Father Milon

by Guy de Maupassant

  


For a month the hot sun has been parching the fields. Nature isexpanding beneath its rays; the fields are green as far as the eye cansee. The big azure dome of the sky is unclouded. The farms of Normandy,scattered over the plains and surrounded by a belt of tall beeches, look,from a distance, like little woods. On closer view, after lowering theworm-eaten wooden bars, you imagine yourself in an immense garden, forall the ancient apple-trees, as gnarled as the peasants themselves, arein bloom. The sweet scent of their blossoms mingles with the heavy smellof the earth and the penetrating odor of the stables. It is noon. Thefamily is eating under the shade of a pear tree planted in front of thedoor; father, mother, the four children, and the help--two women andthree men are all there. All are silent. The soup is eaten and then adish of potatoes fried with bacon is brought on.From time to time one of the women gets up and takes a pitcher down tothe cellar to fetch more cider.The man, a big fellow about forty years old, is watching a grape vine,still bare, which is winding and twisting like a snake along the side ofthe house.At last he says: "Father's vine is budding early this year. Perhaps wemay get something from it."The woman then turns round and looks, without saying a word.This vine is planted on the spot where their father had been shot.It was during the war of 1870. The Prussians were occupying the wholecountry. General Faidherbe, with the Northern Division of the army, wasopposing them.The Prussians had established their headquarters at this farm. The oldfarmer to whom it belonged, Father Pierre Milon, had received andquartered them to the best of his ability.For a month the German vanguard had been in this village. The Frenchremained motionless, ten leagues away; and yet, every night, some of theUhlans disappeared.Of all the isolated scouts, of all those who were sent to the outposts,in groups of not more than three, not one ever returned.They were picked up the next morning in a field or in a ditch. Eventheir horses were found along the roads with their throats cut.These murders seemed to be done by the same men, who could never befound.The country was terrorized. Farmers were shot on suspicion, women wereimprisoned; children were frightened in order to try and obtaininformation. Nothing could be ascertained.But, one morning, Father Milon was found stretched out in the barn, witha sword gash across his face.Two Uhlans were found dead about a mile and a half from the farm. One ofthem was still holding his bloody sword in his hand. He had fought,tried to defend himself. A court-martial was immediately held in theopen air, in front of the farm. The old man was brought before it.He was sixty-eight years old, small, thin, bent, with two big handsresembling the claws of a crab. His colorless hair was sparse and thin,like the down of a young duck, allowing patches of his scalp to be seen.The brown and wrinkled skin of his neck showed big veins whichdisappeared behind his jaws and came out again at the temples. He hadthe reputation of being miserly and hard to deal with.They stood him up between four soldiers, in front of the kitchen table,which had been dragged outside. Five officers and the colonel seatedthemselves opposite him.The colonel spoke in French:"Father Milon, since we have been here we have only had praise for you.You have always been obliging and even attentive to us. But to-day aterrible accusation is hanging over you, and you must clear the matterup. How did you receive that wound on your face?"The peasant answered nothing.The colonel continued:"Your silence accuses you, Father Milon. But I want you to answer me!Do you understand? Do you know who killed the two Uhlans who were foundthis morning near Calvaire?"The old man answered clearly"I did."The colonel, surprised, was silent for a minute, looking straight at theprisoner. Father Milon stood impassive, with the stupid look of thepeasant, his eyes lowered as though he were talking to the priest. Justone thing betrayed an uneasy mind; he was continually swallowing hissaliva, with a visible effort, as though his throat were terriblycontracted.The man's family, his son Jean, his daughter-in-law and his twograndchildren were standing a few feet behind him, bewildered andaffrighted.The colonel went on:"Do you also know who killed all the scouts who have been found dead, fora month, throughout the country, every morning?"The old man answered with the same stupid look:"I did.""You killed them all?""Uh huh! I did.""You alone? All alone?""Uh huh!""Tell me how you did it."This time the man seemed moved; the necessity for talking any length oftime annoyed him visibly. He stammered:"I dunno! I simply did it."The colonel continued:"I warn you that you will have to tell me everything. You might as wellmake up your mind right away. How did you begin?"The man cast a troubled look toward his family, standing close behindhim. He hesitated a minute longer, and then suddenly made up his mind toobey the order."I was coming home one night at about ten o'clock, the night after yougot here. You and your soldiers had taken more than fifty ecus worth offorage from me, as well as a cow and two sheep. I said to myself: 'Asmuch as they take from you; just so much will you make them pay back.'And then I had other things on my mind which I will tell you. Just thenI noticed one of your soldiers who was smoking his pipe by the ditchbehind the barn. I went and got my scythe and crept up slowly behindhim, so that he couldn't hear me. And I cut his head off with one singleblow, just as I would a blade of grass, before he could say 'Booh!' Ifyou should look at the bottom of the pond, you will find him tied up in apotato-sack, with a stone fastened to it."I got an idea. I took all his clothes, from his boots to his cap, andhid them away in the little wood behind the yard."The old man stopped. The officers remained speechless, looking at eachother. The questioning began again, and this is what they learned.Once this murder committed, the man had lived with this one thought:"Kill the Prussians!" He hated them with the blind, fierce hate of thegreedy yet patriotic peasant. He had his idea, as he said. He waitedseveral days.He was allowed to go and come as he pleased, because he had shown himselfso humble, submissive and obliging to the invaders. Each night he sawthe outposts leave. One night he followed them, having heard the name ofthe village to which the men were going, and having learned the few wordsof German which he needed for his plan through associating with thesoldiers.He left through the back yard, slipped into the woods, found the deadman's clothes and put them on. Then he began to crawl through thefields, following along the hedges in order to keep out of sight,listening to the slightest noises, as wary as a poacher.As soon as he thought the time ripe, he approached the road and hidbehind a bush. He waited for a while. Finally, toward midnight, heheard the sound of a galloping horse. The man put his ear to the groundin order to make sure that only one horseman was approaching, then he gotready.An Uhlan came galloping along, carrying des patches. As he went, he wasall eyes and ears. When he was only a few feet away, Father Milon draggedhimself across the road, moaning: "Hilfe! Hilfe!" ( Help! Help!) Thehorseman stopped, and recognizing a German, he thought he was wounded anddismounted, coming nearer without any suspicion, and just as he wasleaning over the unknown man, he received, in the pit of his stomach, aheavy thrust from the long curved blade of the sabre. He dropped withoutsuffering pain, quivering only in the final throes. Then the farmer,radiant with the silent joy of an old peasant, got up again, and, for hisown pleasure, cut the dead man's throat. He then dragged the body to theditch and threw it in.The horse quietly awaited its master. Father Milon mounted him andstarted galloping across the plains.About an hour later he noticed two more Uhlans who were returning home,side by side. He rode straight for them, once more crying "Hilfe!Hilfe!"The Prussians, recognizing the uniform, let him approach withoutdistrust. The old man passed between them like a cannon-ball, fellingthem both, one with his sabre and the other with a revolver.Then he killed the horses, German horses! After that he quickly returnedto the woods and hid one of the horses. He left his uniform there andagain put on his old clothes; then going back into bed, he slept untilmorning.For four days he did not go out, waiting for the inquest to beterminated; but on the fifth day he went out again and killed two moresoldiers by the same stratagem. From that time on he did not stop.Each night he wandered about in search of adventure, killing Prussians,sometimes here and sometimes there, galloping through deserted fields,in the moonlight, a lost Uhlan, a hunter of men. Then, his taskaccomplished, leaving behind him the bodies lying along the roads, theold farmer would return and hide his horse and uniform.He went, toward noon, to carry oats and water quietly to his mount, andhe fed it well as he required from it a great amount of work.But one of those whom he had attacked the night before, in defendinghimself slashed the old peasant across the face with his sabre.However, he had killed them both. He had come back and hidden the horseand put on his ordinary clothes again; but as he reached home he began tofeel faint, and had dragged himself as far as the stable, being unable toreach the house.They had found him there, bleeding, on the straw.When he had finished his tale, he suddenly lifted up his head and lookedproudly at the Prussian officers.The colonel, who was gnawing at his mustache, asked:"You have nothing else to say?""Nothing more; I have finished my task; I killed sixteen, not one more orless.""Do you know that you are going to die?""I haven't asked for mercy.""Have you been a soldier?""Yes, I served my time. And then, you had killed my father, who was asoldier of the first Emperor. And last month you killed my youngest son,Francois, near Evreux. I owed you one for that; I paid. We are quits."The officers were looking at each other.The old man continued:"Eight for my father, eight for the boy--we are quits. I did not seekany quarrel with you. I don't know you. I don't even know where youcome from. And here you are, ordering me about in my home as though itwere your own. I took my revenge upon the others. I'm not sorry."And, straightening up his bent back, the old man folded his arms in theattitude of a modest hero.The Prussians talked in a low tone for a long time. One of them, acaptain, who had also lost his son the previous month, was defending thepoor wretch. Then the colonel arose and, approaching Father Milon, saidin a low voice:"Listen, old man, there is perhaps a way of saving your life, it is to--"But the man was not listening, and, his eyes fixed on the hated officer,while the wind played with the downy hair on his head, he distorted hisslashed face, giving it a truly terrible expression, and, swelling outhis chest, he spat, as hard as he could, right in the Prussian's face.The colonel, furious, raised his hand, and for the second time the manspat in his face.All the officers had jumped up and were shrieking orders at the sametime.In less than a minute the old man, still impassive, was pushed up againstthe wall and shot, looking smilingly the while toward Jean, his eldestson, his daughter-in-law and his two grandchildren, who witnessed thisscene in dumb terror.


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