Thebonesetter
The terror of that apparition and
hasty removal stopped for a moment the physical sufferings
of the countess, and so enabled her to cast a furtive
glance at the actors in this mysterious scene.
She did not recognize Bertrand, who was there disguised
and masked as carefully as his master. After
lighting in haste some candles, the light of which
mingled with the first rays of the sun which were reddening
the window panes, the old servitor had gone to the
embrasure of a window and stood leaning against a
corner of it. There, with his face towards the
wall, he seemed to be estimating its thickness, keeping
his body in such absolute immobility that he might
have been taken for a statue. In the middle of
the room the countess beheld a short, stout man, apparently
out of breath and stupefied, whose eyes were blindfolded
and his features so distorted with terror that it was
impossible to guess at their natural expression.
“God’s death! you scamp,”
said the count, giving him back his eyesight by a
rough movement which threw upon the man’s neck
the bandage that had been upon his eyes. “I
warn you not to look at anything but the wretched
woman on whom you are now to exercise your skill; if
you do, I’ll fling you into the river that flows
beneath those windows, with a collar round your neck
weighing a hundred pounds!”
With that, he pulled down upon the
breast of his stupefied hearer the cravat with which
his eyes had been bandaged.
“Examine first if this can be
a miscarriage,” he continued; “in which
case your life will answer to me for the mother’s;
but, if the child is living, you are to bring it to
me.”
So saying, the count seized the poor
operator by the body and placed him before the countess,
then he went himself to the depths of a bay-window
and began to drum with his fingers upon the panes,
casting glances alternately on his serving-man, on
the bed, and at the ocean, as if he were pledging
to the expected child a cradle in the waves.
The man whom, with outrageous violence,
the count and Bertrand had snatched from his bed and
fastened to the crupper of the latter’s horse,
was a personage whose individuality may serve to characterize
the period,—a man, moreover, whose influence
was destined to make itself felt in the house of Herouville.
Never in any age were the nobles so
little informed as to natural science, and never was
judicial astrology held in greater honor; for at no
period in history was there a greater general desire
to know the future. This ignorance and this curiosity
had led to the utmost confusion in human knowledge;
all things were still mere personal experience; the
nomenclatures of theory did not exist; printing was
done at enormous cost; scientific communication had
little or no facility; the Church persecuted science
and all research which was based on the analysis of
natural phenomena. Persecution begat mystery.
So, to the people as well as to the nobles, physician
and alchemist, mathematician and astronomer, astrologer
and necromancer were six attributes, all meeting in
the single person of the physician. In those
days a superior physician was supposed to be cultivating
magic; while curing his patient he was drawing their
horoscopes. Princes protected the men of genius
who were willing to reveal the future; they lodged
them in their palaces and pensioned them. The
famous Cornelius Agrippa, who came to France to become
the physician of Henri II., would not consent, as
Nostradamus did, to predict the future, and for this
reason he was dismissed by Catherine de’ Medici,
who replaced him with Cosmo Ruggiero. The men
of science, who were superior to their times, were
therefore seldom appreciated; they simply inspired
an ignorant fear of occult sciences and their results.
Without being precisely one of the
famous mathematicians, the man whom the count had
brought enjoyed in Normandy the equivocal reputation
which attached to a physician who was known to do mysterious
works. He belonged to the class of sorcerers
who are still called in parts of France “bonesetters.”
This name belonged to certain untutored geniuses who,
without apparent study, but by means of hereditary
knowledge and the effect of long practice, the observations
of which accumulated in the family, were bonesetters;
that is, they mended broken limbs and cured both men
and beasts of certain maladies, possessing secrets
said to be marvellous for the treatment of serious
cases. But not only had Maitre Antoine Beauvouloir
(the name of the present bonesetter) a father and
grandfather who were famous practitioners, from whom
he inherited important traditions, he was also learned
in medicine, and was given to the study of natural
science. The country people saw his study full
of books and other strange things which gave to his
successes a coloring of magic. Without passing
strictly for a sorcerer, Antoine Beauvouloir impressed
the populace through a circumference of a hundred
miles with respect akin to terror, and (what was far
more really dangerous for himself) he held in his power
many secrets of life and death which concerned the
noble families of that region. Like his father
and grandfather before him, he was celebrated for
his skill in confinements and miscarriages. In
those days of unbridled disorder, crimes were so frequent
and passions so violent that the higher nobility often
found itself compelled to initiate Maitre Antoine
Beauvouloir into secrets both shameful and terrible.
His discretion, so essential to his safety, was absolute;
consequently his clients paid him well, and his hereditary
practice greatly increased. Always on the road,
sometimes roused in the dead of night, as on this
occasion by the count, sometimes obliged to spend
several days with certain great ladies, he had never
married; in fact, his reputation had hindered certain
young women from accepting him. Incapable of
finding consolation in the practice of his profession,
which gave him such power over feminine weakness, the
poor bonesetter felt himself born for the joys of
family and yet was unable to obtain them.
The good man’s excellent heart
was concealed by a misleading appearance of joviality
in keeping with his puffy cheeks and rotund figure,
the vivacity of his fat little body, and the frankness
of his speech. He was anxious to marry that he
might have a daughter who should transfer his property
to some poor noble; he did not like his station as
bonesetter and wished to rescue his family name from
the position in which the prejudices of the times
had placed it. He himself took willingly enough
to the feasts and jovialities which usually followed
his principal operations. The habit of being on
such occasions the most important personage in the
company, had added to his natural gaiety a sufficient
dose of serious vanity. His impertinences were
usually well received in crucial moments when it often
pleased him to perform his operations with a certain
slow majesty. He was, in other respects, as inquisitive
as a nightingale, as greedy as a hound, and as garrulous
as all diplomatists who talk incessantly and betray
no secrets. In spite of these defects developed
in him by the endless adventures into which his profession
led him, Antoine Beauvouloir was held to be the least
bad man in Normandy. Though he belonged to the
small number of minds who are superior to their epoch,
the strong good sense of a Norman countryman warned
him to conceal the ideas he acquired and the truths
he from time to time discovered.
As soon as he found himself placed
by the count in presence of a woman in childbirth,
the bonesetter recovered his presence of mind.
He felt the pulse of the masked lady; not that he
gave it a single thought, but under cover of that
medical action he could reflect, and he did reflect
on his own situation. In none of the shameful
and criminal intrigues in which superior force had
compelled him to act as a blind instrument, had precautions
been taken with such mystery as in this case.
Though his death had often been threatened as a means
of assuring the secrecy of enterprises in which he
had taken part against his will, his life had never
been so endangered as at that moment. He resolved,
before all things, to find out who it was who now employed
him, and to discover the actual extent of his danger,
in order to save, if possible, his own little person.
“What is the trouble?”
he said to the countess in a low voice, as he placed
her in a manner to receive his help.
“Do not give him the child—”
“Speak loud!” cried the
count in thundering tones which prevented Beauvouloir
from hearing the last word uttered by the countess.
“If not,” added the count who was careful
to disguise his voice, “say your ‘In manus.’”
“Complain aloud,” said
the leech to the lady; “cry! scream! Jarnidieu!
that man has a necklace that won’t fit you any
better than me. Courage, my little lady!”
“Touch her lightly!” cried the count.
“Monsieur is jealous,”
said the operator in a shrill voice, fortunately drowned
by the countess’s cries.
For Maitre Beauvouloir’s safety
Nature was merciful. It was more a miscarriage
than a regular birth, and the child was so puny that
it caused little suffering to the mother.
“Holy Virgin!” cried the
bonesetter, “it isn’t a miscarriage, after
all!”
The count made the floor shake as
he stamped with rage. The countess pinched Beauvouloir.
“Ah! I see!” he said
to himself. “It ought to be a premature
birth, ought it?” he whispered to the countess,
who replied with an affirmative sign, as if that gesture
were the only language in which to express her thoughts.
“It is not all clear to me yet,” thought
the bonesetter.
Like all men in constant practice,
he recognized at once a woman in her first trouble
as he called it. Though the modest inexperience
of certain gestures showed him the virgin ignorance
of the countess, the mischievous operator exclaimed:—
“Madame is delivered as if she knew all about
it!”
The count then said, with a calmness more terrifying
than his anger:—
“Give me the child.”
“Don’t give it him, for
the love of God!” cried the mother, whose almost
savage cry awoke in the heart of the little man a courageous
pity which attached him, more than he knew himself,
to the helpless infant rejected by his father.
“The child is not yet born;
you are counting your chicken before it is hatched,”
he said, coldly, hiding the infant.
Surprised to hear no cries, he examined
the child, thinking it dead. The count, seeing
the deception, sprang upon him with one bound.
“God of heaven! will you give
it to me?” he cried, snatching the hapless victim
which uttered feeble cries.
“Take care; the child is deformed
and almost lifeless; it is a seven months’ child,”
said Beauvouloir clinging to the count’s arm.
Then, with a strength given to him by the excitement
of his pity, he clung to the father’s fingers,
whispering in a broken voice: “Spare yourself
a crime, the child cannot live.”
“Wretch!” replied the
count, from whose hands the bonesetter had wrenched
the child, “who told you that I wished to kill
my son? Could I not caress it?”
“Wait till he is eighteen years
old to caress him in that way,” replied Beauvouloir,
recovering the sense of his importance. “But,”
he added, thinking of his own safety, for he had recognized
the Comte d’Herouville, who in his rage had
forgotten to disguise his voice, “have him baptized
at once and do not speak of his danger to the mother,
or you will kill her.”
The gesture of satisfaction which
escaped the count when the child’s death was
prophesied, suggested this speech to the bonesetter
as the best means of saving the child at the moment.
Beauvouloir now hastened to carry the infant back
to its mother who had fainted, and he pointed to her
condition reprovingly, to warn the count of the results
of his violence. The countess had heard all;
for in many of the great crises of life the human
organs acquire an otherwise unknown delicacy.
But the cries of the child, laid beside her on the
bed, restored her to life as if by magic; she fancied
she heard the voices of angels, when, under cover
of the whimperings of the babe, the bonesetter said
in her ear:—
“Take care of him, and he’ll
live a hundred years. Beauvouloir knows what
he is talking about.”
A celestial sigh, a silent pressure
of the hand were the reward of the leech, who had
looked to see, before yielding the frail little creature
to its mother’s embrace, whether that of the
father had done no harm to its puny organization.
The half-crazed motion with which the mother hid her
son beside her and the threatening glance she cast
upon the count through the eye-holes of her mask, made
Beauvouloir shudder.
“She will die if she loses that
child too soon,” he said to the count.
During the latter part of this scene
the lord of Herouville seemed to hear and see nothing.
Rigid, and as if absorbed in meditation, he stood
by the window drumming on its panes. But he turned
at the last words uttered by the bonesetter, with
an almost frenzied motion, and came to him with uplifted
dagger.
“Miserable clown!” he
cried, giving him the opprobrious name by which the
Royalists insulted the Leaguers. “Impudent
scoundrel! your science which makes you the accomplice
of men who steal inheritances is all that prevents
me from depriving Normandy of her sorcerer.”
So saying, and to Beauvouloir’s
great satisfaction, the count replaced the dagger
in its sheath.
“Could you not,” continued
the count, “find yourself for once in your life
in the honorable company of a noble and his wife, without
suspecting them of the base crimes and trickery of
your own kind? Kill my son! take him from his
mother! Where did you get such crazy ideas?
Am I a madman? Why do you attempt to frighten
me about the life of that vigorous child? Fool!
I defy your silly talk—but remember this,
since you are here, your miserable life shall answer
for that of the mother and the child.”
The bonesetter was puzzled by this
sudden change in the count’s intentions.
This show of tenderness for the infant alarmed him
far more than the impatient cruelty and savage indifference
hitherto manifested by the count, whose tone in pronouncing
the last words seemed to Beauvouloir to point to some
better scheme for reaching his infernal ends.
The shrewd practitioner turned this idea over in his
mind until a light struck him.
“I have it!” he said to
himself. “This great and good noble does
not want to make himself odious to his wife; he’ll
trust to the vials of the apothecary. I must
warn the lady to see to the food and medicine of her
babe.”
As he turned toward the bed, the count
who had opened a closet, stopped him with an imperious
gesture, holding out a purse. Beauvouloir saw
within its red silk meshes a quantity of gold, which
the count now flung to him contemptuously.
“Though you make me out a villain
I am not released from the obligation of paying you
like a lord. I shall not ask you to be discreet.
This man here,” (pointing to Bertrand) “will
explain to you that there are rivers and trees everywhere
for miserable wretches who chatter of me.”
So saying the count advanced slowly
to the bonesetter, pushed a chair noisily toward him,
as if to invite him to sit down, as he did himself
by the bedside; then he said to his wife in a specious
voice:—
“Well, my pretty one, so we
have a son; this is a joyful thing for us. Do
you suffer much?”
“No,” murmured the countess.
The evident surprise of the mother,
and the tardy demonstrations of pleasure on the part
of the father, convinced Beauvouloir that there was
some incident behind all this which escaped his penetration.
He persisted in his suspicion, and rested his hand
on that of the young wife, less to watch her condition
than to convey to her some advice.
“The skin is good, I fear nothing
for madame. The milk fever will come, of course;
but you need not be alarmed; that is nothing.”
At this point the wily bonesetter
paused, and pressed the hand of the countess to make
her attentive to his words.
“If you wish to avoid all anxiety
about your son, madame,” he continued, “never
leave him; suckle him yourself, and beware of the
drugs of apothecaries. The mother’s breast
is the remedy for all the ills of infancy. I
have seen many births of seven months’ children,
but I never saw any so little painful as this.
But that is not surprising; the child is so small.
You could put him in a wooden shoe! I am certain
he doesn’t weight more than sixteen ounces.
Milk, milk, milk. Keep him always on your breast
and you will save him.”
These last words were accompanied
by a significant pressure of the fingers. Disregarding
the yellow flames flashing from the eyeholes of the
count’s mask, Beauvouloir uttered these words
with the serious imperturbability of a man who intends
to earn his money.
“Ho! ho! bonesetter, you are
leaving your old felt hat behind you,” said
Bertrand, as the two left the bedroom together.
The reasons of the sudden mercy which
the count had shown to his son were to be found in
a notary’s office. At the moment when Beauvouloir
arrested his murderous hand avarice and the Legal Custom
of Normandy rose up before him. Those mighty
powers stiffened his fingers and silenced the passion
of his hatred. One cried out to him, “The
property of your wife cannot belong to the house of
Herouville except through a male child.”
The other pointed to a dying countess and her fortune
claimed by the collateral heirs of the Saint-Savins.
Both advised him to leave to nature the extinction
of that hated child, and to wait the birth of a second
son who might be healthy and vigorous before getting
rid of his wife and first-born. He saw neither
wife nor child; he saw the estates only, and hatred
was softened by ambition. The mother, who knew
his nature, was even more surprised than the bonesetter,
and she still retained her instinctive fears, showing
them at times openly, for the courage of mothers seemed
suddenly to have doubled her strength.