and his ambition to live. Even his
desire, the deepest craving of his flesh probably derived from this initial
astonishment at possessing a lovely body, at mastering and humiliating it. Now he knew he was not made for such love,
but for the innocent and terrible love of the dark god he would henceforth
serve.
As
often happens, what was best in his life had crystallized around what was
worst. Claire and her friends, Zagreus and his will to happiness had all crystallized
around Marthe.
He knew now that it was his own will to happiness which must make the
next move. But if it was to do so, he
realized that he must submit to time, that to come to terms with time was at
once the most magnificent and the most dangerous of experiments. Idleness is fatal only to the mediocre. Most men cannot even prove they are not
mediocre. He had won that right. But the proof remained to be shown, the risk
to be run. Only one thing had
changed. He felt free of his past, and
of what he had lost. He wanted nothing
now but this contraction and this enclosure inside himself, this lucid and
patient fervour in the face of the world.
Like warm dough being squeezed and kneaded, all he wanted was to hold
his life between his hands: the way he felt during those two long nights on the
train when he would talk to himself, prepare himself
to live. To lick his life like
barley-sugar, to shape it, sharpen it, love it at last - that was his whose
passion. This presence of himself to
himself - henceforth his effort would be to maintain it in the face of
everything in his life, even at the cost of a solitude he knew now was so
difficult to endure. He would not
submit. All his violence would help him
now, and at the point to which it raised him, his love
would join him, like a furious passion to live.
The
sea wrinkled slowly against the ship's sides.
The sky filled with stars. And Mersault, in silence, felt in himself extreme and violent
powers to love, to marvel at this life with its countenance of sunlight and
tears, this life in its salt and hot stone - it seemed that by caressing this
life, all his powers of love and despair would unite. That was his poverty, that
was his sole wealth. As if by writing
zero, he was starting over again, but with a consciousness of his powers and a
lucid intoxication which urged him on in the face of his fate.
And
then Algiers - the slow arrival in the morning, the dazzling cascade of the
Kasbah above the sea, the hills and the sky, the bay's outstretched arms, the
houses among the trees and the smell, already upon him, of the docks. Then Mersault
realized that not once since