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Authors: Robert Pinget

Trio (28 page)

BOOK: Trio
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As if his existence had been cut off.

The neighbor said she’d seen the goatherd walking along the hedge and the master close his shutter but that at that moment a sports car had gone past on the road and braked suddenly, a man had got out of it and gone over to the scarecrow’s bush, he probably wanted to urinate, she’d paid more attention to the car which you couldn’t see very well but whose headlights were so powerful that they lit up everything as far as the barn, then the driver got in again but this is where people’s imaginations take over and make them start questioning everything again, she declared that the scarecrow had disappeared, she swore black and blue, a moment before, the dummy had been silhouetted against the sky, she’d even said to herself really anyone might take it for a man, such a good imitation.

The tourist seems to have gone down to the village again and stopped at the café, he ordered a Pernod, the waiter noticed his rubber boots all covered with mud and asks him where on earth he can have been or merely thinks where can he have been, he looks more closely at this black mud to which a bit of the marsh grass is still sticking, no doubt about it, the visitor must have some special interest down there but what can it be, nothing to do with property in any case because the ground belongs to the commune, that’s why no one gets anything out of it, the marsh could be drained and the surrounding fields made viable again, it seems that in the past all the land round there was under cultivation, that’s typical of our times, so much waste both political and otherwise, don’t tell me that the government doesn’t do all this on purpose so as to have to get its staple commodities elsewhere, fiddles in exchange for God knows what advantages for the foreigners, we were in a bad way, and that the master who knows all about past history also said that there’d been a manor house on the hillside, there’s no trace of it now, unless it’s a tumbledown wall and the remains of an underground passage which as a child you wondered whether it wasn’t Roman or Visigoth, not at all, only three centuries old, though that’s not so bad, all this to say that our forefathers weren’t mad, they picked out that spot which is superbly exposed and extracted their provender and wealth from it, we’d be curious to know that lord of the manor, who was he, as for the mud-bespattered fellow he drank his Pernod and left.

In the sempiternal morning of his mania.

Yes in one sense there was something puerile about that friendship with the doctor, you might have wondered, hearing the two of them, apart from the hawkings and scrapings of old bronchitics and the senile rambling, whether you weren’t dealing with children their remarks were so foolish, they told each other everything including their dreams, something which to say the very least is insipid, or else how many times they’d urinated during the night or something their mothers had said or memories of their loves which once again took shape or the opposite after a Pernod or two, certainly it made interesting listening, not counting the quibbles and arguments of the yes you did no I didn’t order, all day long, giving you the impression
 

Phantasms of the night and of yesterday and tomorrow.

Pictures to extricate from their dross. Profoundly integrated night in which every deficiency will have its alibi.

Practices that were either magical or that dated from the Middle Ages, the schoolmaster said you’re all mad, how can people worry about that sort of thing these days, it’s all faked, exploiting people’s credulity, have you ever seen conjurers producing pigeons from up their sleeves, well it’s the same thing, sleight of hand that’s all, to accuse that old dyspeptic of being dangerous would be to do him too much honor and what have you got against him tell me that, the ridiculous things his neighbor or the plumber get up to, the troubles some people have when spring’s on the way, they’d do better to look after themselves, a good depurative and getting up early will restore them to health, do you suppose science is just a lot of rubbish, ignoramuses, that’s what you are, but he went too far, the schoolmaster, in his indignation he went too far, people began to say that he was in league with the master, so much interest in our suspicions meant he wanted to give them some substance, we aren’t all that stupid.

In that cold house haunted by all the carefree years, phantasms of the night that leave nothing of memory’s suggestions intact.

That mutilated corpse, with its bloodstained trouser fly.

The apprentice when he came up with his boss to get the tractor going again apparently saw an enormous amount of crows on the dunghill, you couldn’t quite make out, why worry, something or other putrefying, they had to get a move on, get this out of the way before the heavy day ahead of them, il was harvest time so it wasn’t as if they were short of work, agricultural machinery is in a bad state of repair and every day something goes wrong for one farmer or the other, something broken in the mechanism that he’d been trying to tinker with the previous evening by the light of a storm-lantern but not knowing anything about it and hardly seeing more he only made things worse, there they all are from early morning with their vehicles at the mechanic’s.

As if the chronicle of these countless instants.

And it was the same morning that the neighbor’s oldest apparently came to deliver a duck and not finding anyone at home must have gone in by the kitchen, behind the house that is, it remained to be seen why he might have hung around there or even in the room, you could suppose anything you liked, we hardly knew him, he doesn’t speak but you find things out about this one and that, every morning when he goes to work, he’s a day laborer, he glances round the house but only as he goes by, he doesn’t stop, not since the time he was surprised by his father at the slit in the shutter, it must have been winter, the house is shut up, everything is in order.

He goes into the kitchen which most of the time isn’t locked, so few people go by along the lane and how can you mistrust your neighbors they’re a decent lot, the maid has gone shopping in the village and won’t be back till eleven, as regular as clockwork, the master has gone for a walk down by the marsh, the man puts his duck down on the table and almost automatically opens the drawer as if he’d seen something in it that time the maid was looking for small change, he finds some bills, nothing he was hoping for, then encouraged by the serene atmosphere of the house this summer’s day goes into the dining room which is next to the kitchen, the door had been left open, goes straight over to the drawer in the big cupboard where the master kept his papers, opens it and doesn’t find anything or perhaps hasn’t time to search because he sees through the window the doctor coming through the little gate, he only just has time to go out and if the doctor sees him he’ll calmly call out from a distance that he’s left the bird on the kitchen table.

But the child had been present at the massacre of the duck, the old woman went at it with might and main then plucked and drew the bird, singed it, tied it up and said to the child seeing that you’re here you might as well take it to the master you’ll get a tip, I’ve got my goats to milk, the boy took the corpse and carried it to the kitchen where the servant wasn’t, what to do, he puts his parcel down on the windowsill and pushes the shutter back, a thoughtful child, when suddenly the doctor who can’t see very well from a distance and is for ever thinking himself the victim of everybody’s indiscretions calls out what is it, who’s there, the kid skedaddled, didn’t even want to wait for his tip.

As for the poultry dealer no contradiction, he could perfectly well have gone by with his van and the doctor as he was alone said wait for the maid she isn’t back from the village yet, here, come and have a nice pastis with me that’ll revive you, a stupid thing to say to a driver but the doctor belongs to a generation, doesn’t time pass, in which drink hadn’t yet become anathema nor had anyone pointed out the connection between its misdeeds and speed on the roads for the simple reason that people didn’t go so fast in those days, more often by bike than by car, a cyclist zigzagging or catching his foot in his chain, nothing funnier, now he’s come a cropper in the ditch and the entire contents of his little trailer emptied all over the road, the children run over to pick up the palmipeds, they had a good laugh and said to their mothers when they went home to lunch that day, lovely spring sun, we saw the poulterer he was drunk again, all his ducks on the ground and him in the ditch, we put everything back in his the cart and he went off pushing his bike, his wife’ll beat him again.

Meanwhile the kid who could see them tippling together goes into the kitchen, puts the corpse on the table and opens the drawer he’d seen the maid take the small change from, he offers himself the tip, that’s the explanation, not realising that she knows how much is in it and when she doesn’t find the right amount she’ll suspect as much but you aren’t really going to panic over one franc and the boy had a right to it, just simply tell him next time that he isn’t supposed to help himself.

But the maid when she came back from the village went straight to the drawer to empty the small change from her handbag into it and sees that the bills are all out of order, she re-counts the money she keeps in reserve, there’s nothing missing, on the other hand something has been taken, she won’t mention it to her master, how could anyone imagine a child would be interested in it, it wasn’t the younger one who’d put the duck on the table and the neighbor’s oldest wasn’t there at the time, early spring, sowing time, he’d been taken on some twenty miles away for a couple of weeks, the servant later discovered that the slaughteress had entrusted the bird to the farmhand telling him to put it on the kitchen windowsill and not forget to push back the outside shutter.

So calm. So gray. At his table in the cold house making a note marginal to a murmured phrase, you couldn’t hear very well, the story will never come to light, no visible flaw.

So at about seven the maid went into the dark room, she lit the lamp, he asked what’s the news in town, she replied that she’d met the postman and his wife with their little girl, they’d had a chat, he was very pale, still not recovered from a serious illness, his wife cut the conversation short saying he’s had a touch of bronchitis he’s got to be careful, a customer had told the servant all about it, the man suffers from fainting fits and falls down all over the place, the last attack was serious, he’s going to have to give up his rounds by the marsh and he’ll retire earlier than was foreseen.

So that the next day thinking over this conversation he doubted the validity of the doctor’s suspicions, the body, because was it a corpse, seen the previous day on the dunghill and which had disappeared a few minutes later couldn’t have been that of the postman who only goes out now on his wife’s arm, the other man answered that he had never been able to stand the postman and that he was possibly not the only one, that business of his health might well be an act, nothing in his looks or behavior had seemed suspect to him, it’s true the doctor is getting on, his judgment’s going.

And if it was an act why did the wife minimize her husband’s condition, bronchitis at his age doesn’t put you on the retired list.

For in fact the body or was it a corpse seen by the master had disappeared a few minutes later, when the maid is asked she declares that she heard the sound of an engine and the goatherd the same except that she didn’t see anything on the dunghill even though she’d gone by it, did monsieur really see it, because he can’t see very well from a distance, or perhaps mixed it up, this in the doctor’s opinion, he didn’t say so straight away, with a vision of a scarecrow with outstretched arms which had almost shattered him the day before, they were still laughing about it at this very moment.

The neighbor’s child goes up to the body, touches it lightly on the shoulder and rushes home to its mother.

Huddled up in an armchair, he was already stiff.

Go on then, tell, said the doctor.

And the other started again on the story of his death, adding details sometimes difficult to reconcile with the old ones but his correct logic which was typical of our parts made him fall on his feet, with this reservation however that the dream remodelled everything, upset the order, and that it would take the narrator till tomorrow and even longer to restore the verisimilitude to his tale.

A fire in the hearth, fine china hanging on the walls, the bottle of spirits on the table, the two friends sank themselves in the interminable tale, in spite of everything, that listening ear and that courteous behavior were a godsend to the talker, he’d got up to when he moved away from the town, hundredth repetition, dismayed by the inconsistency of his plans and that kind of quest for one didn’t know what, so many years to wait, in the end people were pointing at him in the streets, the ogre who eats naughty children, do you think it’s possible to go on like this, my memoirs you can well imagine I gave up believing in them years ago, and for what, good God, better to keep ourselves busy with this garden, what would you say to a terrace overhanging the river and put the greenhouse not down below but behind the barn, the doctor helped himself to another little glassful, the sort of questions that the other man asked himself didn’t interest him anymore, moral ones that is, but that voice, its inflections, the slightly inebriated subtlety of the arguments and the profusion of both funereal and rustic images still appealed to him or let’s say soothed him pleasantly, he was going to get sozzled, a friendship is based on mutual admiration and his for the orator wasn’t shaken.

But what can be said about friendships that suddenly break up. Better to die together. He heard the maid muttering in her kitchen that she would cut out their Pernod. Already an hour and a quarter, life is becoming impossible.

And when they’d finished the duck, went and sat out on the terrace and when they’d drunk their coffee were just about to fall asleep in the spring sunshine when the poultry dealer emerges through the outside gate, he’s crossed the garden and is hawking his wares. You won’t say no to a little glass. The fellow parks it on a chair and starts yakking, something about mirages on the road, memories that fade, peculiar sensations, you couldn’t hear very well, which makes the doctor say you want to watch your liver, come and see me, very strange yes, as if he’d just been saying
 

BOOK: Trio
11.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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