Four Short Stories By Emile Zola eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 771 pages of information about Four Short Stories By Emile Zola.

Four Short Stories By Emile Zola eBook

Émile Gaboriau
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 771 pages of information about Four Short Stories By Emile Zola.
showing herself.  You wouldn’t find another body like hers!  Such shoulders as she had, and such legs and such a figure!  Strange that she should be dead!  You know, above her tights she had nothing on but a golden girdle which hardly concealed her behind and in front.  All round her the grotto, which was entirely of glass, shone like day.  Cascades of diamonds were flowing down; strings of brilliant pearls glistened among the stalactites in the vault overhead, and amid the transparent atmosphere and flowing fountain water, which was crossed by a wide ray of electric light, she gleamed like the sun with that flamelike skin and hair of hers.  Paris would always picture her thus—­would see her shining high up among crystal glass like the good God Himself.  No, it was too stupid to let herself die under such conditions!  She must be looking pretty by this time in that room up there!

“And what a lot of pleasures bloody well wasted!” said Mignon in melancholy tones, as became a man who did not like to see good and useful things lost.

He sounded Lucy and Caroline in order to find out if they were going up after all.  Of course they were going up; their curiosity had increased.  Just then Blanche arrived, out of breath and much exasperated at the way the crowds were blocking the pavement, and when she heard the news there was a fresh outburst of exclamations, and with a great rustling of skirts the ladies moved toward the staircase.  Mignon followed them, crying out: 

“Tell Rose that I’m waiting for her.  She’ll come at once, eh?”

“They do not exactly know whether the contagion is to be feared at the beginning or near the end,” Fontan was explaining to Fauchery.  “A medical I know was assuring me that the hours immediately following death are particularly dangerous.  There are miasmatic exhalations then.  Ah, but I do regret this sudden ending; I should have been so glad to shake hands with her for the last time.

“What good would it do you now?” said the journalist.

“Yes, what good?” the two others repeated.

The crowd was still on the increase.  In the bright light thrown from shop-windows and beneath the wavering glare of the gas two living streams were distinguishable as they flowed along the pavement, innumerable hats apparently drifting on their surface.  At that hour the popular fever was gaining ground rapidly, and people were flinging themselves in the wake of the bands of men in blouses.  A constant forward movement seemed to sweep the roadway, and the cry kept recurring; obstinately, abruptly, there rang from thousands of throats: 

“A Berlin!  A Berlin!  A Berlin!”

The room on the fourth floor upstairs cost twelve francs a day, since Rose had wanted something decent and yet not luxurious, for sumptuousness is not necessary when one is suffering.  Hung with Louis XIII cretonne, which was adorned with a pattern of large flowers, the room was furnished with the mahogany commonly found in hotels.  On the floor there was a red carpet variegated with black foliage.  Heavy silence reigned save for an occasional whispering sound caused by voices in the corridor.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Four Short Stories By Emile Zola from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.