1War  Hot, thought the Parisians. The warm air of spring. It was night, they  were at war and there was an air raid. But dawn was near and the war far  away. The first to hear the hum of the siren were those who couldn’t  sleep—the ill and bedridden, mothers with sons at the front, women crying  for the men they loved. To them it began as a long breath, like air being  forced into a deep sigh. It wasn’t long before its wailing filled the sky.  It came from afar, from beyond the horizon, slowly, almost lazily. Those  still asleep dreamed of waves breaking over pebbles, a March storm  whipping the woods, a herd of cows trampling the ground with their hooves,  until finally sleep was shaken off and they struggled to open their eyes,  murmuring, “Is it an air raid?”The women, more anxious, more alert, were already up, although some of  them, after closing the windows and shutters, went back to bed. The night  before—Monday, 3 June—bombs had fallen on Paris for the first time since  the beginning of the war. Yet everyone remained calm. Even though the  reports were terrible, no one believed them. No more so than if victory  had been announced. “We don’t understand what’s happening,” people said.They had to dress their children by torchlight. Mothers lifted small,  warm, heavy bodies into their arms: “Come on, don’t be afraid, don’t cry.”  An air raid. All the lights were out, but beneath the clear, golden June  sky, every house, every street was visible. As for the Seine, the river  seemed to absorb even the faintest glimmers of light and reflect them back  a hundred times brighter, like some multifaceted mirror. Badly blacked-out  windows, glistening rooftops, the metal hinges of doors all shone in the  water. There were a few red lights that stayed on longer than the others,  no one knew why, and the Seine drew them in, capturing them and bouncing  them playfully on its waves. From above, it could be seen flowing along,  as white as a river of milk. It guided the enemy planes, some people  thought. Others said that couldn’t be so. In truth, no one really knew  anything. “I’m staying in bed,” sleepy voices murmured, “I’m not scared.”  “All the same, it just takes one . . .” the more sensible replied.Through the windows that ran along the service stairs in new apartment  blocks, little flashes of light could be seen descending: the people  living on the sixth floor were fleeing the upper storeys; they held their  torches in front of them, in spite of the regulations. “Do you think I  want to fall on my face on the stairs! Are you coming, Emile?” Everyone  instinctively lowered their voices as if the enemy’s eyes and ears were  everywhere. One after another, doors slammed shut. In the poorer  neighbourhoods there was always a crowd in the Métro, or the foul-smelling  shelters. The wealthy simply went to sit with the concierge, straining to  hear the shells bursting and the explosions that meant bombs were falling,  their bodies as tense as frightened animals in dark woods as the hunter  gets closer. Though the poor were just as afraid as the rich, and valued  their lives just as much, they were more sheeplike: they needed one  another, needed to link arms, to groan or laugh together.Day was breaking. A silvery blue light slid over the cobblestones, over  the parapets along the quayside, over the towers of Notre-Dame. Bags of  sand were piled halfway up all the important monuments, encircling  Carpeaux’s dancers on the façade of the Opera House, silencing the  Marseillaise on the Arc de Triomphe.Still at some distance, great guns were firing; they drew nearer, and  every window shuddered in reply. In hot rooms with blacked-out windows,  children were born, and their cries made the women forget the sound of  sirens and war. To the dying, the barrage of gunfire seemed far away,  without any meaning whatsoever, just one more element in that vague,  menacing whisper that washes over those on the brink of death. Children  slept peacefully, held tight against their mothers’ sides, their lips  making sucking noises, like little lambs. Street sellers’ carts lay  abandoned, full of fresh flowers.The sun came up, fiery red, in a cloudless sky. A shell was fired, now so  close to Paris that from the top of every monument birds rose into the  sky. Great black birds, rarely seen at other times, stretched out their  pink-tinged wings. Beautiful fat pigeons cooed; swallows wheeled; sparrows  hopped peacefully in the deserted streets. Along the Seine each poplar  tree held a cluster of little brown birds who sang as loudly as they  could. From deep beneath the ground came the muffled noise everyone had  been waiting for, a sort of three-tone fanfare. The air raid was over.
2  In the Péricand household they listened in shocked silence to the evening  news on the radio, but no one passed comment on the latest developments.  The Péricands were a cultivated family: their traditions, their way of  thinking, their middle-class, Catholic background, their ties with the  Church (their eldest son, Philippe Péricand, was a priest), all these  things made them mistrustful of the government of France. On the other  hand, Monsieur Péricand’s position as curator of one of the country’s  national museums bound them to an administration that showered its  faithful with honours and financial rewards.A cat held a little piece of bony fish tentatively between its sharp  teeth. He was afraid to swallow it, but he couldn’t bring himself to spit  it out either.Madame Péricand finally decided that only a male mind could explain with  clarity such strange, serious events. Neither her husband nor her eldest  son was at home: her husband was dining with friends, her son was not in  Paris. Charlotte Péricand, who ruled the family’s daily life with an iron  hand (whether it was managing the household, her children’s education or  her husband’s career), was not in the habit of seeking anyone’s opinion.  But this was of a different order. She needed a voice of authority to tell  her what to believe. Once pointed in the right direction, there would be  no stopping her. Even if given absolute proof she was mistaken, she would  reply with a cold, condescending smile, “My father said so . . . My  husband is very well-informed.” And she would make a dismissive little  gesture with her gloved hand.She took pride in her husband’s position (she herself would have preferred  a more domestic lifestyle, but following the example of our Dear Saviour,  each of us has his cross to bear). She had come home between appointments  to oversee her children’s studies, the baby’s bottles and the servants’  work, but she didn’t have time to take off her hat and coat. For as long  as the Péricand children could remember, their mother was always ready to  go out, armed with hat and white gloves. (Since she was thrifty, her  mended gloves had the faint smell of stain remover, a reminder of their  passage through the dry-cleaners.)As soon as she had come in this evening, she had gone to stand in front of  the radio in the drawing room. Her clothes were black, her hat a divine  little creation in fashion that season, decorated with three flowers and  topped with a silk pom-pom. Beneath it, her face was pale and anguished,  emphasising the marks of age and fatigue. She was forty-seven years old  and had five children. You would have thought, to look at her, that God  had intended her to be a redhead. Her skin was extremely delicate, lined  by the passing years. Freckles were dotted over her strong, majestic nose.  The expression in her green eyes was as sharp as a cat’s. At the last  minute, however, it seemed that Providence had wavered, or decided that a  shock of red hair would not be appropriate, neither to Madame Péricand’s  irreproachable morals nor to her social status, so she had been given  mousy brown hair, which she was losing by the handful since she’d had her  last child. Monsieur Péricand was a man of great discipline: his religious  scruples prohibited a number of pleasures and his concern for his  reputation kept him away from places of ill repute. The youngest Péricand  child was only two, and between Father Philippe and the baby, there were  three other children, not counting the ones Madame Péricand discreetly  referred to as the “three accidents”: babies she had carried almost to  term before losing them, so that three times their mother had been on the  verge of death.The drawing room, where the radio was now playing, was enormous and  well-proportioned, with four windows overlooking the Boulevard Delessert.  It was furnished in traditional style, with large armchairs and settees  upholstered in golden yellow. Next to the balcony, the elder Monsieur  Péricand sat in his wheelchair. He was an invalid whose advancing age  meant that he sometimes lapsed back into childhood and only truly returned  to his right mind when discussing his fortune, which was considerable (he  was a Péricand-Maltête, heir of the Maltête family of Lyon). But the war,  with its trials and tribulations, no longer affected him. He listened,  indifferent, steadily nodding his beautiful silvery beard. The children  stood in a semi-circle behind their mother, the youngest in his nanny’s  arms. Nanny had three sons of her own at the front. She had brought the  little boy downstairs to say goodnight to his family and took advantage of  her brief entry into the drawing room to listen anxiously to what they  were saying on the radio.The door was slightly ajar and Madame Péricand could sense the presence of  the other servants outside. Madeleine, the maid, was so beside herself  with worry that she came right up to the doorway. To Madame Péricand, such  a breach of the normal rules seemed a frightening indication of things to  come. It was in just this manner that the different social classes all  ended up on the top deck during a shipwreck. But working-class people were  highly strung. “How they do get carried away,” Madame Péricand thought  reproachfully. She was one of those middle-class women who generally trust  the lower classes. “They’re not so bad if you know how to deal with them,”  she would say in the same condescending and slightly sad tone she used to  talk of a caged animal. She was proud that she kept her servants for a  long time. She insisted on looking after them when they were ill. When  Madeleine had had a sore throat, Madame Péricand herself had prepared her  gargle. Since she had no time to administer it during the day, she had  waited until she got back from the theatre in the evening. Madeleine had  woken up with a start and had only expressed her gratitude afterwards, and  even then, rather coldly in Madame Péricand’s opinion. Well, that’s the  lower classes for you, never satisfied, and the more you go out of your  way to help them, the more ungrateful and moody they are. But Madame  Péricand expected no reward except from God.She turned towards the shadowy figures in the hallway and said with great  kindness, “You may come and listen to the news if you like.”“Thank you, Madame,” the servants murmured respectfully and slipped into  the room on tiptoe.They all came in: Madeleine; Marie; Auguste, the valet and finally Maria,  the cook, embarrassed because her hands smelled of fish. But the news was  over. Now came the commentaries on the situation: “Serious, of course, but  not alarming,” the speaker assured everyone. He spoke in a voice so full,  so calm, so effortless, and used such a resonant tone each time he said  the words “France,” “Homeland” and “Army,” that he instilled hope in the  hearts of his listeners. He had a particular way of reading such  communiqués as “The enemy is continuing relentless attacks on our  positions but is encountering the most valiant resistance from our  troops.” He said the first part of the sentence in a soft, ironic,  scornful tone of voice, as if to imply, “At least that’s what they’d like  us to think.” But in the second part he stressed each syllable, hammering  home the adjective “valiant” and the words “our troops” with such  confidence that people couldn’t help thinking, “Surely there’s no reason  to worry so much!”Madame Péricand saw the questioning, hopeful stares directed towards her.  “It doesn’t seem absolutely awful to me!” she said confidently. Not that  she believed it; she just felt it was her duty to keep up morale.Maria and Madeleine let out a sigh.“You think so, Madame?”Hubert, the second-eldest son, a boy of seventeen with chubby pink cheeks,  seemed the only one struck with despair and amazement. He dabbed nervously  at his neck with a crumpled-up handkerchief and shouted in a voice that  was so piercing it made him hoarse, “It isn’t possible! It isn’t possible  that it’s come to this! But, Mummy, what has to happen before they call  everyone up? Right away—every man between sixteen and sixty! That’s what  they should do, don’t you think so, Mummy?”He ran into the study and came back with a large map, which he spread out  on the table, frantically measuring the distances. “We’re finished, I’m  telling you, finished, unless . . .”Hope was restored. “
I see what they’re going to do,” he finally announced,  with a big happy smile that revealed his white teeth. “I can see it very  well. We’ll let them advance, advance, and then we’ll be waiting for them  there and there, look, see, Mummy! Or even . . .”“Yes, yes,” said his mother. “Go and wash your hands now, and push back  that bit of hair that keeps falling into your eyes. Just look at you.”Fury in his heart, Hubert folded up his map. Only Philippe took him  seriously, only Philippe spoke to him as an equal. “How I hate this  family,” he said to himself and kicked violently at his little brother’s  toys as he left the drawing room. Bernard began to cry. “That’ll teach him  about life,” Hubert thought.The nanny hurried to take Bernard and Jacqueline out of the room; the  baby, Emmanuel, was already asleep over her shoulder. Holding Bernard’s  hand, she strode through the door, crying for her three sons whom she  imagined already dead, all of them. “Misery and misfortune, misery and  misfortune!” she said quietly, over and over again, shaking her grey head.  She continued muttering as she started running the bath and warmed the  children’s pyjamas: “Misery and misfortune.” To her, those words embodied  not only the political situation but, more particularly, her own life:  working on the farm in her youth, her widowhood, her unpleasant  daughters-in-law, living in other people’s houses since she was sixteen.Auguste, the valet, shuffled back into the kitchen. On his solemn face was  an expression of great contempt that was aimed at many things.The energetic Madame Péricand went to her rooms and used the available  fifteen minutes between the children’s bath time and dinner to listen to  Jacqueline and Bernard recite their school lessons. Bright little voices  rose up: “The earth is a sphere which sits on absolutely nothing.”Only the elder Monsieur Péricand and Albert the cat remained in the  drawing room. It had been a lovely day. The evening light softly  illuminated the thick chestnut trees; Albert, a small grey tomcat who  belonged to the children, seemed ecstatic. He rolled around on his back on  the carpet. He jumped up on to the mantelpiece, nibbled at the edge of a  peony in a large midnight-blue vase, delicately pawed at a snapdragon  etched into the bronze corner-mount of a console table, then in one leap  perched on the old man’s wheelchair and miaowed in his ear. The elder  Monsieur Péricand stretched a hand towards him; his hand was always  freezing cold, purple and shaking. The cat was afraid and ran off. Dinner  was about to be served. Auguste appeared and pushed the invalid into the  dining room.They were just sitting down at the table when the mistress of the house  stopped suddenly, Jacqueline’s spoon of tonic suspended in mid-air. “It’s  your father, children,” she said as the key turned in the lock.It was indeed Monsieur Péricand, a short, stocky man with a gentle and  slightly awkward manner. His normally well-fed, relaxed and rosy-cheeked  face looked, not frightened or worried, but extraordinarily shocked. He  wore the expression found on people who have died in an accident, in a  matter of seconds, without having had time to be afraid or suffer. They  would be reading a book or looking out of a car window, thinking about  things, or making their way along a train to the restaurant car when, all  of a sudden, there they were in hell.Madame Péricand rose quietly from her chair. “Adrien?” she called out, her  voice anguished.“It’s nothing. Nothing,” he muttered hastily, glancing furtively at the  children, his father and the servants.Madame Péricand understood. She nodded at the servants to continue serving  dinner. She forced herself to swallow her food, but each mouthful seemed  as hard and bland as a stone and stuck in her throat. Nevertheless, she  repeated the phrases that had become ritual at mealtimes for the past  thirty years. “Don’t drink before starting your soup,” she told the  children. “Darling, your knife . . .”She cut the elderly Monsieur Péricand’s filet of sole into small strips.  He was on a complicated diet that allowed him to eat only the lightest  food and Madame Péricand always served him herself, pouring his water,  buttering his bread, tying his napkin round his neck, for he always  started drooling when he saw food he liked. “I don’t think poor elderly  invalids can bear to be touched by servants,” she would say to her friends.“We must show grandfather how much we love him, my darlings,” she  instructed the children, looking at the old man with terrifying tenderness.In his later years, Monsieur Péricand had endowed various philanthropic  projects, one of which was especially dear to his heart: the Penitent  Children of the 16th Arrondissement, a venerable institution whose goal  was to instil morals in delinquent minors. It had always been understood  that the elder Monsieur Péricand would leave a certain sum of money to  this organisation, but he had a rather irritating way of never revealing  exactly how much. If he hadn’t enjoyed his meal, or if the children made  too much noise, he would suddenly emerge from his stupor and say in a weak  but clear voice, “I’m going to leave them five million.”A painful silence would follow.On the other hand, if he’d had a lovely meal and a good sleep in his chair  by the window, in the sunshine, he would look up at his daughter-in-law  with the pale, distant eyes of a small child, or a newborn puppy.Charlotte was very tactful. She never replied, as others might, “You’re  absolutely right, Father.” Instead, she would say sweetly, “Good Lord, you  have plenty of time to think about that!”The Péricand fortune was considerable, but it would be unjust to accuse  them of coveting the elder Monsieur Péricand’s inheritance. They didn’t  care about money, not at all, but money cared about them, so to speak!  There were certain things that they deserved, including the  Maltête-Lyonnais millions; they would never manage to spend it all but  they would save it for their children’s children. As for the Penitent  Children of the 16th Arrondissement, they were so involved with this  charity that, twice a year, Madame Péricand organised classical music  concerts for the unfortunate children; she would play the harp and was  gratified to notice that, at certain passages, sobbing could be heard in  the darkened concert hall.Monsieur Péricand followed his daughter-in-law’s hands attentively. She  was so distracted and upset that she forgot his sauce. His white beard  waved about alarmingly. Madame Péricand came back to reality and quickly  poured the parsley butter over the ivory flesh of the fish, but it was  only after she placed a slice of lemon at the side of his plate that the  old man was calm again.Hubert leaned towards his brother and muttered, “It’s not going well, is  it?”“No,” he replied with a gesture and a look. Hubert dropped his trembling  hands on to his lap. He was lost in thought, vividly imagining scenes of  battle and victory. He was a Boy Scout. He and his friends would form a  group of volunteers, sharpshooters who would defend their country to the  end. In a flash, his mind raced through time and space. He and his  friends: a small group bound by honour and loyalty. They would fight, they  would fight all night long; they would save their bombed-out, burning  Paris. What an exciting, wonderful life! His heart leapt. And yet, war was  such a savage and horrifying thing. He was intoxicated by his imaginings.  He clutched his knife so tightly in his hand that the piece of roast beef  he was cutting fell on to the floor.“Clumsy oaf,” whispered Bernard. He and Jacqueline were eight and nine  years old, respectively, and were both thin, blond and stuck-up. The two  of them were sent to bed after dessert and the elder Monsieur Péricand  fell asleep at his usual place by the open window. The tender June day  persisted, refusing to die. Each pulse of light was fainter and more  exquisite than the last, as if bidding farewell to the earth, full of love  and regret. The cat sat on the window ledge and looked nostalgically  towards an horizon that was the colour of green crystal.Monsieur Péricand paced up and down the room. “In a few days, maybe even  tomorrow, the Germans will be on our doorstep. I’ve heard the High Command  has decided to fight outside Paris, in Paris, beyond Paris. No one knows  it yet, thank goodness, because after tomorrow there will be a stampede on  the roads and at the train stations. You must leave for your mother’s  house in Burgundy as early as possible tomorrow morning, Charlotte. As for  me,” Monsieur Péricand said rather proudly, “I will share the fate of the  treasures entrusted to my care.”“I thought everything in the museum had been moved out in September,” said  Hubert.“Yes, but the temporary hiding place they chose in Brittany isn’t  suitable; it turns out it’s as damp as a cellar. I just don’t understand  it. A Committee was organised to safeguard national treasures. It had  three sections and seven subsections, each of which was supposed to  appoint a panel of experts responsible for hiding works of art during the  war, yet just last month an attendant in the provisional museum points out  that suspicious stains are appearing on the canvases. Yes, a wonderful  portrait of Mignard with his hands rotting away from a kind of green  leprosy. They quickly sent the valuable packing cases back to Paris and  now I’m waiting for an order to rush them off to somewhere even further  away.”“But what about us? How will we travel? By ourselves?”“You’ll leave tomorrow morning, calmly, with the children and the two  cars, and any furniture and luggage you can carry, of course. We can’t  pretend that, by the end of the week, Paris might not be destroyed, burned  down and thoroughly pillaged.”“You are amazing!” exclaimed Charlotte. “You talk about it so calmly!”Monsieur Péricand turned towards his wife, his face gradually returning to  its normal pinkish colour—a matte pink, the colour of pigs who have been  recently slaughtered. “That’s because I can’t really believe it,” he  explained quietly. “Here I am, speaking to you, listening to you; we’ve  decided to flee, to leave our home, yet I cannot believe that it is all  
real. Do you understand? Now go and get everything ready, Charlotte.  Everything must be ready by tomorrow morning; you could be at your  mother’s in time for dinner. I’ll join you as soon as I can.”Madame Péricand’s face wore the same resigned, bitter look as when the  children were ill and she was forced to put on an apron and nurse them;  they all usually managed to be ill at the same time, though with different  maladies. When this happened, Madame Péricand would come out of the  children’s rooms with a thermometer in her hand, as if she were  brandishing the crown of martyrdom, and everything in her bearing seemed  to cry out: “You will reward your servants on Judgement Day, kind Jesus!”“What about Philippe?” was all she asked.“Philippe cannot leave Paris.”Madame Péricand left the room, head held high. She refused to bow beneath  the burden. She would see to it that the entire household was ready to  leave in the morning: the elderly invalid, four children, the servants,  the cat, plus the silver, the most valuable pieces of china, the fur  coats, food and medicine in case of emergencies. She shuddered.In the sitting room, Hubert was pleading with his father. “Please let me  stay. I can stay here with Philippe. And . . . don’t make fun of me! Can’t  you see that if I went and got my friends we could form a com-  pany of volunteers; we’re young, strong, ready for anything . . . We   could . . .”Monsieur Péricand looked at him. “My poor boy!” was all he said.“It’s all over? We’ve lost the war?” stammered Hubert. “Is . . . is it  true?”And suddenly, to his horror, he felt himself burst into tears. He cried  like a baby, like Bernard would have cried, his large mouth twisted, tears  streaming down his face. Night was falling, soft and peaceful. A swallow  flew by, lightly brushing against the balcony in the dark night air. The  cat let out a frustrated little cry of desire.
3  The writer Gabriel Corte was working on his terrace, between the dark,  swaying woods and the golden green setting sun fading over the Seine. How  peaceful everything was around him! Beside him were his well-trained  faithful friends, great white dogs who were awake yet motionless, their  noses pressed against the cool paving stones, their eyes half closed. At  his feet his mistress silently picked up the sheets of paper he dropped.  His servants, the secretary, were all invisible behind the shimmering  windows; they were hidden somewhere in the background of the house, in the  wings of his life, a life he desired to be as brilliant, luxurious and  disciplined as a ballet. He was fifty years old and had his favourite  games. Depending on the day, he was either Lord of the Heavens or a  miserable writer crushed by hard work and labouring in vain. On his desk  he had had engraved, “To lift such a heavy weight, Sisyphus, you will need  all your courage.” His fellow writers were jealous of him because he was  rich. He himself bitterly told the story of his first candidature to the  Académie Française: one of the electors implored to vote for him had  sarcastically replied, “He has three telephone lines!”He was handsome, with the cruel, languid movements of a cat, expressive  soft hands and a slightly full Roman face. Only Florence, his official  mistress, was allowed to remain in his bed until morning (the others never  spent the night with him). Only she knew how many masks he could put on,  this old flirt with dark circles under his eyes and thin arched eyebrows,  too thin, like a woman’s.That evening he was working as he normally did, half-naked. His house in  Saint-Cloud had been specially built to be hidden away from prying eyes,  right down to the vast, wonderful terrace, planted with blue cinerarias.  Blue was Gabriel Corte’s favourite colour. He could only write if he had a  small glass bowl of deep lapis lazuli beside him. He would look at it now  and again, and caress it like a mistress. What he liked best in Florence,  as he often told her, were her clear blue eyes, which gave him the same  feeling of coolness as his glass bowl. “Your eyes quench my thirst,” he  would murmur. She had a soft, slightly flabby chin, a contralto voice that  was still beautiful and, Gabriel Corte confided to his friends, something  cow-like in her expression. I like that. A woman should look like a  heifer: sweet, trusting and generous, with a body as white as cream. You  know, like those old actresses whose skin has been softened by massage,  make-up and powder.He stretched his delicate fingers in the air and clicked them like  castanets. Florence handed him a lemon, then an orange and some glacé  strawberries; he consumed an enormous amount of fruit. She gazed at him,  almost kneeling before him on a suede pouffe, in that attitude of  adoration that pleased him so much (though he couldn’t have imagined any  other). He was tired, but it was that good tiredness which comes from  doing enjoyable work. Sometimes he said it was better than the tiredness  that comes after making love.He looked benevolently at his mistress. “Well, that’s not gone too badly,  I think. And you know, the midpoint.” (He drew a triangle in the air  indicating its top.) “I’ve got past it.”She knew what he meant. Inspiration flagged in the middle of a novel. At  those moments, Corte struggled like a horse trying in vain to pull a  carriage out of the mud. She brought her hands together in a gracious  gesture of admiration and surprise. “Already! I congratulate you, my dear.  Now it will go smoothly, I’m sure.”“God willing!” he murmured. “But Lucienne worries me.”“Lucienne?”He looked at her scornfully, his eyes hard and cold. When he was in a good  mood, Florence would say, “You still have that killer look in your eye . .  .” and he would laugh, flattered. But he hated being teased when in the  throes of creativity.She couldn’t even remember who Lucienne was.“Of course,” she lied. “I don’t know what I was thinking!”“I don’t know either,” he said in a wounded voice.But she seemed so sad and humble that he took pity on her and softened. “I  keep telling you, you don’t pay enough attention to the minor characters.  A novel should be like a street full of strangers, where no more than two  or three people are known to us in depth. Look at writers like Proust.  They knew how to use minor characters to humiliate, to belittle their  protagonists. In a novel, there is nothing more valuable than teaching the  lesson of humility to the heroes. Remember, in 
War and Peace, the little  peasant girls who cross the road, laughing, in front of Prince Andrei’s  carriage? He speaks to them, directly, and the reader’s imagination is at  once lifted; now there is not just one face, not just one soul. He  portrays the many faces of the crowd. Wait, I’ll read you that passage,  it’s remarkable. Put the light on,” he said, for night had fallen.“Planes,” Florence replied, looking up at the sky.“Won’t they leave me the hell alone?” he thundered.He hated the war; it threatened much more than his lifestyle or peace of  mind. It continually destroyed the world of the imagination, the only  world where he felt happy. It was like a shrill, brutal trumpet shattering  the fragile crystal walls he’d taken such pains to build in order to shut   out the rest of the world.“God!” he sighed. “How upsetting, what a nightmare!”Brought back down to earth, he asked to see the newspapers. She gave them  to him without a word. They came in from the terrace and he leafed through  the papers, a dark look on his face. “All in all,” he said, “nothing new.”He didn’t want to see anything new. He dismissed reality with the bored,  startled gesture of a sleeping man awakened abruptly in the middle of a  dream. He even shaded his eyes with his hand as if to block out a dazzling  light.Florence walked towards the radio. He stopped her. “No, no, leave it  alone.”“But Gabriel . . .”He went white with anger. “Listen to me! I don’t want to hear anything.  Tomorrow, tomorrow will be soon enough. If I hear any bad news now (and it  can only be bad with these c**** in government) my momen-  tum will be lost, my inspiration blocked. Look, you’d better call Made-  moiselle Sudre. I think I’ll dictate a few pages!” She hurried to summon  the secretary.As she was coming back to the drawing room, the telephone rang. “It’s  Monsieur Jules Blanc phoning from the Presidential Office, wishing to  speak to Monsieur Corte,” said the valet.								
									 Copyright © 2006 by Irene Nemirovsky. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.