When critics and readers caught scent of
Patrick Suskind's "Perfume", it became an instant "New York
Times" bestseller in hardcover and paperback. The reviews were
sensational, word-of-mouth was incredible — and now it is back in an all-new
trade paperback format. "A tour de force of the imagination." —
"People."
Perfume
“The Name of the Rose, the last literary
sensation from Europe, crept up on America by stealth. PERFUME… arrives with
fanfare… PERFUME
GIVES OFF A RARE, SINFULLY ADDICTIVE CHILL OF PURE EVIL.
SUSKIND HAS SEDUCTIVE POWER AS A STORYTELLER.”
Connoisseur
“PERFUME IS ONE OF THE MOST EXCITING DISCOVERIES IN
YEARS… A SUPREMELY ACCOMPLISHED WORK OF ART,
MARVELOUSLY GRAFTED AND ENJOYABLE, AND RICH IN
HISTORICAL DETAIL, WITH
AN ABUNDANCE OF
LIFE… AN
ASTONISHING
PERFORMANCE, A MASTERWORK
OF ARTISTIC
CONCEPTION AND EXECUTION…
CONSTANTLY FASCINATING…
WITH HIS VERY FIRST NOVEL, PATRICK SUSKIND HAS ASSURED
HIMSELF A PLACE BESIDE THE
MOST IMPORTANT… WRITERS OF OUR TIME.”
San
Francisco Chronicle
“MESMERIZING FROM FIRST PAGE TO LAST… a highly
sophisticated horror tale… The last section of PERFUME takes on the frantic
dimensions of a superior mystery story… SUPERB STORY-TELLING ALL
THE WAY…
THE CLIMAX IS A SAVAGE SHOCKER.”
Cleveland Plain Dealer
“A BESTSELLER THAT ALSO EXISTS AS A STRANGE AND INGENIOUS WORK OF
LITERATURE… PERFUME has many dimensions. It is a meditation upon irrationality
and the Age of Reason; upon obsession and illusion; upon solipsism and art. The
sensuous, supple prose moves with a pantherish grace…”
Boston
Globe
“AN
EXCELLENT AND MOST EXTRAORDINARY FIRST NOVEL…”
Chicago
Tribune
“AN INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER…
A FASCINATING AND
HORRIFYING TALE… BRILLIANT.”
Library Journal
“AN INGENIOUS STORY… ABOUT A MOST EXOTIC MONSTER…
SUSPENSE BUILDS UP STEADILY, PARTICULARLY AT THE END.”
Los Angeles Times
“UNUSUAL AND COMPELLING… PERFUME offers a riot for the senses…
PERFUME READS CHILLINGLY LIKE A WELL-DOCUMENTED,
VERIFIABLE CASE HISTORY OF LUNACY AND MASS HYSTERIA.”
Publishers Weekly
“AN ORIGINAL, GRUESOME, COMPELLING NOVEL…”
Christian Science Monitor
“The story spins along like an ancient tale out of the Arabian
Nights with both suspense and horror growing steadily… A tour de force of the
imagination, a spell-weaving experience…”
People
“Like the best scents, PERFUME’s effects will linger long after it
has been stoppered…”
Time
“MR. SUSKIND’S INGENUITY PACKS PERFUME WITH FRESH
POWER. GRENOUILLE GROWS INTO AS COMPELLING A HEARTLESS
FIEND
-MADDENED BY AN UNCARING WORLD-AS YOU COULD ASK FOR.”
The Wall
Street Journal
|
PART
I
One
I N EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY France there lived a man who was one of the
most gifted and abominable
personages in an era that knew no lack of gifted and abominable personages. His
story will be told here. His name was Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, and if his
name-in contrast to the names of other gifted abominations, de Sade’s, for
instance, or Saint-Just’s, Fbuche’s, Bonaparte’s, etc.-has been forgotten
today, it is certainly not because Grenouille fell short of those more famous
blackguards when it came to arrogance, misanthropy, immorality, or, more
succinctly, to wickedness, but because his gifts and his sole ambition were
restricted to a domain that leaves no traces in history: to the fleeting realm
of scent.
In the
period of which we speak, there reigned in the cities a stench barely
conceivable to us modern men and women. The streets stank of manure, the
courtyards of urine, the stairwells stank of moldering wood and rat droppings,
the kitchens of spoiled cabbage and mutton fat; the unaired parlors stank of
stale dust, the bedrooms of greasy sheets, damp featherbeds, and the pungently
sweet aroma of chamber pots. The stench of sulfur rose from the chimneys, the
stench of caustic lyes from the tanneries, and from the slaughterhouses came
the stench of congealed blood. People stank of sweat and unwashed clothes; from
their mouths came the stench of rotting teeth, from their bellies that of
onions, and from their bodies, if they were no longer very young, came the
stench of rancid cheese and sour milk and tumorous disease. The rivers stank,
the marketplaces stank, the churches stank, it stank beneath the bridges and in
the palaces.The peasant stank as did the priest, the apprentice as did his
master’s wife, the whole of the aristocracy stank, even the king himself stank,
stank like a rank lion, and the queen like an old goat, summer and winter. For
in the eighteenth century there was nothing to hinder bacteria busy at
decomposition, and so there was no human activity, either constructive or
destructive, no manifestation of germinating or decaying life that was not
accompanied by stench.
And of course the stench was
foulest in Paris, for Paris was the largest city of France. And in turn there
was a spot in Paris under the sway of a particularly fiendish stench: between the
rue aux Fers and the rue de la Ferronnerie, the Cimetiere des Innocents to be
exact. For eight hundred years the dead had been brought here from the
Hotel-Dieu and from the surrounding parish churches, for eight hundred years,
day in, day out, corpses by the dozens had been carted here and tossed into
long ditches, stacked bone upon bone for eight hundred years in the tombs and
charnel houses. Only later-on the eve of the Revolution, after several of the
grave pits had caved in and the stench had driven the swollen graveyard’s
neighbors to more than mere protest and to actual insurrection -was it finally
closed and abandoned. Millions of bones and skulls were shoveled into the
catacombs of Montmartre and in its place a food market was erected.
Here,
then, on the most putrid spot in the whole kingdom, Jean-Baptiste Grenouilie
was born on July 17, 1738. It was one of the hottest days of the year. The heat
lay leaden upon the graveyard, squeezing its putrefying vapor, a blend of
rotting melon and the fetid odor of burnt animal horn, out into the nearby
alleys. When the labor pains began, Grenouille’s mother was standing at a fish
stall in the rue aux Fers, scaling whiting that she had just gutted. The fish,
ostensibly taken that very morning from the Seine, already stank so vilely that
the smell masked the odor of corpses. Grenouille’s mother, however, perceived
the odor neither of the fish nor of the corpses, for her sense of smell had
been utterly dulled, besides which her belly hurt, and the pain deadened all
susceptibility to sensate impressions. She only wanted the pain to stop, she
wanted to put this revolting birth behind her as quickly as possible. It was
her fifth. She had effected all the others here at the fish booth, and all had
been stillbirths or semi-stillbirths, for the bloody meat that had emerged had
not differed greatly from the fish guts that lay there already, nor had lived
much longer, and by evening the whole mess had been shoveled away and carted
off to the graveyard or down to the river. It would be much the same this day,
and Grenouille’s mother, who was still a young woman, barely in her
mid-twenties, and who still was quite pretty and had almost all her teeth in
her mouth and some hair on her head and-except for gout and syphilis and a
touch of consumption-suffered from no serious disease, who still hoped to live
a while yet, perhaps a good five or ten years, and perhaps even to marry one
day and as the
honorable wife of a widower with a trade or
some such to bear real children… Grenouille’s mother wished that it were
already over. And when the final contractions began, she squatted down under
the gutting table and there gave birth, as she had done four times before, and
cut the newborn thing’s umbilical cord with her butcher knife. But then, on
account of the heat and the stench, which she did not perceive as such but only
as an unbearable, numbing something-like a field of lilies or a small room
filled with too many daffodils-she grew faint, toppled to one side, fell out
from under the table into the street, and lay there, knife in hand.
Tumult and turmoil. The crowd
stands in a circle around her, staring, someone hails the police. The woman
with the knife in her hand is still lying in the street. Slowly she comes to.
What has happened to her? “Nothing.”
What is she doing with that knife? “Nothing.”
Where does the blood on her skirt come from?
“From the fish.”
She stands up, tosses the
knife aside, and walks off to wash.
And then, unexpectedly, the
infant under the gutting table begins to squall. They have a look, and beneath
a swarm of flies and amid the offal and fish heads they discover the newborn
child. They pull it out. As prescribed by law, they give it to a wet nurse and
arrest the mother. And since she confesses, openly admitting that she would
definitely have let the thing perish, just as she had with those other four by
the way, she is tried, found guilty of multiple infanticide, and a few weeks
later decapitated at the place de Greve.
By that time the child had
already changed wet nurses three times. No one wanted to keep it for more than
a couple of days. It was too greedy, they said, sucked as much as two babies,
deprived the other sucklings of milk and them, the wet nurses, of their
livelihood, for it was impossible to make a living nursing just one babe. The
police officer in charge, a man named La Fosse, instantly wearied of the matter
and wanted to have the child sent to a halfway house for foundlings and orphans
at the far end of the rue Saint-Antoine, from which transports of children were
dispatched daily to the great public orphanage in Rouen. But since these
convoys were made up of porters who carried bark baskets into which, for
reasons of economy, up to four infants were placed at a time; since therefore
the mortality rate on the road was extraordinarily high; since for that reason
the porters were urged to convey only baptized infants and only those furnished
with an official certificate of transport to be stamped upon arrival in Rouen;
since the babe Grenouille had neither been baptized nor received so much as a
name to inscribe officially on the certificate of transport; since, moreover, it
would not have been good form for the police anonymously to set a child at the
gates of the halfway house, which would have been the only way to dodge the
other formalities… thus, because of a whole series of bureaucratic and
administrative difficulties that seemed likely to occur if the child were
shunted aside, and because time was short as well, officer La Fosse revoked his
original decision and gave instructions for the boy to be handed over on
written receipt to some ecclesiastical institution or other, so that there they
could baptize him and decide his further fate. He got rid of him at the
cloister of Saint-Merri in the rue Saint-Martin. There they baptized him with
the name Jean-Baptiste. And because on that day the prior was in a good mood
and the eleemosynary fund not yet exhausted, they did not have the child
shipped to Rouen, but instead pampered him at the cloister’s expense. To this
end, he was given to a wet nurse named Jeanne Bussie who lived in the rue
Saint-Denis and was to receive, until further notice, three francs per week for
her trouble.
Two
A FEW WEEKS later, the wet nurse Jeanne Bussie stood, market basket
in hand, at the gates of the
cloister of Saint-Merri, and the minute they were opened by a bald monk of
about fifty with a light odor of vinegar about him-Father Terrier-she said
“There!” and set her market basket down on the threshold.
“What’s that?” asked Terrier,
bending down over the basket and sniffing at it, in the hope that it was
something edible.
“The bastard of that woman
from the rue aux Fers who killed her babies!”
The monk poked about in the
basket with his finger till he had exposed the face of the sleeping infant.
“He looks good. Rosy pink and
well nourished.”
“Because he’s stuffed himself
on me. Because he’s pumped me dry down to the bones. But I’ve put a stop to
that. Now you can feed him yourselves with goat’s milk, with pap, with beet
juice. He’ll gobble up anything, that bastard will.”
Father Terrier was an
easygoing man. Among his duties was the administration of the cloister’s
charities, the distribution of its moneys to the poor and needy. And for that
he expected a thank-you and that he not be bothered further. He despised
technical details, because details meant difficulties and difficulties meant
ruffling his composure, and he simply would not put up with that. He was upset
that he had even opened the gate. He wished that this female would take her
market basket and go home and let him alone with her suckling problems. Slowly
he straightened up, and as he did he breathed the scent of milk and cheesy wool
exuded by the wet nurse. It was a pleasant aroma.
“I don’t understand what it
is you want. I really don’t understand what you’re driving at. I can only
presume that it would certainly do no harm to this infant if he were to spend a
good while yet lying at your breast.”
“None to him,” the wet nurse
snarled back, “but plenty to me. I’ve lost ten pounds and been eating like I
was three women. And for what? For three francs a week!”
“Ah, I understand,” said
Terrier, almost relieved. “I catch your drift. Once again, it’s a matter of
money.”
“No!” said the wet nurse.
“Of course it is! It’s always
a matter of money. When there’s a knock at this gate, it’s a matter of money.
Just once I’d like to open it and find someone standing there for whom it was a
matter of something else. Someone, for instance, with some little show of
thoughtfulness. Fruit, perhaps, or a few nuts. After all, in autumn there are
lots of things someone could come by with. Flowers maybe. Or if only someone
would simply come and say a friendly word. ‘God bless you, Father Terrier, I
wish you a good day!’ But I’ll probably never live to see it happen. If it
isn’t a beggar, it’s a merchant, and if it isn’t a merchant, it’s a tradesman,
and if it isn’t alms he wants, then he presents me with a bill. I can’t even go
out into the street anymore. When I go out on the street, I can’t take three
steps before I’m hedged in by folks wanting money!”
“Not me,” said the wet nurse.
“But I’ll tell you this: you
aren’t the only wet nurse in the parish. There are hundreds of excellent foster
mothers who would scramble for the chance of putting this charming babe to
their breast for three francs a week, or to supply him with pap or juices or
whatever nourishment…”
“Then give him to one of
them!”
“… On the other hand, it’s
not good to pass a child around like that. Who knows if he would flourish as
well on someone else’s milk as on yours. He’s used to the smell of your breast,
as you surely know, and to the beat of your heart.”
And once again he inhaled
deeply of the warm vapors streaming from the wet nurse.
But then, noticing that his
words had made no impression on her, he said, “Now take the child home with
you! I’ll speak to the prior about all this. I shall suggest to him that in the
future you be given four francs a week.”
“No,” said the wet nurse. “All right-five!”
“No.”
“How much more do you want, then?” Terrier
shouted at her. “Five francs is a pile of money for the menial task of feeding
a baby.”
“I don’t want any money, period,” said the wet
nurse. “I want this bastard out of my house.” “But why, my good woman?” said
Terrier, poking his finger in the basket again. “He really is an
adorable child. He’s rosy
pink, he doesn’t cry, and he’s been baptized.” “He’s possessed by the devil.”
Terrier quickly withdrew his
finger from the basket.
“Impossible! It is absolutely
impossible for an infant to be possessed by the devil. An infant is
not yet a human being; it is a prehuman being
and does not yet possess a fully developed soul. Which is why it is of no
interest to the devil. Can he talk already, perhaps? Does he twitch and jerk?
Does he move things about in the room? Does some evil stench come from him?”
“He doesn’t smell at all,”
said the wet nurse.
“And there you have it! That
is a clear sign. If he were possessed by the devil, then he would have to
stink.”
And to soothe the wet nurse
and to put his own courage to the test, Terrier lifted the basket and held it
up to his nose.
“I smell absolutely nothing
out of the ordinary,” he said after he had sniffed for a while, “really nothing
out of the ordinary. Though it does appear as if there’s an odor coming from
his diapers.” And he held out the basket to her so that she could confirm his
opinion.
“That’s
not what I mean,”-said the wet nurse peevishly, shoving the basket away. “I
don’t mean what’s in the diaper. His soil smells, that’s true enough. But it’s
the bastard himself, he doesn’t smell.” “Because he’s healthy,” Terrier cried,
“because he’s healthy, that’s why he doesn’t smell! Only sick babies smell,
everyone knows that. It’s well known that a child with the pox smells like
horse
manure, and one with scarlet
fever like old apples, and a consumptive child smells like onions. He is
healthy, that’s all that’s wrong with him. Do you think he should stink? Do
your own children stink?”
“No,” said the wet nurse. “My
children smell like human children ought to smell.”
Terrier carefully placed the
basket back on the ground, for he could sense rising within him the first waves
of his anger at this obstinate female. It was possible that he would need to
move both arms more freely as the debate progressed, and he didn’t want the
infant to be harmed in the process. But for the present, he knotted his hands
behind his back, shoved his tapering belly toward the wet nurse, and asked
sharply, “You maintain, then, that you know how a human child-which may I
remind you, once it is baptized, is also a child of God-is supposed to smell?”
“Yes,” said the wet nurse.
“And you further maintain
that, if it does not smell the way you-you, the wet nurse Jeanne Bussie from
the rue Saint-Denis!-think it ought to smell, it is therefore a child of the
devil?”
He swung his left hand out
from behind his back and menacingly held the question mark of his index finger
in her face. The wet nurse thought it over. She was not happy that the
conversation had all at once turned into a theological cross-examination, in
which she could only be the loser.
“That’s not what I meant to
say,” she answered evasively. “You priests will have to decide whether all this
has anything to do with the devil or not, Father Terrier. That’s not for such
as me to say. I only know one thing: this baby makes my flesh creep because it
doesn’t smell the way children ought to smell.”
“Aha,” said Terrier with
satisfaction, letting his arm swing away again. “You retract all that about the
devil, do you? Good. But now be so kind as to tell me: what does a baby smell
like when he smells the way you think he ought to smell? Well?”
“He smells good,” said the
wet nurse.
“What do you mean, ‘good’?”
Terrier bellowed at her. “Lots of things smell good. A bouquet of lavender
smells good. Stew meat smells good. The gardens of Arabia smell good. But what
does a baby smell like, is what I want to know.”
The wet nurse hesitated. She
knew very well how babies smell, she knew precisely-after all she had fed,
tended, cradled, and kissed dozens of them… She could find them at night with
her nose. Why, right at that moment she bore that baby smell clearly in her
nose. But never until now had she described it in words.
“Well?” barked Terrier,
clicking his fingernails impatiently.
“Well
it’s-” the wet nurse began, “it’s not all that easy to say, because… because
they don’t smell the same all over, although they smell good ail over, Father,
you know what I mean? Their feet, for instance, they smell like a smooth, warm
stone-or no, more like curds… or like butter, like fresh butter, that’s it
exactly. They smell like fresh butter. And their bodies smell like… like a
griddle cake that’s been soaked in milk. And their heads, up on top, at the
back of the head, where the hair makes a cowlick, there, see where I mean,
Father, there where you’ve got nothing left…” And she tapped the bald spot on
the head of the monk, who, struck speechless for a moment by this flood of
detailed inanity, had obediently bent his head down. “There, right there, is
where they smell best of all. It
smells like caramel, it
smells so sweet, so wonderful, Father, you have no idea! Once you’ve smelled
them there, you love them whether they’re your own or somebody else’s. And
that’s how little children have to smell-and no other way. And if they don’t
smell like that, if they don’t have any smell at all up there, even less than
cold air does, like that little bastard there, then… You can explain it however
you like, Father, but I”-and she crossed her arms resolutely beneath her bosom
and cast a look of disgust toward the basket at her feet as if it contained
toads-”I, Jeanne Bussie, will not take that thing back!”
Father Terrier slowly raised
his lowered head and ran his fingers across his bald head a few tirnes as if
hoping to put the hair in order, passed his finger beneath his nose as if by
accident, and sniffed thoughtfully.
“Like caramel…?” he asked,
attempting to find his stern tone again. “Caramel! What do you know about
caramel? Have you ever eaten any?”
“Not exactly,” said the wet
nurae. “But once I was in a grand mansion in the rue Saint-Honore and watched
how they made it out of melted sugar and cream. It smelled so good that I’ve
never forgotten it.”
“Yes, yes. All right,” said
Terrier and took his finger from his nose. “But please hold your tongue now! I
find it quite exhausting to continue a conversation with you on such a level. I
have determined that, for whatever reason, you refuse to nourish any longer the
babe put under your care, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, and are returning him
herewith to his temporary guardian, the cloister of Saint-Merri. I find that
distressing, but I apparently cannot alter the fact. You are discharged.”
With that he grabbed the
basket, took one last whiff of that fleeting woolly, warm milkiness, and
slammed the door. Then he went to his office.
Three
F ATHER TERRIER was an educated man. He had not merely
studied theology, but had read the
philosophers as well, and had dabbled with botany and alchemy on the side. He
had a rather high opinion of his own critical faculties. To be sure, he would
never go so far as some-who questioned the miracles, the oracles, the very
truth of Holy Scripture-even though the biblical texts could not, strictly speaking, be explained by reason
alone, indeed often directly contradicted it. He preferred not to meddle with
such problems, they were too discomfiting for him and would only land him in
the most agonizing insecurity and disquiet, whereas to make use of one’s reason
one truly needed both security and quiet. What he most vigorously did combat,
however, were the superstitious notions of the simple folk: witches and
fortune-telling cards, the wearing of amulets, the evil eye, exorcisms,
hocus-pocus at full moon, and all the other acts they performed-it was really
quite depressing to see how such heathenish customs had still not been uprooted
a good thousand years after the firm establishment of the Christian religion!
And most instances of so-called satanic possession or pacts with the devil
proved on closer inspection to be superstitious mummery. Of course, to deny the
existence of Satan himself, to doubt his power-Terrier could not go so far as
that; ecclesiastical bodies other than one small, ordinary monk were assigned
the task of deciding about such matters touching the very foundations of
theology. But on the other hand, it was clear as day that when a simple soul
like that wet nurse maintained that she had spotted a devilish spirit, the
devil himself could not possibly have a hand in it. The very fact that she
thought she had spotted him was certain proof that there was nothing devilish
to be found, for the devil would certainly never be stupid enough to let
himself be unmasked by the wet nurse Jeanne Bussie. And with her nose no less!
With the primitive organ of smell, the basest of the senses! As if hell smelled
of sulfur and paradise of incense and myrrh! The worst sort of superstition,
straight out of the darkest days of paganism, when people still lived like
beasts, possessing no keenness of the eye, incapable of distinguishing colors,
but presuming to be able to smell blood, to scent the difference between friend
and foe, to be smelled out by cannibal giants and werewolves and the Furies,
all the while offering their ghastly gods stinking, smoking burnt sacrifices.
How repulsive! “The fool sees with his nose” rather than his eyes, they say,
and apparently the light of God-given reason would have to shine yet another
thousand years before the last remnants of such primitive beliefs were
banished.
“Ah yes,
and you poor little child! Innocent creature! Lying in your basket and
slumbering away, with no notion of the ugly suspicions raised against you. That
impudent woman dared to claim you
don’t smell the way human children are supposed
to smell. Well, what do we have to say to that? Pooh-peedooh!”
And he rocked the basket
gently on his knees, stroking the infant’s head with his finger and repeating
“poohpeedooh” from time to time, an expression he thought had a gentle,
soothing effect on small children. “You’re supposed to smell like caramel, what
nonsense, poohpeedooh!”
After a while he pulled his
finger back, held it under his nose and sniffed, but could smell nothing except
the choucroute he had eaten at lunch.
He hesitated a moment, looked
around him to make sure no one was watching, lifted the basket, lowered his fat
nose into it. Expecting to inhale an odor, he sniffed all around the infant’s
head, so close to it that the thin reddish baby hair tickled his nostrils. He
did not know exactly how babies’ heads were supposed to smell. Certainly not
like caramel, that much was clear, since caramel was melted sugar, and how
could a baby that until now had drunk only milk smell like melted sugar? It
might smell like milk, like wet nurse’s milk. But it didn’t smell like milk. It
might smell like hair, like skin and hair and maybe a little bit of baby sweat.
And Terrier sniffed with the intention of smelling skin, hair, and a little
baby sweat. But he smelled nothing. For the life of him he couldn’t. Apparently
an infant has no odor, he thought, that must be it. An infant, assuming it is
kept clean, simply doesn’t smell, any more than it speaks, or walks, or writes.
Such things come only with age. Strictly speaking, human beings first emit an
odor when they reach puberty. That’s how it is, that’s all Wasn’t it Horace
himself who wrote, “The youth is gamy as a buck, the maiden’s fragrance
blossoms as does the white narcissus…”?-and the Romans knew all about that! The
odor of humans is always a fleshly odor-that is, a sinful odor. How could an
infant, which does not yet know sin even in its dreams, have an odor? How could
it smell? Poohpee-dooh-not a chance of it!
He had placed the basket back
on his knees and now rocked it gently. The babe still slept soundly. Its right
fist, small and red, stuck out from under the cover and now and then twitched
sweetly against his cheek. Terrier smiled and suddenly felt very cozy. For a
moment he allowed himself the fantastic thought that he was the father of the
child. He had not become a monk, but rather a normal citizen, an upstanding
craftsman perhaps, had taken a wife, a warm wife fragrant with milk and wool,
and had produced a son with her and he was rocking him here now on his own
knees, his own child, poohpoohpoohpeedooh… The thought of it made him feel
good. There was something so normal and right about the idea. A father rocking
his son on his knees, poohpeedooh, a vision as old as the world itself and yet
always new and normal, as long as the world would exist, ah yes! Terrier felt
his heart glow with sentimental coziness.
Then the
child awoke. Its nose awoke first. The tiny nose moved, pushed upward, and
sniffed. It sucked air in and snorted it back out in short puffs, like an
imperfect sneeze. Then the nose wrinkled up, and the child opened its eyes. The
eyes were of an uncertain color, between oyster gray and creamy opal white,
covered with a kind of slimy film and apparently not very well adapted for
sight. Terrier had the impression that they did not even perceive him. But not
so the nose. While the child’s dull eyes squinted into the void, the nose
seemed to fix on a particular target, and Terrier had the very odd feeling that
he himself, his person, Father Terrier, was that target. The tiny wings of
flesh around the two tiny holes in the child’s face swelled like a bud opening
to bloom. Or rather, like the cups of that small meat-eating plant that was
kept in the royal botanical gardens. And like the plant, they seemed to create
an eerie suction. It seemed to Terrier as if the child saw him with its
nostrils, as if it were staring intently at him, scrutinizing him, more
piercingly than eyes could ever do, as if it were using its nose to devour something
whole, something that came from him, from Terrier, and that he could not hold
that something back or hide it,… The child with no smell was smelling at him
shamelessly, that was it! It was establishing his scent! And all at once he
felt as if he stank, of sweat and vinegar, of choucroute and unwashed clothes.
He felt naked and ugly, as if someone were gaping at him while revealing
nothing of himself. The child seemed to be smelling right through his skin,
into his innards. His most tender emotions, his filthiest thoughts lay exposed
to that greedy little nose, which wasn’t even a proper nose, but only a pug of
a nose, a tiny perforated organ, forever crinkling and puffing and quivering.
Terrier shuddered. He felt sick to his stomach. He pulled back his own nose as
if he smelled something foul that he wanted nothing to do with. Gone was the
homey thought that his might be his own flesh and blood. Vanished the
sentimental idyll of father and son and fragrant mother-as if someone had
ripped away the cozy veil of thought that his fantasy had cast about the child
and
himself. A strange, cold creature lay there on
his knees, a hostile animal, and were he not a man by nature prudent,
God-fearing, and given to reason, in the rush of nausea he would have hurled it
like a spider from him.
Terrier wrenched himself to
his feet and set the basket on the table. He wanted to get rid of the thing, as
quickly as possible, right away if possible, immediately if possible.
And then it began to wail. It
squinted up its eyes, gaped its gullet wide, and gave a screech so repulsively
shrill that the blood in Terrier’s veins congealed. He shook the basket with an
outstretched hand and shouted “Poohpeedooh” to silence the child, but it only
bellowed more loudly and turned completely blue in the face and looked as if it
would burst from bellowing.
Away with it! thought
Terrier, away this very instant with this… he was about to say “devil,” but
caught himself and refrained… away with this monster, with this insufferable
child! But away where? He knew a dozen wet nurses and orphanages in the
neighborhood, but that was too near, too close for comfort, get the thing
farther away, so far away that you couldn’t hear it, so far away that it could
not be dropped on your doorstep again every hour or so; if possible it must be
taken to another parish, on the other side of the river would be even better,
and best of all extra mums, in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, that was it! That
was the place for this screaming brat, far off to the east, beyond the
Bastille, where at night the city gates were locked.
And he hitched up his cassock
and grabbed the bellowing basket and ran off, ran through the tangle of alleys
to the rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine, eastward up the Seine, out of the city,
far, far out the rue de Charonne, almost to its very end, where at an address
near the cloister of Madeleine de Trenelle, he knew there lived a certain
Madame Gaillard, who took children to board no matter of what age or sort, as
long as someone paid for them, and there he handed over the child, still
screaming, paid a year in advance, and fled back into the city, and once at the
cloister cast his clothes from him as if they were foully soiled, washed
himself from head to foot, and crept into bed in his cell, crossing himself
repeatedly, praying long, and finally with some relief falling asleep.
Four
M ADAME GAILLARD’S life already lay behind her,
though she was not yet thirty years old.
To the world she looked as old as her years-and at the same time two,
three, a hundred times older, like the mummy of a young girl. But on the inside
she was long since dead. When she was a child, her father had struck her across
the forehead with a poker, just above the base of the nose, and she had lost
for good all sense of smell and every sense of human warmth and human
coldness-indeed, every human passion. With that one blow, tenderness had become
as foreign to her as enmity, joy as strange as despair. She felt nothing when
later she slept with a man, and just as little when she bore her children. She
did not grieve over those that died, nor rejoice over those that remained to
her. When her husband beat her, she did not flinch, and she felt no sense of
relief when he died of cholera in the Hotel-Dieu. The only two sensations that
she was aware of were a very slight depression at the approach of her monthly
migraine and a very slight elevation of mood at its departure. Otherwise, this
numbed woman felt nothing. On the other hand… or perhaps precisely because of
her total lack of emotion… Madame Gaillard had a merciless sense of order and
justice. She showed no preference for any one of the children entrusted to her
nor discriminated against any one of them. She served up three meals a day and
not the tiniest snack more. She diapered the little ones three times a day, but
only until their second birthday. Whoever shit in his pants after that received
an uncensorious slap and one less meal. Exactly one half of the boarding fees
were spent for her wards, exactly one half she retained for herself. She did
not attempt to increase her profits when prices went down; and in hard times she
did not charge a single sol extra, even when it was a matter of life and death.
Otherwise her business would have been of no value to her. She needed the
money. She had figured it down to the penny. In her old age she wanted to buy
an annuity, with just enough beyond that so that she could afford to die at
home rather than perish miserably in the Hotel-Dieu as her husband had. The
death itself had left her cold. But she dreaded a communal, public death among
hundreds of strangers. She wanted to afford a private death, and for that she
needed her full cut of the boarding fees. True, there were winters when three
or four of her two dozen little boarders died. Still, her record was
considerably better than that of most other private foster mothers and surpassed
by far the record of the great public and ecclesiastical
orphanages, where the losses often came to nine
out of ten. There were plenty of replacements. Paris produced over ten thousand
new foundlings, bastards, and orphans a year. Several such losses were quite
affordable.
For little Grenouille, Madame
Gaillard’s establishment was a blessing. He probably could not have survived anywhere
else. But here, with this small-souled woman, he throve. He had a tough
constitution. Whoever has survived his own birth in a garbage can is not so
easily shoved back out of this world again. He could eat watery soup for days
on end, he managed on the thinnest milk, digested the rottenest vegetables and
spoiled meat. In the course of his childhood he survived the measles,
dysentery, chicken pox, cholera, a twenty-foot fall into a well, and a scalding
with boiling water poured over his chest. True, he bore scars and chafings and
scabs from it all, and a slightly crippled foot left him with a limp, but he
lived. He was as tough as a resistant bacterium and as content as a tick
sitting quietly on a tree and living off a tiny drop of blood plundered years
before. He required a minimum ration of food and clothing for his body. For his
soul he required nothing. Security, attention, tenderness, love-or whatever all
those things are called that children are said to require— were totally
dispensable for the young Grenouille. Or rather, so it seems to us, he had
totally dispensed with them just to go on living-from the very start. The cry
that followed his birth, the cry with which he had brought himself to people’s
attention and his mother to the gallows, was not an instinctive cry for
sympathy and love. That cry, emitted upon careful consideration, one might
almost say upon mature consideration, was the newborn’s decision against love
and nevertheless for life. Under the circumstances, the latter was possible only
without the former, and had the child demanded both, it would doubtless have
abruptly come to a grisly end. Of course, it could have grabbed the other
possibility open to it and held its peace and thus have chosen the path from
birth to death without a detour by way of life, sparing itself and the world a
great deal of mischief. But to have made such a modest exit would have demanded
a modicum of native civility, and that Grenouille did not possess. He was an
abomination from the start.
He decided in favor of life out of sheer spite
and sheer malice.
Obviously he did not decide
this as an adult would decide, who requires his more or less substantial
experience and reason to choose among various options. But he did decide
vegetatively, as a bean when once tossed aside must decide if it ought to
germinate or had better let things be.
Or like that tick in the
tree, for which life has nothing better to offer than perpetual hibernation.
The ugly little tick, which by rolling its blue-gray body up into a ball offers
the least possible surface to the world; which by making its skin smooth and
dense emits nothing, lets not the tiniest bit of perspiration escape. The tick,
which makes itself extra small and inconspicuous so that no one will see it and
step on it. The lonely tick, which, wrapped up in itself, huddles in its tree,
blind, deaf, and dumb, and simply sniffs, sniffs all year long, for miles
around, for the blood of some passing animal that it could never reach on its
own power. The tick could let itself drop. It could fall to the floor of the
forest and creep a millimeter or two here or there on its six tiny legs and lie
down to die under the leaves-it would be no great loss, God knows. But the
tick, stubborn, sullen, and loathsome, huddles there and lives and waits.
Waits, for that most improbable of chances that will bring blood, in animal
form, directly beneath its tree. And only then does it abandon caution and
drop, and scratch and bore and bite into that alien flesh…
The young Grenouille was such
a tick. He lived encapsulated in himself and waited for better times. He gave
the world nothing but his dung-no smile, no cry, no glimmer in the eye, not
even his own scent. Every other woman would have kicked this monstrous child
out. But not Madame Gaillard. She could not smell that he did not smell, and
she expected no stirrings from his soul, because her own was sealed tight.
The
other children, however, sensed at once what Grenouille was about. From the
first day, the new arrival gave them the creeps. They avoided the box in which
he lay and edged closer together in their beds as if it had grown colder in the
room. The younger ones would sometimes cry out in the night; they felt a draft
sweep through the room. Others dreamed something was taking their breath away.
One day the older ones conspired to suffocate him. They piled rags and blankets
and straw over his face and weighed it all down with bricks. When Madame
Gaillard dug him out the next morning, he was crumpled and squashed and blue,
but not dead. They tried it a couple of times more, but in vain. Simple
strangulation-using their bare hands or stopping up his mouth and nose— would
have
been a dependable method, but they did not dare
try it. They didn’t want to touch him. He disgusted them the way a fat spider
that you can’t bring yourself to crush in your own hand disgusts you.
As he grew older, they gave
up their attempted murders. They probably realized that he could not be
destroyed. Instead, they stayed out of his way, ran off, or at least avoided
touching him. They did not hate him. They weren’t jealous of him either, nor
did they begrudge him the food he ate. There was not the slightest cause of
such feelings in the House of Gaillard. It simply disturbed them that he was
there. They could not stand the nonsmell of him. They were afraid of him.
Five
L OOKED AT objectively, however, there was nothing at all about him
to instill terror. As he grew older,
he was not especially big, nor strong-ugly, true, but not so extremely ugly
that people would necessarily have taken fright at him. He was not aggressive,
nor underhanded, nor furtive, he did not provoke people. He preferred to keep out
of their way. And he appeared to possess nothing even approaching a fearful
intelligence. Not until age three did he finally begin to stand on two feet; he
spoke his first word at four, it was the word “fishes,” which in a moment of
sudden excitement burst from him like an echo when a fishmonger coming up the
rue de Charonne cried out his wares in the distance. The next words he parted
with were “pelargonium,” “goat stall,” “savoy cabbage,” and “Jacqueslorreur,”
this last being the name of a gardener’s helper from the neighboring convent of
the Filles de la Croix, who occasionally did rough, indeed very rough work for
Madame Gaillard, and was most conspicuous for never once having washed in all
his life. He was less concerned with verbs, adjectives, and expletives. Except
for “yes” and “no”-which, by the way, he used for the first time quite late-he
used only nouns, and essentially only nouns for concrete objects, plants,
animals, human beings— and only then if the objects, plants, animals, or human
beings would subdue him with a sudden attack of odor.
One day as he sat on a cord
of beechwood logs snapping and cracking in the March sun, he first uttered the
word “wood.” He had seen wood a hundred times before, had heard the word a
hundred times before. He understood it, too, for he had often been sent to
fetch wood in winter. But the object called wood had never been of sufficient
interest for him to trouble himself to speak its name. It happened first on
that March day as he sat on the cord of wood, The cord was stacked beneath
overhanging eaves and formed a kind of bench along the south side of Madam
Gaillard’s shed. The top logs gave off a sweet burnt smell, and up from the
depths of the cord came a mossy aroma; and in the warm sun, bits of resin odor
crumbled from the pinewood planking of the shed.
Grenouille
sat on the logs, his legs outstretched and his back leaned against the wall of
the shed. He had closed his eyes and did not stir. He saw nothing, he heard
nothing, he felt nothing. He only smelled the aroma of the wood rising up
around him to be captured under the bonnet of the eaves. He drank in the aroma,
he drowned in it, impregnating himself through his innermost pores, until he
became wood himself; he lay on the cord of wood like a wooden puppet, like
Pinocchio, as if dead, until after a long while, perhaps a half hour or more,
he gagged up the word “wood.” He vomited the word up, as if he were filled with
wood to his ears, as if buried in wood to his neck, as if his stomach, his
gorge, his nose were spilling over with wood. And that brought him to himself,
rescued him only moments before the overpowering presence of the wood, its
aroma, was about to suffocate him. He shook himself, slid down off the logs,
and tottered away as if on wooden legs. Days later he was still completely
fuddled by the intense olfactory experience, and whenever the memory of it rose
up too powerfully within him he would mutter imploringly, over and over, “wood,
wood.”
And so he learned to speak. With
words designating nonsmelling objects, with abstract ideas and the like,
especially those of an ethical or moral nature, he had the greatest difficulty.
He could not retain them, confused them with one another, and even as an adult
used them unwillingly and often incorrectly: justice, conscience, God, joy,
responsibility, humility, gratitude, etc.-what these were meant to express
remained a mystery to him.
On the
other hand, everyday language soon would prove inadequate for designating all
the olfactory notions that he had accumulated within himself. Soon he was no
longer smelling mere wood, but kinds of wood: maple wood, oak wood, pinewood,
elm wood, pearwood, old, young, rotting, moldering, mossy wood, down to single
logs, chips, and splinters-and could clearly differentiate them
as objects in a way that other people could not
have done by sight. It was the same with other things. For instance, the white
drink that Madame Gaillard served her wards each day, why should it be
designated uniformly as milk, when to Grenouilie’s senses it smelled and tasted
completely different every morning depending on how warm it was, which cow it
had come from, what that cow had been eating, how much cream had been left in
it and so on… Or why should smoke possess only the name “smoke,” when from
minute to minute, second to second, the amalgam of hundreds of odors mixed
iridescently into ever new and changing unities as the smoke rose from the
fire… or why should earth, landscape, air-each filled at every step and every
breath with yet another odor and thus animated with another identity-still be
designated by just those three coarse words. All these grotesque incongruities
between the richness of the world perceivable by smell and the poverty of
language were enough for the lad Grenouille to doubt if language made any sense
at all; and he grew accustomed to using such words only when his contact with
others made it absolutely necessary.
At age six he had completely
grasped his surroundings olfactorily. There was not an object in Madame
Gaillard’s house, no place along the northern reaches of the rue de Charonne,
no person, no stone, tree, bush, or picket fence, no spot be it ever so small,
that he did not know by smell, could not recognize again by holding its
uniqueness firmly in his memory. He had gathered tens of thousands, hundreds of
thousands of specific smells and kept them so clearly, so, randomly, at his
disposal, that he could not only recall them when he smelled them again, but
could also actually smell them simply upon recollection. And what was more, he
even knew how by sheer imagination to arrange new combinations of them, to the
point where he created odors that did not exist in the real world. It was as if
he were an autodidact possessed of a huge vocabulary of odors that enabled him
to form at will great numbers of smelled sentences— and at an age when other
children stammer words, so painfully drummed into them, to formulate their
first very inadequate sentences describing the world. Perhaps the closest
analogy to his talent is the musical wunderkind, who has heard his way inside
melodies and harmonies to the alphabet of individual tones and now composes
completely new melodies and harmonies all on his own. With the one difference,
however, that the alphabet of odors is incomparably larger and more nuanced
than that of tones; and with the additional difference that the creative
activity of Grenouille the wunderkind took place only inside him and could be
perceived by no one other than himself.
To the world he appeared to
grow ever more secretive. What he loved most was to rove alone through the
northern parts of the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, through vegetable gardens and
vineyards, across meadows. Sometimes he did not come home in the evening,
remained missing for days. The rod of punishment awaiting him he bore without a
whimper of pain. Confining him to the house, denying him meals, sentencing him
to hard labor-nothing could change his behavior. Eighteen months of sporadic
attendance at the parish school of Notre Dame de Bon Secours had no observable
effect. He learned to spell a bit and to write his own name, nothing more. His
teacher considered him feebleminded.
Madame
Gaillard, however, noticed that he had certain abilities and qualities that
were highly unusual, if not to say supernatural: the childish fear of darkness
and night seemed to be totally foreign to him. You could send him anytime on an
errand to the cellar, where other children hardly dared go even with a lantern,
or out to the shed to fetch wood on the blackest night. And he never took a
light with him and still found his way around and immediately brought back what
was demanded, without making one wrong move-not a stumble, not one thing
knocked over. More remarkable still, Madame Gaillard thought she had discovered
his apparent ability to see right through paper, cloth, wood, even through
brick walls and locked doors. Without ever entering the dormitory, he knew how many
of her wards-and which ones-where in there. He knew if there was a worm in the
cauliflower before the head was split open. And once, when she had hidden her
money so well that she couldn’t find it herself (she kept changing her hiding
places), he pointed without a second’s search to a spot behind a fireplace
beam-and there it was! He could even see into the future, because he would
infallibly predict the approach of a visitor long before the person arrived or
of a thunderstorm when there was not the least cloud in the sky. Of course, he
could not see any of these things with his eyes, but rather caught their scents
with a nose that from day to day smelled such things more keenly and precisely:
the worm in the cauliflower, the money behind a beam, and people on the other
side of a wall or several blocks away. But Madame Gaillard would not have
guessed that fact in her wildest dream, even if that blow
with the
poker had left her olfactory organ intact. She was convinced that, feebleminded
or not, the lad had second sight. And since she also knew that people with
second sight bring misfortune and death with them, he made her increasingly
nervous. What made her more nervous still was the unbearable thought of living
under the same roof with someone who had the gift of spotting hidden money
behind walls and beams; and once she had discovered that Grenouille possessed
this dreadful ability, she set about getting rid of him. And it just so
happened that at about the same time-Grenouille had turned eight-the cloister
of Saint-Merri, without mention of the reason, ceased to pay its yearly fee.
Madame did not dun them. For appearances’ sake, she waited an additional week,
and when the money owed her still had not appeared, she took the lad by the
hand and walked with him into the city.
She was acquainted with a
tanner named Grimal-, who lived near the river in the rue de la Mortellerie and
had a notorious need for young laborers-not for regular apprentices and
journeymen, but for cheap coolies. There were certain jobs in the trade—
scraping the meat off rotting hides, mixing the poisonous tanning fluids and
dyes, producing the caustic lyes-so perilous, that, if possible, a responsible
tanning master did not waste his skilled workers on them, but instead used
unemployed riffraff, tramps, or, indeed, stray children, about whom there would
be no inquiry in dubious situations. Madame Gaillard knew of course that by al!
normal standards Grenouille would have no chance of survival in Grimal’s
tannery. But she was not a woman who bothered herself about such things. She
had, after all, done her duty. Her custodianship was ended. What happened to
her ward from here on was not her affair. If he made it through, well and good.
If he died, that was well and good too-the main thing was that it all be done
legally. And so she had Monsieur Grimal provide her with a written receipt for
the boy she was handing over to him, gave him in return a receipt for her
brokerage fee of fifteen francs, and set out again for home in the rue de
Charonne. She felt not the slightest twinge of conscience. On the contrary, she
thought her actions not merely legal but also just, for if a child for whom no
one was paying were to stay on with her, it would necessarily be at the expense
of the other children or, worse, at her own expense, endangering the future of
the other children, or worse, her own future-that is, her own private and
sheltered death, which was the only thing that she still desired from life.
Since we
are to leave Madame Gaillard behind us at this point in our story and shall not
meet her again, we shall take a few sentences to describe the end of her days.
Although dead in her heart since childhood, Madame unfortunately lived to be
very, very old. In 1782, just short of her seventieth birthday, she gave up her
business, purchased her annuity as planned, sat in her little house, and waited
for death. But death did not come. What came in its place was something not a
soul in the world could have anticipated: a revolution, a rapid transformation
of all social, moral, and transcendental affairs. At first this revolution had
no effect on Madame Oaillard’s personal fate. But then-she was almost eighty by
now-all at once the man who held her annuity had to emigrate, was stripped of
his holdings, and forced to auction off his possessions to a trouser
manufacturer. For a while it looked as if even this change would have no fatal
effect on Madame Gaillard, for the trouser manufacturer continued to pay her
annuity punctually. But then came the day when she no longer received her money
in the form of hard coin but as little slips of printed paper, and that marked
the beginning of her economic demise.
Within two years, the annuity
was no longer worth enough to pay for her firewood. Madame was forced to sell
her house-at a ridiculously low price, since suddenly there were thousands of
other people who also had to sell their houses. And once again she received in
return only these stupid slips of paper, and once again within two years they
were as good as worthless, and by 1797 (she was nearing ninety now) she had
lost her entire fortune, scraped together from almost a century of hard work,
and was living in a tiny furnished room in the rue des Coquilles. And only
then-ten, twenty years too late-did death arrive, in the form of a protracted
bout with a cancer that grabbed Madame by the throat, robbing her first of her
appetite and then of her voice, so that she could raise not one word of protest
as they carted her off to the Hotel-Dieu. There they put her in a ward
populated with hundreds of the mortally ill, the same ward in which her husband
had died, laid her in a bed shared with total strangers, pressing body upon
body with five other women, and for three long weeks let her die in public
view. She was then sewn into a sack, tossed onto a tumbrel at four in the
morning with fifty other corpses, to the faint tinkle of a bell driven to the
newly founded cemetery of Clamart, a mile beyond the city gates, and there laid
in her final resting place, a mass grave beneath a thick layer of quicklime.
That was in the year 1799.
Thank God Madame had suspected nothing of the fate awaiting her as she walked
home that day in 1746, leaving Grenouille and our story behind. She might
possibly have lost her faith in justice and with it the only meaning that she
could make of life.
Six
F ROM HIS first glance at Monsieur Grimal-no, from the first breath
that sniffed in the odor enveloping
Grimal-Grenouille knew that this man was capable of thrashing him to death for
the least infraction. His life was worth precisely as much as the work he could
accomplish and consisted only of whatever utility Grimal ascribed to it. And
so, Grenouille came to heel, never once making an attempt to resist. With each
new day, he would bottle up inside himself the energies of his defiance and
contumacy and expend them solely to survive the impending ice age in his
ticklike way. Tough, uncomplaining, inconspicuous, he tended the light of
life’s hopes as a very small, but carefully nourished flame. He was a paragon
of docility, frugality, and diligence in his work, obeyed implicitly, and
appeared satisfied with every meal offered. In the evening, he meekly let
himself be locked up in a closet off to one side of the tannery floor, where
tools were kept and the raw, salted hides were hung. There he slept on the
hard, bare earthen floor. During the day he worked as long as there was
light-eight hours in winter, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen hours in summer. He
scraped the meat from bestially stinking hides, watered them down, dehaired
them, limed, bated, and fulled them, rubbed them down with pickling dung,
chopped wood, stripped bark from birch and yew, climbed down into the tanning
pits filled with caustic fumes, layered the hides and pelts just as the
journeymen ordered him, spread them with smashed gallnuts, covered this ghastly
funeral pyre with yew branches and earth. Years later, he would have to dig
them up again and retrieve these mummified hide carcasses-now tanned leather—
from their grave.
When he was not burying or
digging up hides, he was hauling water. For months on end, he hauled water up
from the river, always in two buckets, hundreds of bucketfuls a day, for
tanning requires vast quantities of water, for soaking, for boiling, for
dyeing. For months on end, the water hauling left him without a dry stitch on
his body; by evening his clothes were dripping wet and his skin was cold and
swollen like a soaked shammy.
After
one year of an existence more animal than human, he contracted anthrax, a
disease feared by tanners and usually fatal. Grimal had already written him off
and was looking around for a replacement— not without regret, by the way, for
he had never before had a more docile and productive worker than this
Grenouille. But contrary to all expectation, Grenouille survived the illness.
All he bore from it were scars from the large black carbuncles behind his ears
and on his hands and cheeks, leaving him disfigured and even uglier than he had
been before. It also left him immune to anthrax-an invaluable advantage-so that
now he could strip the foulest hides with cut and bleeding hands and still run
no danger of reinfection. This set him apart not only from the apprentices and
journeymen, but also from his own potential successors. And because he could no
longer be so easily replaced as before, the value of his work and thus the
value of his life increased. Suddenly he no longer had to sleep on bare earth,
but was allowed to build himself a plank bed in the closet, was given straw to
scatter over it and a blanket of his own. He was no longer locked in at
bedtime. His food was more adequate. Grimal no longer kept him as just any
animal, but as a useful house pet.
When he was twelve, Grimal
gave him half of Sunday off, and at thirteen he was even allowed to go out on
weekend evenings for an hour after work and do whatever he liked. He had
triumphed, for he was alive, and he possessed a small quantum of freedom
sufficient for survival. The days of his hibernation were over. Grenouille the
tick stirred again. He caught the scent of morning. He was seized with an urge
to hunt. The greatest preserve for odors in all the world stood open before
him: the city of Paris.
Seven
I T WAS LIKE living in Utopia. The adjacent
neighborhoods of Saint-Jacques-de-la-Boucherie and Saint-Eustache were a wonderland. In the narrow side streets
off the rue Saint-Denis and the rue Saint-Martin, people lived so densely
packed, each house so tightly pressed to the next, five, six stories
high, that you could not see the sky, and the
air at ground level formed damp canals where odors congealed. It was a mixture
of human and animal smells, of water and stone and ashes and leather, of soap
and fresh-baked bread and eggs boiled in vinegar, of noodles and smoothly
polished brass, of sage and ale and tears, of grease and soggy straw and dry
straw. Thousands upon thousands of odors formed an invisible gruel that filled
the street ravines, only seldom evaporating above the rooftops and never from
the ground below. The people who lived there no longer experienced this gruel
as a special smell; it had arisen from them and they had been steeped in it over
and over again; it was, after all, the very air they breathed and from which
they lived, it was like clothes you have worn so long you no longer smell them
or feel them against your skin. Grenouille, however, smelled it all as if for
the first time. And he did not merely smell the mixture of odors in the
aggregate, but he dissected it analytically into its smallest and most remote
parts and pieces. His discerning nose unraveled the knot of vapor and stench
into single strands of unitary odors that could not be unthreaded further.
Unwinding and spinning out these threads gave him unspeakable joy.
He would often just stand
there, leaning against a wall or crouching in a dark corner, his eyes closed,
his mouth half open and nostrils flaring wide, quiet as a feeding pike in a
great, dark, slowly moving current. And when at last a puff of air would toss a
delicate thread of scent his way, he would lunge at it and not let go. Then he
would smell at only this one odor, holding it tight, pulling it into himself
and preserving it for all time. The odor might be an old acquaintance, or a
variation on one; it could be a brand-new one as well, with hardly any
similarity to anything he had ever smelled, let alone seen, till that moment:
the odor of pressed silk, for example, the odor of a wild-thyme tea, the odor
of brocade embroidered with silver thread, the odor of a cork from a bottle of
vintage wine, the odor of a tortoiseshell comb. Grenouille was out to find such
odors still unknown to him; he hunted them down with the passion and patience
of an angler and stored them up inside him.
When he had smelled his fill
of the thick gruel of the streets, he would go to airier terrain, where the
odors were thinner, mixing with the wind as they unfurled, much as perfume
does-to the market of Les Halles, for instance, where the odors of the day
lived on into the evening, invisibly but ever so distinctly, as if the vendors
still swarmed among the crowd, as if the baskets still stood there stuffed full
of vegetables and eggs, or the casks full of wine and vinegar, the sacks with
their spices and potatoes and flour, the crates of nails and screws, the meat
tables, the tables full of doth and dishes and shoe soles and all the hundreds
of other things sold there during the day… the bustle of it all down to the
smallest detail was still present in the air that had been left behind.
Gre-nouille saw the whole market smelling, if it can be put that way. And he
smelled it more precisely than many people could see it, for his perception was
after the fact and thus of a higher order: an essence, a spirit of what had
been, something undisturbed by the everyday accidents of the moment, like
noise, glare, or the nauseating press of living human beings.
Or he would go to the spot
where they had beheaded his mother, to the place de Greve, which stuck out to
lick the river like a huge tongue. Here lay the ships, pulled up onto shore or
moored to posts, and they smelled of coal and grain and hay and damp ropes.
And from
the west, via this one passage cut through the city by the river, came a broad
current of wind bringing with it the odors of the country, of the meadows
around Neuilly, of the forests between Saint-Germain and Versailles, of far-off
cities like Rouen or Caen and sometimes of the sea itself. The sea smelled like
a sail whose billows had caught up water, salt, and a cold sun. It had a simple
smell, the sea, but at the same time it smelled immense and unique, so much so
that Grenouille hesitated to dissect the odors into fishy, salty, watery,
seaweedy, fresh-airy, and so on. He preferred to leave the smell of the sea
blended together, preserving it as a unit in his memory, relishing it whole.
The smell of the sea pleased him so much that he wanted one day to take it in,
pure and unadulterated, in such quantities that he could get drunk on it. And
later, when he learned from stories how large the sea is and that you can sail
upon it in ships for days on end without ever seeing land, nothing pleased him
more than the image of himself sitting high up in the crow’s nest of the
foremost mast on such a ship, gliding on through the endless smell of the
sea-which really was no smell, but a breath, an exhalation of breath, the end
of all smells-dissolving with pleasure in that breath. But it was never to be,
for Grenouille, who stood there on the riverbank at the place de Greve steadily
breathing in and out the scraps of sea breeze that he could catch in his nose,
would never in his life see the sea, the real sea, the immense ocean that lay
to the west, and would never be able to mingle himself with its smell. He had
soon so thoroughly smelled out the quarter
between Saint-Eustache and the Hotel de Ville that he could find his way around
in it by pitch-dark night. And so he expanded his hunting grounds, first
westward to the Faubourg Saint-Honore, then out along the rue Saint-Antoine to
the Bastille, and finally across to the other bank of the river into the
quarters of the Sorbonne and the Faubourg Saint-Germain where the rich people
lived. Through the wrought-iron gates at their portals came the smells of coach
leather and of the powder in the pages’ wigs, and over the high walls passed
the garden odors of broom and roses and freshly trimmed hedges. It was here as
well that Grenouille first smelled perfume in the literal sense of the word: a
simple lavender or rose water, with which the fountains of the gardens were
filled on gala occasions; but also the more complex, more costly scents, of
tincture of musk mixed with oils of neroli and tuberose, jonquil, jasmine, or
cinnamon, that floated behind the carriages like rich ribbons on the evening
breeze. He made note of these scents, registering them just as he would profane
odors, with curiosity, but without particular admiration. Of course he realized
that the purpose of perfumes was to create an intoxicating and alluring effect,
and he recognized the value of the individual essences that comprised them. But
on the whole they seemed to him rather coarse and ponderous, more slapdashed
together than composed, and he knew that he could produce entirely different
fragrances if he only had the basic ingredients at his disposal.
He knew many of these
ingredients already from the flower and spice stalls at the market; others were
new to him, and he filtered them out from the aromatic mixture and kept them
unnamed in his memory: ambergris, civet, patchouli, sandalwood, bergamot,
vetiver, opopanax, benzoin, hop blossom, castor…
He was not particular about
it. He did not differentiate between what is commonly considered a good and a
bad smell, not yet. He was greedy. The goal of the hunt was simply to possess
everything the world could offer in the way of odors, and his only condition
was that the odors be new ones. The smell of a sweating horse meant just as
much to him as the tender green bouquet of a bursting rosebud, the acrid stench
of a bug was no less worthy than the aroma rising from a larded veal roast in
an aristocrat’s kitchen. He devoured everything, everything, sucking it up into
him. But there were no aesthetic principles governing the olfactory kitchen of
his imagination, where he was forever synthesizing and concocting new aromatic
combinations. He fashioned grotes-queries, only to destroy them again
immediately, like a child playing with blocks-inventive and destructive, with
no apparent norms for his creativity.
Eight
O N SEPTEMBER 1, 1753, the anniversary of the
king’s coronation, the city of Paris set off fireworks at the Pont-Royal. The display was not as spectacular as
the fireworks celebrating the king’s marriage, or as the legendary fireworks in
honor of the dauphin’s birth, but it was impressive nevertheless. They had
mounted golden sunwheeis on the masts of the ships. From the bridge itself
so-called fire bulls spewed showers of burning stars into the river. And while
from every side came the deafening roar of petards exploding and of
firecrackers skipping across the cobblestones, rockets rose into the sky and
painted white lilies against the black firmament. Thronging the bridge and the
quays along both banks of the river, a crowd of many thousands accompanied the
spectacle with ah’s and oh’s and even some “long live” ‘s-although the king had
ascended his throne more than thirty-eight years before and the high point of
his popularity was Song since behind him. Fireworks can do that.
Grenouille
stood silent in the shadow of the Pavilion de Flore, across from the Pont-Neuf
on the right bank. He did not stir a finger to applaud, did not even look up at
the ascending rockets. He had come in hopes of getting a whiff of something
new, but it soon became apparent that fireworks had nothing to offer in the way
of odors. For all their extravagant variety as they glittered and gushed and
crashed and whistled, they left behind a very monotonous mixture of smells:
sulfur, oil, and saltpeter.
He was
just about to leave this dreary exhibition and head homewards along the gallery
of the Louvre when the wind brought him something, a tiny, hardly noticeable
something, a crumb, an atom of scent; no, even less than that: it was more the
premonition of a scent than the scent itself-and at the same time it was
definitely a premonition of something he had never smelled before. He backed up
against the wall, closed his eyes, and flared his nostrils. The scent was so
exceptionally delicate and fine that he could not hold on to it; it continually
eluded his perception, was masked by the powder
smoke of the petards, blocked by the exudations
of the crowd, fragmented and crushed by the thousands of other city odors. But
then, suddenly, it was there again, a mere shred, the whiff of a magnificent
premonition for only a second… and it vanished at once. Grenouille suffered
agonies. For the first time, it was not just that his greedy nature was
offended, but his very heart ached. He had the prescience of something
extraordinary-this scent was the key for ordering all odors, one could
understand nothing about odors if one did not understand this one scent, and
his whole life would be bungled, if he, Grenouille, did not succeed in
possessing it. He had to have it, not simply in order to possess it, but for
his heart to be at peace.
He was almost sick with
excitement. He had not yet even figured out what direction the scent was coming
from. Sometimes there were intervals of several minutes before a shred was
again wafted his way, and each time he was overcome by the horrible anxiety
that he had lost it forever. He was finally rescued by a desperate conviction
that the scent was coming from the other bank of the river, from somewhere to
the southeast.
He moved away from the wall
of the Pavilion de Flore, dived into the crowd, and made his way across the
bridge. Every few strides he would stop and stand on tiptoe in order to take a
sniff from above people’s heads, at first smelling nothing for pure excitement;
then finally there was something, he smelled the scent, stronger than before,
knew that he was on the right track, dived in again, burrowed through the
throng of gapers and pyrotechnicians unremittingly setting torch to their
rocket fuses, lost the scent in the acrid smoke of the powder, panicked, shoved
and jostled his way through and burrowed onward, and after countless minutes
reached the far bank, the Hotel de Mailly, the Quai Malaquest, the entrance to
the rue de Seine,…
Here he
stopped, gathering his forces, and smelled. He had it. He had hold of it tight.
The odor came rolling down the rue de Seine like a ribbon, unmistakably clear,
and yet as before very delicate and very fine. Grenouille felt his heart
pounding, and he knew that it was not the exertion of running that had set it
pounding, but rather his excited helplessness in the presence of this scent. He
tried to recall something comparable, but had to discard all comparisons. This
scent had a freshness, but not the freshness of limes or pomegranates, not the
freshness of myrrh or cinnamon bark or curly mint or birch or camphor or pine
needles, nor that of a May rain or a frosty wind or of well water… and at the same
time it had warmth, but not as bergamot, cypress, or musk has, or jasmine or
daffodils, not as rosewood has or iris… This scent was a blend of both, of
evanescence and substance, not a blend, but a unity, although slight and frail
as well, and yet solid and sustaining, like a piece of thin, shimmering silk…
and yet again not like silk, but like pastry soaked in honeysweet milk-and try
as he would he couldn’t fit those two together: milk and silk! This scent was
inconceivable, indescribable, could not be categorized in any way-it really
ought not to exist at all. And yet there it was as plain and splendid as day.
Grenouille followed it, his fearful heart pounding, for he suspected that it
was not he who followed the scent, but the scent that had captured him and was
drawing him irresistibly to it.
He walked up the rue de
Seine. No one was on the street. The houses stood empty and still. The people
were down by the river watching the fireworks. No hectic odor of humans
disturbed him, no biting stench of gunpowder. The street smelled of its usual
smells: water, feces, rats, and vegetable matter. But above it hovered the
ribbon, delicate and clear, leading Grenouille on. After a few steps, what
little light the night afforded was swallowed by the tall buildings, and
Grenouille walked on in darkness. He did not need to see. The scent led him
firmly.
Fifty
yards farther, he turned off to the right up the rue des Marais, a narrow alley
hardly a span wide and darker still-if that was possible. Strangely enough, the
scent was not much stronger. It was only purer, and in its augmented purity, it
took on an even greater power of attraction. Grenouille walked with no will of
his own. At one point, the scent pulled him strongly to the right, straight
through what seemed to be a wall. A low entryway opened up, leading into a back
courtyard. Grenouille moved along the passage like a somnambulist, moved across
the courtyard, turned a corner, entered a second, smaller courtyard, and here
finally there was light-a space of only a few square feet. A wooden roof hung
out from the wall. Beneath it, a table, a candle stuck atop it. A girl was
sitting at the table cleaning yellow plums. With her left hand, she took the
fruit from a basket, stemmed and pitted it with a knife, and dropped it into a
bucket. She might have been thirteen, fourteen years old. Gre-nouille stood
still. He recognized at once the source of the scent that he had followed from
half a mile away on the other bank of the river: not this squalid courtyard,
not the plums. The source was the
girl.
For a moment he was so
confused that he actually thought he had never in all his life seen anything so
beautiful as this girl-although he only caught her from behind in silhouette
against the candlelight. He meant, of course, he had never smelled anything so
beautiful. But since he knew the smell of humans, knew it a thousandfold, men,
women, children, he could not conceive of how such an exquisite scent could be
emitted by a human being. Normally human odor was nothing special, or it was
ghastly. Children smelled insipid, men urinous, all sour sweat and cheese,
women smelled of rancid fat and rotting fish. Totally uninteresting,
repulsive-that was how humans smelled… And so it happened that for the first
time in his life, Grenouille did not trust his nose and had to call on his eyes
for assistance if he was to believe what he smelled. This confusion of senses
did not last long at all. Actually he required only a moment to convince
himself optically-then to abandon himself all the more ruthlessly to olfactory
perception. And now he smelled that this was a human being, smelled the sweat
of her armpits, the oil in her hair, the fishy odor of her genitals, and
smelied it all with the greatest pleasure. Her sweat smelled as fresh as the
sea breeze, the tallow of her hair as sweet as nut oil, her genitals were as
fragrant as the bouquet of water lilies, her skin as apricot blossoms… and the
harmony of all these components yielded a perfume so rich, so balanced, so
magical, that every perfume that Grenouille had smelled until now, every
edifice of odors that he had so playfully created within himself, seemed at
once to be utterly meaningless. A hundred thousand odors seemed worthless in
the presence of this scent. This one scent was the higher principle, the
pattern by which the others must be ordered. It was pure beauty.
Grenouille knew for certain
that unless he possessed this scent, his life would have no meaning. He had to
understand its smallest detail, to follow it to its last delicate tendril; the
mere memory, however complex, was not enough. He wanted to press, to emboss
this apotheosis of scent on his black, muddled soul, meticulously to explore it
and from this point on, to think, to live, to smell only according to the
innermost structures of its magic formula.
He slowly approached the girl,
closer and closer, stepped under the overhanging roof, and halted one step
behind her. She did not hear him.
She had red hair and wore a
gray, sleeveless dress. Her arms were very white and her hands yellow with the
juice of the halved plums. Grenouille stood bent over her and sucked in the
undiluted fragrance of her as it rose from her nape, her hair, from the
neckline of her dress. He let it flow into him like a gentle breeze. He had
never felt so wonderful. But the girl felt the air turn cool.
She did not see Grenouille.
But she was uneasy, sensed a strange chill, the kind one feels when suddenly
overcome with some long discarded fear. She felt as if a cold draft had risen
up behind her, as if someone had opened a door leading into a vast, cold
cellar. And she laid the paring knife aside, pulled her arms to her chest, and
turned around.
She was so frozen with terror
at the sight of him that he had plenty of time to put his hands to her throat.
She did not attempt to cry out, did not budge, did not make the least motion to
defend herself. He, in turn, did not look at her, did not see her delicate,
freckled face, her red lips, her large sparkling green eyes, keeping his eyes
closed tight as he strangled her, for he had only one concern-not to lose the
least trace of her scent.
When she was dead he laid her
on the ground among the plum pits, tore off her dress, and the stream of scent
became a flood that inundated him with its fragrance. He thrust his face to her
skin and swept his flared nostrils across her, from belly to breast, to neck,
over her face and hair, and back to her belly, down to her genitals, to her
thighs and white legs. He smelled her over from head to toe, he gathered up the
last fragments of her scent under her chin, in her navel, and in the wrinkles
inside her elbow.
And after he had smelled the
last faded scent of her, he crouched beside her for a while, collecting
himself, for he was brimful with her. He did not want to spill a drop of her
scent. First he must seal up his innermost compartments. Then he stood up and
blew out the candle.
Meanwhile
people were starting home, singing and hurrahing their way up the rue de Seine.
Grenouille smelled his way down the dark alley and out onto the rue des Petits
Augustins, which lay parallel to the rue de Seine and led to the river. A
little while later, the dead girl was discovered. A hue and cry arose. Torches
were lit. The watch arrived. Grenouille had long since gained the other bank.
That night, his closet seemed
to him a palace, and his plank bed a four-poster. Never before in
his life had he known what happiness was. He
knew at most some very rare states of numbed contentment. But now he was
quivering with happiness and could not sleep for pure bliss. It was as if he
had been born a second time; no, not a second time, the first time, for until
now he had merely existed like an animal with a most nebulous self-awareness.
But after today, he felt as if he finally knew who he really was: nothing less
than a genius. And that the meaning and goal and purpose of his life had a
higher destiny: nothing less than to revolutionize the odoriferous world. And that
he alone in ail the world possessed the means to carry it off: namely, his
exquisite nose, his phenomenal memory, and, most important, the master scent
taken from that girl in the rue des Marais. Contained within it was the magic
formula for everything that could make a scent, a perfume, great: delicacy,
power, stability, variety, and terrifying, irresistible beauty. He had found
the compass for his future life. And like all gifted abominations, for whom
some external event makes straight the way down into the chaotic vortex of
their souls, Grenouille never again departed from what he believed was the
direction fate had pointed him. It was clear to him now why he had clung to
life so tenaciously, so -savagely. He must become a creator of scents. And not
just an average one. But, rather, the greatest perfumer of all time.
And during that same night,
at first awake and then in his dreams, he inspected the vast rubble of his
memory. He examined the millions and millions of building blocks of odor and
arranged them systematically: good with good, bad with bad, fine with fine,
coarse with coarse, fetid with fetid, ambrosial with ambrosial. In the course
of the next week, this system grew ever more refined, the catalog of odors ever
more comprehensive and differentiated, the hierarchy ever clearer. And soon he
could begin to erect the first carefully planned structures of odor: houses,
walls, stairways, towers, cellars, rooms, secret chambers… an inner fortress
built of the most magnificent odors, that each day grew larger, that each day
grew more beautiful and more perfectly framed. A murder had been the start of
this splendor-if he was at all aware of the fact, it was a matter of tota!
indifference to him. Already he could no longer recall how the girl from the rue
des Marais had looked, not her face, not her body. He had preserved the best
part of her and made it his own: the principle of her scent.
Nine
T HERE WERE a baker’s dozen of perfumers in Paris
in those days. Six of them resided on the
right bank, six on the left, and one exactly in the middle, that is, on the
Pont-au-Change, which connected the right bank with the He de la Cite. This
bridge was so crammed with four-story buildings that you could not glimpse the
river when crossing it and instead imagined yourself on solid ground on a
perfectly normal street-and a very elegant one at that. Indeed, the
Pont-au-Change was considered one of the finest business addresses in the city.
The most renowned shops were to be found here; here were the goldsmiths, the
cabinetmakers, the best wigmakers and pursemakers, the manufacturers of the
finest lingerie and stockings, the picture framers, the merchants for riding
boots, the embroiderers of epaulets, the mold-ers of gold buttons, and the
bankers. And here as well stood the business and residence of the perfumer and
glover Giuseppe Baldini. Above his display window was stretched a sumptuous
green-lacquered baldachin, next to which hung Baldini’s coat of arms, all in
gold: a golden flacon, from which grew a bouquet of golden flowers. And before
the door lay a red carpet, also bearing the Baldini coat of arms embroidered in
gold. When you opened the door, Persian chimes rang out, and two silver herons
began spewing violet-scented toilet water from their beaks into a gold-plated
vessel, which in turn was shaped like the flacon in the Baldini coat of arms.
Behind the counter of light
boxwood, however, stood Baldini himself, old and stiff as a pillar, in a
silver-powdered wig and a blue coat adorned with gold frogs. A cloud of the
frangipani with which he sprayed himself every morning enveloped him almost
visibly, removing him to a hazy distance. So immobile was he, he looked like
part of his own inventory. Only if the chimes rang and the herons spewed-both
of which occurred rather seldom-did he suddenly come to life, his body folding
up into a small, scrambling figure that scurried out from behind the counter
with numerous bows and scrapes, so quickly that the cloud of frangipani could
hardly keep up with him, and bade his customer take a seat while he exhibited
the most exquisite perfumes and cosmetics.
Baldini had thousands of
them. His stock ranged from essences absolues-floral oils, tinctures, extracts,
secretions, balms, resins, and other drugs in dry, liquid, or waxy form-through
diverse
pomades, pastes, powders, soaps, creams,
sachets, bandolines, brilliantines, mustache waxes, wart removers, and beauty
spots, all the way to bath oils, lotions, smelling salts, toilet vinegars, and
countless genuine perfumes. But Baldini was not content with these products of
classic beauty care. It was his ambition to assemble in his shop everything
that had a scent or in some fashion contributed to the production of scent. And
so in addition to incense pastilles, incense candles, and cords, there were
also sundry spices, from anise seeds to zapota seeds, syrups, cordials, and
fruit brandies, wines from Cyprus, Malaga, and Corinth, honeys, coffees, teas,
candied and dried fruits, figs, bonbons, chocolates, chestnuts, and even
pickled capers, cucumbers, and onions, and marinated tuna. Plus perfumed
sealing waxes, stationery, lover’s ink scented with attar of roses, writing
kits of Spanish leather, penholders of whjte sandalwood, caskets and chests of
cedarwood, potpourris and bowls for flower petals, brass incense holders,
crystal flacons and cruses with stoppers of cut amber, scented gloves,
handkerchiefs, sewing cushions filled with mace, and musk-sprinkled wallpaper
that could fill a room with scent for more than a century.
Naturally there was not room
for all these wares in the splendid but small shop that opened onto the street
(or onto the bridge), and so for lack of a cellar, storage rooms occupied not
just the attic, but the whole second and third floors, as well as almost every
room facing the river on the ground floor. The result was that an indescribable
chaos of odors reigned in the House of Baldini. However exquisite the quality
of individual items-for Baldini bought wares of only highest quality-the blend
of odors was almost unbearable, as if each musician in a thousand-member
orchestra were playing a different melody at fortissimo. Baldini and his
assistants were themselves inured to this chaos, like aging orchestra
conductors (all of whom are hard of hearing, of course); and even his wife, who
lived on the fourth floor, bitterly defending it against further encroachments
by the storage area, hardly noticed the many odors herself anymore. Not so the
customer entering Baldini’s shop for the first time. The prevailing mishmash of
odors hit him like a punch in the face. Depending on his constitution, it might
exalt or daze him, but in any case caused such a confusion of senses that he often
no longer knew what he had come for. Errand boys forgot their orders.
Belligerent gentlemen grew
queasy. And many ladies took a spell, half-hysteric, half-claustrophobic,
fainted away, and could be revived only with the most pungent smelling salts of
clove oil, ammonia, and camphor.
Under such conditions, it was
really not at all astonishing that the Persian chimes at the door of Giuseppe
Baldini’s shop rang and the silver herons spewed less and less frequently.
Ten
“C HENIER!” BALDINI cried from behind the counter where for hours he
had stood rigid as a pillar, staring at the door. “Put on your wig!” And out
from among the kegs of olive oil and dangling Bayonne hams appeared
Chenier-Baldini’s assistant, somewhat younger than the latter, but already an
old man himself-and moved toward the elegant front of the shop. He pulled his
wig from his coat pocket and shoved it on his head. “Are you going out,
Monsieur Baldini?”
“No,” said Baldini. “I shall
retire to my study for a few hours, and I do not wish to be disturbed under any
circumstances.”
“Ah, I see! You are creating
a new perfume.”
BALDSNI: Correct. With which
to impregnate a Spanish hide for Count Verhamont. He wants something like…
like… I think he said it’s called Amor and Psyche, and comes he says from that…
that bungler in the rue Saint-Andre-des-Arts, that… that…
CHENIER: Pelissier.
BALDINI: Yes. Indeed. That’s
the bungler’s name. Amor and Psyche, by Pelissier.-Do you know it?”
CHENIER: Yes, yes. I do
indeed. You can smell it everywhere these days. Smell it on every street
corner. But if you ask me-nothing special! It most certainly can’t be compared
in any way with what you will create, Monsieur Baldini.
BALDSNI: Naturally not.
CHENIER: It’s a terribly common scent, this
Amor and Psyche. BALDINI: Vulgar?
CHENIER: Totally vulgar, like everything from
Pelissier. I believe it contains lime oil. BALDINI: Really? What else?
CHENIER: Essence of orange blossom perhaps. And
maybe tincture of rosemary. But I can’t say for sure.
BALDINI: It’s of no consequence at all to me in
any case. CHENIER: Naturally not.
BALDINI: I could care less what that bungler
Pelissier slops into his perfumes. I certainly would not take my inspiration
from him, I assure you.
CHENIER: You’re absolutely
right, monsieur.
BALDINI: As you know, I take my inspiration
from no one. As you know,! create my own perfumes.
CHENIER: I do know, monsieur. BALDINI: I alone
give birth to them. CHENIER: I know.
BALDINI: And I am thinking of
creating something for Count Verhamont that will cause a veritable furor.
CHENIER: I am sure it will,
Monsieur Baldini.
BALDINI: Take charge of the shop. I need peace
and quiet. Don’t let anyone near me, Chenier. And with that, he shuffled
away-not at all like a statue, but as befitted his age, bent over, but so
far that he looked almost as if he had been
beaten-and slowly climbed the stairs to his study on the second floor.
Chenier took his place behind
the counter, positioning himself exactly as his master had stood before, and
stared fixedly at the door. He knew what would happen in the next few hours:
absolutely nothing in the shop, and up in Baldini’s study, the usual
catastrophe. Baldini would take off his blue coat drenched in frangipani, sit
down at his desk, and wait for inspiration. The inspiration would not come. He
would then hurry over to the cupboard with its hundreds of vials and start
mixing them haphazardly. The mixture would be a failure. He would curse, fling
open the window, and pour the stuff into the river. He would try something
else, that too would be a failure, he would then rave and rant and throw a
howling fit there in the stifling, odor-filled room. At about seven o’clock he
would come back down, miserable, trembling and whining, and say: “Chenier, I’ve
lost my nose, I cannot give birth to this perfume, I cannot deliver the Spanish
hide to the count, all is lost, I am dead inside, I want to die, Chenier,
please, help me die!” And Chenier would suggest that someone be sent to
Pelissier’s for a bottle of Amor and Psyche, and Baldini would acquiesce, but
only on condition that not a soul should learn of his shame. Chenier would
swear himself to silence, and tonight they would perfume Count Verhamont’s
leather with the other man’s product. That was how it would be, no doubt of it,
and Chenier only wished that the whole circus were already over. Baldini was no
longer a great perfumer. At one time, to be sure, in his youth, thirty, forty
years ago, he had composed Rose of the South and Baldini’s Gallant Bouquet, the
two truly great perfumes to which he owed his fortune. But now he was old and
exhausted and did not know current fashions and modern tastes, and whenever he
did manage to concoct a new perfume of his own, it was some totally
old-fashioned, unmarketable stuff that within a year they had to dilute ten to
one and peddle as an additive for fountains. What a shame, Chenier thought as
he checked the sit of his wig in the mirror-a shame about old Baldini; a shame
about his beautiful shop, because he’s sure to ruin it; and a shame about me,
because by the time he has ruined it, I’ll be too old to take it over…
Eleven
G IUSEPPE BALDINI had indeed taken off his
redolent coat, but only out of long-standing habit. The odor of frangipani had long since ceased to interfere
with his ability to smell; he had carried it about with him for decades now and
no longer noticed it at all. And although he had closed the doors to his study
and asked for peace and quiet, he had not sat down at his desk to ponder and
wait for inspiration, for he knew far better than Chenier that inspiration
would not strike-after all, it never had before. He was old and exhausted, that
much was true, and was no longer a great perfumer, but he knew that he had
never in his life been one. He had inherited Rose of the South from his father,
and the
formula for Baidini’s Gallant
Bouquet had been bought from a traveling Genoese spice salesman. The rest of
his perfumes were old familiar blends. He had never invented anything. He was
not an inventor. He was a careful producer of traditional scents; he was like a
cook who runs a great kitchen with a routine and good recipes, but has never
created a dish of his own. He staged this whole hocus-pocus with a study and
experiments and inspiration and hush-hush secrecy only because that was part of
the professional image of a perfumer and glover. A perfumer was fifty percent
alchemist who created miracles-that’s what people wanted. Fine! That his art
was a craft like any other, only he knew, and was proud of the fact. He didn’t
want to be an inventor. He was very suspicious of inventions, for they always
meant that some rule would have to be broken. And he had no intention of
inventing some new perfume for Count Verhamont. Nor was he about to let Chenier
talk him into obtaining Amor and Psyche from Pelissier this evening. He already
had some. There it stood on his desk by the window, in a little glass flacon
with a cut-glass stopper. He had bought it a couple of days before. Naturally
not in person. He couldn’t go to Pelissier and buy perfume in person! But
through a go-between, who had used yet another go-between… Caution was
necessary. Because Baldini did not simply want to use the perfume to scent the
Spanish hide-the small quantity he had bought was not sufficient for that in
any case. He had something much nastier in mind: he wanted to copy it.
That was, moreover, not
forbidden. It was merely highly improper. To create a clandestine imitation of
a competitor’s perfume and sell it under one’s own name was terribly improper.
But more improper still was to get caught at it, and that was why Chenier must
know nothing about it, for Chenier was a gossip.
How awful, that an honest man
should feel compelled to travel such crooked paths! How awful, that the most
precious thing a man possesses, his own honor, should be sullied by such shabby
dealings! But what was he to do? Count Verhamont was, after all, a customer he
dared not lose. He had hardly a single customer left now. He would soon have to
start chasing after customers as he had in his twenties at the start of his
career, when he had wandered the streets with a boxful of wares dangling at his
belly. God knew, he, Giuseppe Baldini-owner of the largest perfume establishment
in Paris, with the best possible address-only managed to stay out of the red by
making house calls, valise in hand. And that did not suit him at all, for he
was well over sixty and hated waiting in cold antechambers and parading eau des
millefleurs and four thieves’ vinegar before old marquises or foisting a
migraine salve off on them. Besides which, there was such disgusting
competition in those antechambers. There was that upstart Brouet from the rue
Dauphine, who claimed to have the greatest line of pomades in Europe; or
Calteau from the rue Mauconseil, who had managed to become purveyor to the
household of the duchesse d’Artois; or this totally unpredictable Antoine
Pelissier from the rue Saint-Andre-des-Arts, who every season launched a new
scent that the whole world went crazy over.
Perfumes
like Pelissier’s could make a shambles of the whole market. If the rage one
year was Hungary water and Baldini had accordingly stocked up on lavender,
bergamot, and rosemary to cover the demand-here came Pelissier with his Air de
Muse, an ultra-heavy musk scent. Suddenly everyone had to reek like an animal,
and Baldini had to rework his rosemary into hair oil and sew the lavender into
sachets. If, however, he then bought adequate supplies of musk, civet, and
castor for the next year, Pelissier would take a notion to create a perfume
called Forest Blossom, which would be an immediate success. And when, after
long nights of experiment or costly bribes, Baldini had finally found out the
ingredients in Forest Blossom-Pelissier would trump him again with Turkish
Nights or Lisbon Spice or Bouquet de la Cour or some such damn thing. The man
was indeed a danger to the whole trade with his reckless creativity. It made
you wish for a return to the old rigid guild laws. Made you wish for draconian
measures against this nonconformist, against this inflationist of scent. His
license ought to be revoked and a juicy injunction issued against further
exercise of his profession… and, just on principle, the fellow ought to be
taught a lesson! Because this Pelissier wasn’t even a trained perfumer and
glover. His father had been nothing but a vinegar maker, and Pelissier was a
vinegar maker too, nothing else. But as a vinegar maker he was entitled to
handle spirits, and only because of that had the skunk been able to crash the
gates and wreak havoc in the park of the true perfumers. What did people need
with a new perfume every season? Was that necessary? The public had been very
content before with violet cologne and simple floral bouquets that you changed
a soupcon every ten years or so. For thousands of years people had made do with
incense and myrrh, a few balms, oils, and dried aromatic
herbs. And even once they had learned to use
retorts and alembics for distilling herbs, flowers, and woods and stealing the
aromatic base of their vapors in the form of volatile oils, to crush seeds and
pits and fruit rinds in oak presses, and to extract the scent from petals with
carefully filtered oils-even then, the number of perfumes had been modest. In
those days a figure like Pelissier would have been an impossibility, for back
then just for the production of a simple pomade you needed abilities of which
this vinegar mixer could not even dream. You had to be able not merely to
distill, but also to act as maker of salves, apothecary, alchemist, and
craftsman, merchant, humanist, and gardener all in one. You had to be able to
distinguish sheep suet from calves’ suet, a victoria violet from a parma
violet. You had to be fluent in Latin. You had to know when heliotrope is
harvested and when pelargonium blooms, and that the jasmine blossom loses its
scent at sunrise. Obviously Pelissier had not the vaguest notion of such
matters. He had probably never left Paris, never in all his life seen jasmine
in bloom. Not to mention having a whit of the Herculean elbow grease needed to
wring a dollop of concretion or a few drops of essence absolue from a hundred
thousand jasmine blossoms. Probably he knew such things-knew jasmine-only as a
bottle of dark brown liquid concentrate that stood in his locked cabinet
alongside the many other bottles from which he mixed his fashionable perfumes.
No, in the good old days of true craftsmen, a man like this coxcomb Pelissier
would never have got his foot in the door. He lacked everything: character,
education, serenity, and a sense for the hierarchy within a guild. He owed his
few successes at perfumery solely to the discovery made some two hundred years
before by that genius Mauritius Frangipani-an Italian, let it be noted!-that
odors are soluble in rectified spirit. By mixing his aromatic powder with
alcohol and so transferring its odor to a volatile liquid, Frangipani had liberated
scent from matter, had etherialized scent, had discovered scent as pure scent;
in short, he had created perfume. What a feat! What an epoch-making
achievement! Comparable really only to the greatest accomplishments of
humankind, like the invention of writing by the Assyrians, Euclidean geometry,
the ideas of Plato, or the metamorphosis of grapes into wine by the Greeks. A
truly Promethean act! And yet, just as ail great accomplishments of the spirit
cast both shadow and light, offering humankind vexation and misery along with
their benefits, so, too, Frangipani’s marvelous invention had its unfortunate
results. For now that people knew how to bind the essence of flowers and herbs,
woods, resins, and animal secretions within tinctures and fill them into bottles,
the art of perfumery was slipping bit by bit from the hands of the masters of
the craft and becoming accessible to mountebanks, at least a mountebank with a
passably discerning nose, like this skunk Pelissier. Without ever bothering to
learn how the marvelous contents of these bottles had come to be, they could
simply follow their olfactory whims and concoct whatever popped into their
heads or struck the public’s momentary fancy.
So much was certain: at age
thirty-five, this bastard Pelissier already possessed a larger fortune than he,
Baldini, had finally accumulated after three generations of constant hard work.
And Pelissier’s grew daily, while his, Baldini’s, daily shrank. That sort of
thing would not have been even remotely possible before! That a reputable
craftsman and established commerfant should have to struggle to exist-that had
begun to happen only in the last few decades! And only since this hectic mania
for novelty had broken out in every quarter, this desperate desire for action,
this craze of experimentation, this rodomontade in commerce, in trade, and in
the sciences!
Or this insanity about speed.
What was the need for all these new roads being dug up everywhere, and these
new bridges? What purpose did they serve? What was the advantage of being in
Lyon within a week? Who set any store by that? Whom did it profit? Or crossing
the Atlantic, racing to America in a month-as if people hadn’t got along
without that continent for thousands of years. What had civilized man lost that
he was looking for out there in jungles inhabited by Indians or Negroes. People
even traveled to Lapland, up there in the north, with its eternal ice and
savages who gorged themselves on raw fish. And now they hoped to discover yet
another continent that was said to lie in the South Pacific, wherever that
might be. And why all this insanity? Because the others were doing the same,
the Spaniards, the damned English, the impertinent Dutch, whom you then had to
go out and fight, which you couldn’t in the least afford. One of those
battleships easily cost a good 300,000 livres, and a single cannon shot would
sink it in five minutes, for good and all, paid for with our taxes. The
minister of finance had recently demanded one-tenth of all income, and that was
simply ruinous, even if you didn’t pay Monsieur his tithe. The very attitude
was perverse.
Man’s misfortune stems from
the fact that he does not want to stay in the room where he
belongs. Pascal said that. And Pascal was a
great man, a Frangipani of the intellect, a real craftsman, so to speak, and no
one wants one of those anymore. People read incendiary books now by Huguenots
or Englishmen. Or they write tracts or so-called scientific masterpieces that
put anything and everything in question. Nothing is supposed to be right
anymore, suddenly everything ought to be different. The latest is that little
animals never before seen are swimming about in a glass of water; they say syphilis
is a completely normal disease and no longer the punishment of God. God didn’t
make the world in seven days, it’s said, but over millions of years, if it was
He at all. Savages are human beings like us; we raise our children wrong; and
the earth is no longer round like it was, but flat on the top and bottom like a
melon-as if that made a damn bit of difference! In every field, people question
and bore and scrutinize and pry and dabble with experiments. It’s no longer
enough for a man to say that something is so or how it is so-everything now has
to be proven besides, preferably with witnesses and numbers and one or another
of these ridiculous experiments. These Diderots and d’Alemberts and Voltaires
and Rousseaus or whatever names these scribblers have-there are even clerics
among them and gentlemen of noble birth!-they’ve finally managed to infect the
whole society with their perfidious fidgets, with their sheer delight in
discontent and their unwillingness to be satisfied with anything in this world,
in short, with the boundless chaos that reigns inside their own heads!
Wherever you looked, hectic
excitement. People reading books, even women. Priests dawdling in coffeehouses.
And if the police intervened and stuck one of the chief scoundrels in prison, publishers
howled and submitted petitions, ladies and gentlemen of the highest rank used
their influence, and within a couple of weeks he was set free or allowed out of
the country, from where he went right on with his unconscionable
pamphleteering. In the salons people chattered about nothing but the orbits of
comets and expeditions, about leverage and Newton, about building canals, the
circulation of the blood, and the diameter of the earth.
The king himself had had them
demonstrate some sort of newfangled nonsense, a kind of artificial thunderstorm
they called electricity. With the whole court looking on, some fellow rubbed a
bottle, and it gave off a spark, and His Majesty, so it was said, appeared
deeply impressed. Unthinkable! that his great-grandfather, the truly great
Louis, under whose beneficent reign Baldini had been lucky enough to have lived
for many years, would have allowed such a ridiculous demonstration in his
presence. But that was the temper of the times, and it would all come to a bad
end.
When, without the least
embarrassment, people could brazenly call into question the authority of God’s
Church; when they could speak of the monarchy-equally a creature of God’s
grace-and the sacred person of the king himself as if they were both simply interchangeable
items in a catalog of various forms of government to be selected on a whim;
when they had the ultimate audacity-and have it they did-to describe God
Himself, the Almighty, Very God of Very God, as dispensable and to maintain in
all earnestness that order, morals, and happiness on this earth could be
conceived of without Him, purely as matters of man’s inherent morality and
reason… God, good God!-then you needn’t wonder that everything was turned
upside down, that morals had degenerated, and that humankind had brought down
upon itself the judgment of Him whom it denied. It would come to a bad end. The
great comet of 1681-they had mocked it, calling it a mere clump of stars, while
in truth it was an omen sent by God in warning, for it had portended, as was
clear by now, a century of decline and disintegration, ending in the spiritual,
political, and religious quagmire that man had created for himself, into which
he would one day sink and where only glossy, stinking swamp flowers flourished,
like Pelissier himself!
Baidini stood at the window,
an old man, and gazed malevolently at the sun angled above the river. Barges
emerged beneath him and slid slowly to the west, toward the Pont-Neuf and the
quay below the galleries of the Louvre. No one poled barges against the current
here, for that they used the channel on the other side of the island. Here
everything flowed away from you-the empty and the heavily laden ships, the
rowboats, and the flat-bottomed punts of the fishermen, the dirty brown and the
golden-curled water— everything flowed away, slowly, broadly, and inevitably.
And if Baldini looked directly below him, straight down the wall, it seemed to
him as if the flowing water were sucking the foundations of the bridge with it,
and he grew dizzy.
He had made a mistake buying
a house on the bridge, and a second when he selected one on the
western side.
Because constantly before his eyes now was a river flowing from him; and it was
as if he himself and his house and the wealth he had accumulated over many
decades were flowing away like the river, while he was too old and too weak to
oppose the powerful current. Sometimes when he had business on the left bank,
in the quarter of the Sorbonne or around Saint-Sulpice, he would not walk
across the island and the Pont-Saint-Michel, but would take the longer way
across the Pont-Neuf, for it was a bridge without buildings. And then he would
stand at the eastern parapet and gaze up the river, just for once to see
everything flowing toward him; and for a few moments he basked in the notion
that his life had been turned around, that his business was prospering, his
family thriving, that women threw themselves at him, that his own life, instead
of dwindling away, was growing and growing.
But then, if he lifted his
gaze the least bit, he could see his own house, tall and spindly and fragile, several
hundred yards away on the Pont-au-Change, and he saw the window of his study on
the second floor and saw himself standing there at the window, saw himself
looking out at the river and watching the water flow away, just as now. And
then the beautiful dream would vanish, and Baldini would turn away from where
he had stood on the Pont-Neuf, more despondent than before-as despondent as he
was now, turning away from the window and taking his seat at his desk.
Twelve
B EFORE HIM stood the flacon with Peiissier’s perfume. Glistening
golden brown in the sunlight, the
liquid was clear, not clouded in the least. It looked totally innocent, like a
light tea-and yet contained, in addition to four-fifths alcohol, one-fifth of a
mysterious mixture that could set a whole city trembling with excitement. The
mixture, moreover, might consist of three or thirty different ingredients,
prepared from among countless possibilities in very precise proportions to one
another. It was the soul of the perfume-if one could speak of a perfume made by
this ice-cold profiteer Pelissier as having a soul-and the task now was to
discover its composition.
Baldini blew his nose
carefully and pulled down the blind at the window, since direct sunlight was
harmful to every artificial scent or refined concentration of odors. He pulled
a fresh white lace handkerchief out of a desk drawer and unfolded it. Then,
holding his head far back and pinching his nostrils together, he opened the
flacon with a gentle turn of the stopper. He did not want, for God’s sake, to
get a premature olfactory sensation directly from the bottle. Perfume must be
smelled in its efflorescent, gaseous state, never as a concentrate. He
sprinkled a few drops onto the handkerchief, waved it in the air to drive off
the alcohol, and then held it to his nose. In three short, jerky tugs, he
snatched up the scent as if it were a powder, immediately blew it out again,
fanned himself, took another sniff in waltz time, and finally drew one long,
deep breath, which he then exhaled slowly with several pauses, as if letting it
slide down a long, gently sloping staircase. He tossed the handkerchief onto
his desk and fell back into his armchair.
The perfume was disgustingly
good. That miserable Pelissier was unfortunately a virtuoso. A master, to
heaven’s shame, even if he had never learned one thing a thousand times overt
Baldini wished he had created it himself, this Amor and Psyche. There was
nothing common about it. An absolute classic-full and harmonious. And for all
that, fascinatingly new. It was fresh, but not frenetic. It was floral, without
being unctuous. It possessed depth, a splendid, abiding, voluptuous, rich brown
depth-and yet was not in the least excessive or bombastic.
Baldini stood up almost in
reverence and held the handkerchief under his nose once again. “Wonderful,
wonderful…” he murmured, sniffing greedily. “It has a cheerful character, it’s
charming, it’s like a melody, puts you in a good mood at once… What nonsense, a
good mood!” And he flung the handkerchief back onto his desk in anger, turned
away, and walked to the farthest corner of the room, as if ashamed of his
enthusiasm.
Ridiculous!
Letting himself be swept up in such eulogies-”like a melody, cheerful,
wonderful, good mood.” How idiotic. Childishly idiotic. A moment’s impression.
An old weakness. A matter of temperament. Most likely his Italian blood. Judge
not as long as you’re smelling! That is rule number one, Baldini, you
muttonhead! Smell when you’re smelling and judge after you have smelled! Amor
and Psyche is not half bad as a perfume. A thoroughly successful product. A
cleverly managed bit of concocting. If not to say conjuring. And you could
expect nothing but conjuring from a man like Pelissier. Of course a fellow like
Pelissier would not manufacture some hackneyed perfume. The
scoundrel conjured with complete mastery of his
art, confusing your sense of smell with its perfect harmony. In the classical
arts of scent, the man was a wolf in sheep’s clothing. In short, he was a
monster with talent. And what was worse, a perverter of the true faith.
But you, Baldini, are not
going to be fooled. You were surprised for a moment by your first impression of
this concoction. But do you know how it will smell an hour from now when its
volatile ingredients have fled and the central structure emerges? Or how it
will smell this evening when all that is still perceptible are the heavy, dark
components that now lie in odorous twilight beneath a veil of flowers? Wait and
see, Baldini!
The
second rule is: perfume lives in time; it has its youth, its maturity, and its
old age. And only if it gives off a scent equally pleasant at all three
different stages of its life, can it be called successful. How often have we
not discovered that a mixture that smelled delightfully fresh when first
tested, after a brief interval was more like rotten fruit, and finally reeked
of nothing but the pure civet we had used too much of. Utmost caution with the
civet! One drop too much brings catastrophe. An old source of error. Who knows—
perhaps Pelissier got carried away with the civet. Perhaps by this evening all
that’s left of his ambitious Amor and Psyche will be just a whiff of cat piss.
We shall see.
We shall smell it. Just as a
sharp ax can split a log into tiny splinters, our nose will fragment every
detail of this perfume. And then it will be only too apparent that this
ostensibly magical scent was created by the most ordinary, familiar methods.
We, Baldini, perfumer, shall catch Pelissier, the vinegar man, at his tricks.
We shall rip the mask from his ugly face and show the innovator just what the
old craft is capable of. We’ll scrupulously imitate his mixture, his
fashionable perfume. It will be born anew in our hands, so perfectly copied
that the humbug himself won’t be able to tell it from his own. No! That’s not
enough! We shall improve on it! We’ll show up his mistakes and rinse them away,
and then rub his nose in it. You’re a bungler, Pelissier! An old stinker is
what you are! An upstart in the craft of perfumery, and nothing more.
And now to work, Baldini!
Sharpen your nose and smell without sentimentality! Dissect the scent by the
rules of the art! You must have the formula by this evening!
And he made a dive for his
desk, grabbing paper, ink, and a fresh handkerchief, laid it all out properly,
and began his analysis. The procedure was this: to dip the handkerchief in
perfume, pass it rapidly under his nose, and extract from the fleeting cloud of
scent one or another of its ingredients without being significantly distracted
by the complex blending of its other parts; then, holding the handkerchief at
the end of his outstretched arm, to jot down the name of the ingredient he had
discovered, and repeat the process at once, letting the handkerchief flit by
his nose, snatching at the next fragment of scent, and so on…
Thirteen
H E WORKED WITHOUT pause for two hours-with increasingly hectic
movements, increasingly slipshod
scribblings of his pen on the paper, and increasingly large doses of perfume
sprinkled onto his handkerchief and held to his nose.
He could hardly smell
anything now, the volatile substances he was inhaling had long since drugged
him; he could no longer recognize what he thought had been established beyond
doubt at the start of his analysis. He knew that it was pointless to continue
smelling. He would never ascertain the ingredients of this newfangled perfume,
certainly not today, nor tomorrow either, when his nose would have recovered,
God willing. He had never learned fractionary smelling. Dissecting scents,
fragmenting a unity, whether well or not-so-well blended, into its simple
components was a wretched, loathsome business. It did not interest him. He did
not want to continue.
But his
hand automatically kept on making the dainty motion, practiced a thousand times
over, of dunking the handkerchief, shaking it out, and whisking it rapidly past
his face, and with each whisk he automatically snapped up a portion of
scent-drenched air, only to let it out again with the proper exhalations and
pauses. Until finally his own nose liberated him from the torture, swelling in
allergic reaction till it was stopped up as tight as if plugged with wax. He
could not smell a thing now, could hardly breathe. It was as if a bad cold had
soldered his nose shut; little tears gathered in the corners of his eyes. Thank
God in heaven! Now he could quit in good conscience. He had done his duty, to
the best of his abilities, according to all the rules of the art, and was, as
so often before, defeated. Ultra
posse nemo obligatur. Closing time. Tomorrow
morning he would send off to Pelissi-er’s for a large bottle of Amor and Psyche
and use it to scent the Spanish hide for Count Verhamont, as per order. And
after that he would take his valise, full of old-fashioned soaps, scent bags,
pomades, and sachets and make his rounds among the salons of doddering
countesses. And one day the last doddering countess would be dead, and with her
his last customer. By then he would himself be doddering and would have to sell
his business, to Pelissier or another one of these upstart merchants-perhaps he
would get a few thousand livres for it. And he would pack one or two bags and
go off to Italy with his old wife, if she was not dead herself by then. And if
he survived the trip, he would buy a little house in the country near Messina
where things were cheap. And there in bitterest poverty he, Giuseppe Baldini,
once the greatest perfumer of Paris, would die-whenever God willed it. And that
was well and good.
He stoppered the flacon, laid
down his pen, and wiped the drenched handkerchief across his forehead one last
time. He could sense the cooling effect of the evaporating alcohol, but nothing
else. Then the sun went down.
Baldini stood up. He opened
the jalousie and his body was bathed to the knees in the sunset, caught fire
like a burnt-out torch glimmering low. He saw the deep red rim of the sun
behind the Louvre and the softer fire across the slate roofs of the city. On
the river shining like gold below him, the ships had disappeared. And a wind
must have come up, for gusts were serrating the surface, and it glittered now
here, now there, moving ever closer, as if a giant hand were scattering
millions of louis d’or over the water. For a moment it seemed the direction of
the river had changed: it was flowing toward Baldini, a shimmering flood of pure
gold.
Baldini’s eyes were moist and
sad. He stood there motionless for a long time gazing at the splendid scene.
Then, suddenly, he flung both window casements wide and pitched the fiacon with
Pelissier’s perfume away in a high arc. He saw it splash and rend the
glittering carpet of water for an instant.
Fresh air streamed into the
room. Baldini gulped for breath and noticed that the swelling in his nose was
subsiding. Then he closed the window. At almost the same moment, night fell,
very suddenly. The view of a glistening golden city and river turned into a
rigid, ashen gray silhouette. Inside the room, all at once it was dark. Baldini
resumed the same position as before and stared out of the window. “I shall not
send anyone to Pelissier’s in the morning,” he said, grasping the back of his
armchair with both hands. “I shall not do it. And I shall not make my tour of
the salons either. Instead, I shall go to the notary tomorrow morning and sell
my house and my business. That is what I shall do. E basta!”
The expression on his face
was that of a cheeky young boy, and he suddenly felt very happy. He was once
again the old, the young Baldini, as bold and determined as ever to contend
with fate-even if contending meant a retreat in this case. And what if it did!
There was nothing else to do. These were stupid times, and they left him no
choice. God gives good times and bad times, but He does not wish us to bemoan
and bewail the bad times, but to prove ourselves men. And He had given His
sign. That golden, blood-red mirage of the city had been a warning: act now,
Baldini, before it is too late! Your house still stands firm, your storage
rooms are still full, you will still be able to get a good price for your
slumping business. The decisions are still in your hands. To grow old living
modestly in Messina had not been his goal in life, true-but it was more
honorable and pleasing to God than to perish in splendor in Paris. Let the
Brouets, Calteaus, and Pelissiers have their triumph. Giuseppe Baldini was
clearing out. But he did it unbent and of his own free will!
He was quite proud of himself
now. And his mind was finally at peace. For the first time in years, there was
an easing in his back of the subordinate’s cramp that had tensed his neck and
given an increasingly obsequious hunch to his shoulders. And he stood up
straight without strain, relaxed and free and pleased with himself. His breath
passed lightly through his nose. He could clearly smell the scent of Amor and
Psyche that reigned in the room, but he did not let it affect him anymore.
Baidini had changed his life and felt wonderful. He would go up to his wife now
and inform her of his decision, and then he would make a pilgrimage to
Notre-Dame and light a candle thanking God for His gracious prompting and for
having endowed him, Giuseppe Baldini, with such unbelievable strength of
character.
With almost youthful elan, he
plopped his wig onto his bald head, slipped into his blue coat, grabbed the
candlestick from the desk, and left his study. He had just lit the tallow
candle in the
stairwell to light his way up to his living
quarters when he heard a doorbell ring on the ground floor. It was not the
Persian chimes at the shop door, but the shrill ring of the servants’ entrance,
a repulsive sound that had always annoyed him. He had often made up his mind to
have the thing removed and replaced with a more pleasant bell, but then the
cost would always seem excessive. The thought suddenly occurred to him-and he
giggled as it did-that it made no difference now, he would be selling the
obtrusive doorbell along with the house. Let his successor deal with the
vexation!
The bell rang shrilly again.
He cocked his ear for sounds below. Apparently Chenier had already left the
shop. And the servant girl seemed not about to answer it either. So Baldini
went downstairs to open the door himself.
He pulled back the bolt,
swung the heavy door open-and saw nothing. The darkness completely swallowed
the light of his candle. Then, very gradually, he began to make out a figure, a
child or a half-grown boy carrying something over his arm.
“What do you want?”
“I’m
from Maitre Grimal, I’m delivering the goatskins,” said the figure and stepped
closer and held out to him a stack of hides hanging from his cocked arm. By the
light of his candle, Baldini could now see the boy’s face and his nervous,
searching eyes. He carried himself hunched over. He looked as if he were hiding
behind his own outstretched arm, waiting to be struck a blow. It was
Grenouille.
Fourteen
T HE GOATSKINS for the Spanish leather! Baldini remembered now. He
had ordered the hides from Grimal a
few days before, the finest, softest goatskin to be used as a blotter for Count
Verhamont’s desk, fifteen francs apiece. But he really did not need them
anymore and could spare the expense. On the other hand, if he were simply to
send the boy back…? Who knew-it could make a bad impression, people might begin
to talk, rumors might start: Baldini is getting undependable, Baldini isn’t
getting any orders, Baldini can’t pay his bills… and that would not be good;
no, no, because something like that was likely to lower the selling price of
his business. It would be better to accept these useless goatskins. No one
needed to know ahead of time that Giuseppe Baldini had changed his life.
“Come in!”
He let the boy inside, and
they walked across to the shop, Baldini leading with the candle, Grenouille
behind him with the hides. It was the first time Grenouille had ever been in a
perfumery, a place in which odors are not accessories but stand unabashedly at
the center of interest. Naturally he knew every single perfumery and apothecary
in the city, had stood for nights on end at their shop windows, his nose
pressed to the cracks of their doors. He knew every single odor handled here
and had often merged them in his innermost thoughts to create the most splendid
perfumes. So there was nothing new awaiting him. And yet, just as a musically
gifted child burns to see an orchestra up close or to climb into the church
choir where the organ keyboard lies hidden, Grenouille burned to see a
perfumery from the inside; and when he had heard that leather was to be
delivered to Baldini, he had done all he could to make sure that he would be
the one to deliver it.
And here he stood in
Baldini’s shop, on the one spot in Paris with the greatest number of
professional scents assembled in one small space. He could not see much in the
fleeting light of the candle, only brief glimpses of the shadows thrown by the
counter with its scales, the two herons above the vessel, an armchair for the
customers, the dark cupboards along the walls, the brief flash of bronze
utensils and white labels on bottles and crucibles; nor could he smell anything
beyond what he could already smell from the street. But he at once felt the
seriousness that reigned in these rooms, you might almost call it a holy
seriousness, if the word “holy” had held any meaning whatever for Grenouille;
for he could feel the cold seriousness, the craftsmanlike sobriety, the staid
business sense that adhered to every piece of furniture, every utensil, to
tubs, bottles, and pots. And as he walked behind Baldini, in Baldini’s
shadow-for Baldini did not take the trouble to light his way-he was overcome by
the idea that he belonged here and nowhere else, that he would stay here, that
from here he would shake the world from its foundations.
The idea
was, of course, one of perfectly grotesque immodesty. There was nothing,
absolutely nothing, that could justify a stray tanner’s helper of dubious
origin, without connections or protection,
without the least social standing, to hope that
he would get so much as a toehold in the most renowned perfume shop in
Paris-all the less so, since we know that the decision had been made to
dissolve the business. But what had formed in Grenouille’s immodest thoughts
was not, after all, a matter of hope, but of certainty. He knew that the only
reason he would leave this shop would be to fetch his clothes from Grimal’s,
and then never again. The tick had scented blood. It had been dormant for
years, encapsulated, and had waited. Now it let itself drop, for better or for
worse, entirely without hope. And that was why he was so certain.
They had crossed through the
shop. Baldini opened the back room that faced the river and served partly as a storeroom,
partly as a workshop and laboratory where soaps were cooked, pomades stirred,
and toilet waters blended in big-bellied bottles. “There!” he said, pointing to
a large table in front of the window, “lay them there!”
Grenouille stepped out from Baldini’s shadow, laid the leather on
the table, but quickly jumped back again, placing himself between Baldini and
the door. Baldini stood there for a while. He held the candle to one side to
prevent the wax from dripping on the table and stroked the smooth surface of
the skins with the back of his fingers. Then he pulled back the top one and ran
his hand across the velvety reverse side, rough and yet soft at the same time.
They were very good goatskins. Just made for Spanish leather. As they dried
they would hardly shrink, and when correctly pared they would become supple
again; he could feel that at once just by pressing one between his thumb and
index finger. They could be impregnated with scent for five to ten years. They
were very, very good hides-perhaps he could make gloves from them, three pairs
for himself and three for his wife, for the trip to Messina.
He pulled back his hand. He
was touched by the way this worktable looked: everything lay ready, the glass
basin for the perfume bath, the glass plate for drying, the mortars for mixing
the tincture, pestle and spatula, brush and parer and shears. It was as if
these things were only sleeping because it was dark and would come to life in
the morning. Should he perhaps take the table with him to Messina? And a few of
the tools, only the most important ones…? You could sit and work very nicely at
this table. The boards were oak, and legs as well, and it was cross-braced, so
that nothing about it could wiggle or wobble, acids couldn’t mar it, or oils or
slips of a knife-but it would cost a fortune to take it with him to Messina!
Even by ship! And therefore it would be sold, the table would be sold tomorrow,
and everything that lay on it, under it, and beside it would be sold as well!
Because he, Baldini, might have a sentimental heart, but he also had strength
of character, and so he would follow through on his decision, as difficult as
that was to do; he would give it all up with tears in his eyes, but he would do
it nonetheless, because he knew he was right-he had been given a sign.
He turned to go. There at the
door stood this little deformed person he had almost forgotten about. “They’re
fine,” Baldini said. “Tell your master that the skins are fine. I’ll come by in
the next few days and pay for them.”
“Yes, sir,” said Grenouille,
but stood where he was, blocking the way for Baldini, who was ready to leave
the workshop. Baldini was somewhat startled, but so unsuspecting that he took
the boy’s behavior not for insolence but for shyness.
“What is it?” he asked. “Is
there something else I can do for you? Well? Speak up!”
Grenouille stood there
cowering and gazing at Baldini with a look of apparent timidity, but which in
reality came from a cunning intensity.
“I want to work for you,
Maitre Baldini. Work for you, here in your business.”
It was
not spoken as a request, but as a demand; nor was it really spoken, but
squeezed out, hissed out in reptile fashion. And once again, Baldini misread
Grenouille’s outrageous self-confidence as boyish awkwardness. He gave him a
friendly smile. “You’re a tanner’s apprentice, my lad,” he said. “I have no use
for a tanner’s apprentice. I have a journeyman already, and I don’t need an
apprentice.” “You want to make these goatskins smell good, Maitre Baldini? You
want to make this leather I’ve brought you smell good, don’t you?” Grenouille
hissed, as if he had paid not the least attention to
Baldini’s answer.
“Yes indeed,” said Baldini.
“With Amor and Psyche by
Pelissier?” Grenouille asked, cowering even more than before.
At that, a wave of mild
terror swept through Baldini’s body. Not because he asked himself how this lad
knew all about it so exactly, but simply because the boy had said the name of
the wretched perfume that had defeated his efforts at decoding today.
“How did you ever get the
absurd idea that I would use someone else’s perfume to…”
“You reek of it!” Grenouille hissed.
“You have it on your forehead, and in your right coat pocket is a handkerchief
soaked with it. It’s not very good, this Amor and Psyche, it’s bad, there’s too
much bergamot and too much rosemary and not enough attar of roses.”
“Aha!” Baldini said, totally
surprised that the conversation had veered from the general to the specific.
“What else?”
“Orange blossom, lime, clove,
musk, jasmine, alcohol, and something that I don’t know the name of, there, you
see, right there! In that bottle!” And he pointed a finger into the darkness.
Baldini held the candlestick up in that direction, his gaze following the boy’s
index finger toward a cupboard and falling upon a bottle filled with a grayish
yellow balm.
“Storax?” he asked.
Grenouille nodded. “Yes.
That’s in it too. Storax.” And then he squirmed as if doubling up with a cramp
and muttered the word at least a dozen times to himself:
“Storaxstoraxstoraxstorax…”
Baldini held his candle up to
this lump of humankind wheezing “storax” and thought: Either he is possessed,
or a thieving impostor, or truly gifted. For it was perfectly possible that the
list of ingredients, if mixed in the right proportions, could result in the
perfume Amor and Psyche-it was, in fact, probable. Attar of roses, clove, and
storax-it was those three ingredients that he had searched for so desperately
this afternoon. Joining them with the other parts of the composition-which he
believed he had recognized as well-would unite the segments into a pretty,
rounded pastry. It was now only a question of the exact proportions in which
you had to join them. To find that out, he, Baldini, would have to run
experiments for several days, a horrible task, almost worse than the basic
identification of the parts, for it meant you had to measure and weigh and
record and all the while pay damn close attention, because the least bit of
inattention-a tremble of the pipette, a mistake in counting drops-could ruin
the whole thing. And every botched attempt was dreadfully expensive. Every
ruined mixture was worth a small fortune…
He wanted to test this
mannikin, wanted to ask him about the exact formula for Amor and Psyche. If he
knew it, to the drop and dram, then he was obviously an impostor who had
somehow pinched the recipe from Pelissier in order to gain access and get a
position with him, Baldini. But if he came close, then he was a genius of scent
and as such provoked Baldini’s professional interest. Not that Baldini would
jeopardize his firm decision to give up his business! This perfume by Pelissier
was itself not the important thing to him. Even if the fellow could deliver it
to him by the gallon, Baldini would not dream of scenting Count Verhamont’s
Spanish hides with it, but… But he had not been a perfumer his life long, had
not concerned himself his life long with the blending of scents, to have lost
all professional passions from oae moment to the next. Right now he was
interested in finding out the formula for this damned perfume, and beyond that,
in studying the gifts of this mysterious boy, who had parsed a scent right off
his forehead. He wanted to know what was behind that. He was quite simply
curious.
“You have, it appears, a fine
nose, young man,” he said, once Grenouille had ceased his wheezings; and he
stepped back into the workshop, carefully setting the candlestick on the
worktable, “without doubt, a fine nose, but…”
“I have
the best nose in Paris, Maitre Baldini,” Grenouille interrupted with a rasp. “I
know all the odors in the world, all of them, only I don’t know the names of
some of them, but I can learn the names. The odors that have names, there
aren’t many of those, there are only a few thousand. I’ll learn them all, I’ll
never forget the name of that balm, storax, the balm is called storax, it’s
called storax…” “Silence!” shouted Baldini. “Do not interrupt me when I’m
speaking! You are impertinent and insolent. No one knows a thousand odors by
name. Even I don’t know a thousand of them by name, at best a few hundred, for
there aren’t more than a few hundred in our business, all the rest aren’t
odors,
they are simply stenches.”
During the rather lengthy
interruption that had burst from him, Grenouille had almost unfolded his body, had
in fact been so excited for the moment that he had flailed both arms in circles
to suggest the “all, all of them” that he knew. But at Baldini’s reply he
collapsed back into himself, like a black toad lurking there motionless on the
threshold.
“I have,
of course, been aware,” Baldini continued, “for some time now that Amor and
Psyche consisted of storax, attar of roses, and cloves, plus bergamot and
extract of rosemary et cetera. All that
is needed to find that out is, as I said, a
passably fine nose, and it may well be that God has given you a passably fine
nose, as He has many, many other people as well— particularly at your age. A
perfumer, however”-and here Baldini raised his index finger and puffed out his
chest-”a perfumer, however, needs more than a passably fine nose. He needs an
incorruptible, hardworking organ that has been trained to smell for many
decades, enabling him to decipher even the most complicated odors by
composition and proportion, as well as to create new, unknown mixtures of
scent. Such a nose”-and here he tapped his with his finger-”is not something
one has, young man! It is something one acquires, by perseverance and
diligence. Or could you perhaps give me the exact formula for Amor and Psyche
on the spot? Well? Could you?”
Grenouille did not answer.
“Could you perhaps give me a
rough guess?” Baldini said, bending forward a bit to get a better look at the toad
at his door. “Just a rough one, an estimation? Well, speak up, best nose in
Paris!”
But Grenouille was silent.
“You see?” said Baldini,
equally both satisfied and disappointed; and he straightened up. “You can’t do
it. Of course you can’t. You’re one of those people who know whether there is
chervil or parsley in the soup at mealtime. That’s fine, there’s something to
be said for that. But that doesn’t make you a cook, not by a long shot.
Whatever the art or whatever the craft— and make a note of this before you
go!-talent means next to nothing, while experience, acquired in humility and
with hard work, means everything.”
He was reaching for the
candlestick on the table, when from the doorway came Grenouille’s pinched
snarl: “I don’t know what a formula is, maitre. I don’t know that, but
otherwise I know everything!”
“A formula is the alpha and
omega of every perfume,” replied Baldini sternly, for he wanted to end this
conversation-now. “It contains scrupulously exact instructions for the
proportions needed to mix individual ingredients so that the result is the
unmistakable scent one desires. That is a formula. It is the recipe-if that is
a word you understand better.”
“Formula, formula,” rasped
Grenouille and grew somewhat larger in the doorway. “I don’t need a formula. I
have the recipe in my nose. Can I mix it for you, maitre, can I mix it, can I?”
“How’s that?” pried Baldini
in a rather loud voice and held the candle up to the gnome’s face. “How would
you mix it?”
For the first time,
Grenouille did not flinch. “Why, they’re all here, all the ones you need, the
scents, they’re all here, in this room,” he said, pointing again into the
darkness. “There’s attar of roses! There’s orange blossom! That’s clove! That’s
rosemary, there…!”
“Certainly they’re here!”
roared Baldini. “They are all here. But I’m telling you, you blockhead, that is
of no use if one does not have the formula!”
“… There’s jasmine! Alcohol
there! Bergamot there! Storax there!” Grenouille went on crowing, and at each
name he pointed to a different spot in the room, although it was so dark that
at best you could surmise the shadows of the cupboards filled with bottles.
“You can
see in the dark, can you?” Baldini went on. “You not only have the best nose,
but also the keenest eyes in Paris, do you? Now if you have passably good ears,
then open them up, because I’m telling you: you are a little swindler. You
probably picked up your information at Pelissier’s, did some spying, is that
it? And now you think you can pull the wool over my eyes, right?”
Grenouille was now standing
up, completely unfolded to full size, so to speak, in the doorway, his legs
slightly apart, his arms slightly spread, so that he looked like a black spider
that had latched onto the threshold and frame. “Give me ten minutes,” he said
in close to a normal, fluent pattern of speech, “and I will produce for you the
perfume Amor and Psyche. Right now, right here in this room. Maitre, give me
just five minutes!”
“Do you suppose I’d let you
slop around here in my laboratory? With essences that are worth a fortune?
You?”
“Yes,” said Grenouille.
“Bah!” Baldini shouted,
exhaling all at once every bit of air he had in him. Then he took a deep breath
and a long look at Grenouille the spider, and thought it over. Basically it
makes no difference, he thought, because it will all be over tomorrow anyway. I
know for a fact that he can’t do what he claims he can, can’t possibly do it.
Why, that would make him greater than the great Frangipani. But
why shouldn’t I let him demonstrate before my
eyes what I know to be true? It is possible that someday in Messina-people do
grow very strange in old age and their minds fix on the craziest ideas-I’ll get
the notion that I had failed to recognize an olfactory genius, a creature upon
whom the grace of God had been poured out in superabundance, a wunderkind… It’s
totally out of the question. Everything my reason tells me says it is out of
the question-but miracles do happen, that is certain. So what if, when I lie
dying in Messina someday, the thought comes to me there on my deathbed: On that
evening, back in Paris, I shut my eyes to a miracle…? That would not be very
pleasant, Baldini. Let the fool waste a few drops of attar of roses and musk
tincture; you would have wasted them yourself if Pelissier’s perfume had still
interested you. And what are a few drops-though expensive ones, very, very
expensive!-compared to certain knowledge and a peaceful old age?
“Now pay attention!” he said
with an affectedly stern voice. “Pay attention! I… what is your name, anyway?”
“Grenouille,” said
Grenouille. “Jean-Baptiste Gre-nouille,”
“Aha,” said Baldini. “All
right then, now pay attention, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille! I have thought it
over. You shall have the opportunity, now, this very moment, to prove your
assertion. Your grandiose failure will also be an opportunity for you to learn
the virtue of humility, which-although one may pardon the total lack of its
development at your tender age-will be an absolute prerequisite for later
advancement as a member of your guild and for your standing as a man, a man of
honor, a dutiful subject, and a good Christian. I am prepared to teach you this
lesson at my own expense. For certain reasons, I am feeling generous this
evening, and, who knows, perhaps the recollection of this scene will amuse me
one day. But do not suppose that you can dupe me! Giuseppe Baldini’s nose is
old, but it is still sharp, sharp enough immediately to recognize the slightest
difference between your mixture and this product here.” And at that he pulled
the handkerchief drenched in Amor and Psyche from his pocket and waved it under
Grenouille’s nose. “Come closer, best nose in Paris! Come here to the table and
show me what you can do. But be careful not to drop anything or knock anything
over. Don’t touch anything yet. Let me provide some light first. We want to
have lots of illumination for this little experiment, don’t we?”
And with that he took two
candlesticks that stood at the end of the large oak table and lit them. He
placed all three next to one another along the back, pushed the goatskins to
one side, cleared the middle of the table. Then, with a few composed yet rapid
motions, he fetched from a small stand the utensils needed for the task-the
big-bellied mixing bottle, the glass funnel, the pipette, the small and large
measuring glasses -and placed them in proper order on the oaken surface.
Grenouille had meanwhile
freed himself from the doorframe. Even while Baldini was making his pompous
speech, the stiffness and cunning intensity had fallen away from him. He had
heard only the approval, only the “yes,” with the inner jubilation of a child that
has sulked its way to some— permission granted and thumbs its nose at the
limitations, conditions, and moral admonitions tied to it. Standing there at
his ease and letting the rest of Baldini’s oration flow by, he was for the
first time more human than animal, because he knew that he had already
conquered the man who had yielded to him.
While
Baldini was still fussing with his candlesticks at the table, Grenouille had
already slipped off into the darkness of the laboratory with its cupboards full
of precious essences, oils, and tinctures, and following his sure-scenting
nose, grabbed each of the necessary bottles from the shelves. There were nine
altogether: essence of orange blossom, lime oil, attars of rose and clove,
extracts of jasmine, bergamot, and rosemary, musk tincture, and storax balm,
all quickly plucked down and set at the ready on the edge of the table. The
last item he lugged over was a demijohn full of high-proof rectified spirit.
Then he placed himself behind Baldini-who was still arranging his mixing
utensils with deliberate pedantry, moving this glass back a bit, that one over
more to one side, so that everything would be in its old accustomed order and
displayed to its best advantage in the candlelight— and waited, quivering with
impatience, for the old man to get out of the way and make room for him.
“There!” Baldini said at
last, stepping aside. “I’ve lined up everything you’ll require for-let us
graciously call it-your ‘experiment.’ Don’t break anything, don’t spill
anything. Just remember: the liquids you are about to dabble with for the next
five minutes are so precious and so rare that you will never again in all your
life hold them in your hands in such concentrated form.”
“How much of it shall I make
for you, maitre?” Grenouille asked.
“Make what…?” said Baldini,
who had not yet finished his speech.
“How much of the perfume?”
rasped Grenouille. “How much of it do you want? Shall I fill this big bottle
here to the rim?” And he pointed to a mixing bottle that held a gallon at the
very least.
“No, you shall not!” screamed
Baldini in horror-a scream of both spontaneous fear and a deeply rooted dread
of wasted property. Embarrassed at what his scream had revealed, he followed it
up by roaring, “And don’t interrupt me when I am speaking, either!” Then in a
calm voice tinged with irony, he continued, “Why would we need a gallon of a
perfume that neither of us thinks much of? Haifa beakerful will do, really. But
since such small quantities are difficult to measure, I’ll allow you to start
with a third of a mixing bottle.”
“Good,” said Grenouille. “I’m
going to fill a third of this bottle with Amor and Psyche. But, Maitre Baidini,
I will do it in my own way. I don’t know if it will be how a craftsman would do
it. I don’t know how that’s done. But I will do it my own way.”
“As you please,” said
Baidini, who knew that in this business there was no “your way” or “my way,”
but one and only one way, which consisted of knowing the formula and, using the
appropriate calculations for the quantity one desired, creating a precisely
measured concentrate of the various essences, which then had to be volatilized
into a true perfume by mixing it in a precise ratio with alcohol-usually
varying between one-to-ten and one-to-twenty. There was no other way, that he
knew. And therefore what he was now called upon to witness-first with derisive
hauteur, then with dismay, and finally with helpless astonishment-seemed to him
nothing less than a miracle. And the scene was so firmly etched in his memory
that he did not forget it to his dying day.
Fifteen
T HE LITTLE MAN named Grenouille first uncorked the demijohn of
alcohol. Heaving the heavy vessel up
gave him difficulty. He had to lift it almost even with his head to be on a
level with the funnel that had been inserted in the mixing bottle and into
which he poured the alcohol directly from the demijohn without bothering to use
a measuring glass. Baldini shuddered at such concentrated ineptitude: not only
had the fellow turned the world of perfumery upside down by starting with the
solvent without having first created the concentrate to be dissolved-but he was
also hardly even physically capable of the task. He was shaking with exertion,
and Baldini was waiting at any moment for the heavy demijohn to come crashing
down and smash everything on the table to pieces. The candles, he thought, for
God’s sake, the candles! There’s going to be an explosion, he’ll burn my house
down…! And he was about to lunge for the demijohn and grab it out of the
madman’s hands when Grenouille set it down himself, getting it back on the
floor all in one piece, and stoppered it. A clear, light liquid swayed in the
bottle-not a drop spilled. For a few moments Grenouille panted for breath, but
with a look of contentment on his face as if the hardest part of the job were
behind him. And indeed, what happened now proceeded with such speed that BaWini
could hardly follow it with his eyes, let alone keep track of the order in
which it occurred or make even partial sense of the procedure.
Grenouille
grabbed apparently at random from the row of essences in their flacons, pulled
out the glass stoppers, held the contents under his nose for an instant,
splashed a bit of one bottle, dribbled a drop or two of another, poured a dash
of a third into the funnel, and so on. Pipette, test tube, measuring glass,
spoons and rods-all the utensils that allow the perfumer to control the
complicated process of mixing-Grenouille did not so much as touch a single one
of them. It was as if he were just playing, splashing and swishing like a child
busy cooking up some ghastly brew of water, grass, and mud, which he then
asserts to be soup. Yes, like a child, thought Baldini; all at once he looks
like a child, despite his ungainly hands, despite his scarred, pockmarked face
and his bulbous old-man’s nose. I took him to be older than he is; but now he
seems much younger to me; he looks as if he were three or four; looks just like
one of those unapproachable, incomprehensible, willful little prehuman
creatures, who in their ostensible innocence think only of themselves, who want
to subordinate the whole world to their despotic will, and would do it, too, if
one let them pursue their megalomaniacal ways and did not apply the strictest
pedagogical principles to guide them to a disciplined, self-controlled, fully
human existence. There was just such a fanatical child trapped inside this
young man, standing at the table with eyes aglow, having forgotten everything
around him, apparently no
longer aware that there was anything else in
the laboratory but himself and these bottles that he tipped into the funnel
with nimble awkwardness to mix up an insane brew that he would confidently
swear-and would truly believe!-to be the exquisite perfume Amor and Psyche.
Baldini shuddered as he watched the fellow bustling about in the candlelight,
so shockingly absurd and so shockingly self-confident. In the old days-so he
thought, and for a moment he felt as sad and miserable and furious as he had
that afternoon while gazing out onto the city glowing ruddy in the twilight-in
the old days people like that simply did not exist; he was an entirely new
specimen of the race, one that could arise only in exhausted, dissipated times
like these…, But he was about to be taught his lesson, the impertinent boy. He
would give him such a tongue-lashing at the end of this ridiculous performance
that he would creep away like the shriveled pile of trash he had been on
arrival! Vermin! One dared not get involved with anyone at all these days, the
world was simply teeming with absurd vermin!
Baldini
was so busy with his personal exasperation and disgust at the age that he did
not really comprehend what was intended when Grenouille suddenly stoppered up
all the flacons, pulled the funnel out of the mixing bottle, grabbed the neck
of the bottle with his right hand, capped it with the palm of his left, and
shook it vigorously. Only when the bottle had been spun through the air several
times, its precious contents sloshing back and forth like lemonade between
belly and neck, did Baldini let loose a shout of rage and horror. “Stop it!” he
screeched. “That’s enough! Stop it this moment! Basta! Put that bottle back on
the table and don’t touch anything else, do you understand, nothing else! I
must have been crazy to listen to your asinine gibberish. The way you handle
these things, your crudity, your primitive lack of judgment, demonstrate to me
that you are a bungler, a barbaric bungler, and a beastly, cheeky, snot-nosed
brat besides. You wouldn’t make a good lemonade mixer, not even a good
licorice-water vendor, let alone a perfumer! Just be glad, be grateful and
content that your master lets you slop around in tanning fluids! Do not dare it
ever again, do you hear me? Do not dare ever again to set a foot across the
threshold of a perfumer’s shop!”
Thus spoke Baldini. And even
as he spoke, the air around him was saturated with the odor of Amor and Psyche.
Odors have a power of persuasion stronger than that of words, appearances,
emotions, or will. The persuasive power of an odor cannot be fended off, it
enters into us like breath into our lungs, it fills us up, imbues us totally.
There is no remedy for it.
Grenouille
had set down the bottle, removing his perfume-moistened hand from its neck and
wiping it on his shirttail. One, two steps back-and the clumsy way he hunched
his body together under Baldini’s tirade sent enough waves rolling out into the
room to spread the newly created scent in all directions. Nothing more was
needed. True, Baldini ranted on, railed and cursed, but with every breath his
outward show of rage found less and less inner nourishment. He sensed he had
been proved wrong, which was why his peroration could only soar to empty
pathos. And when he fell silent, had been silent for a good while, he had no
need of Grenouille’s remark: “It’s all done.” He knew that already.
But nevertheless, although in
the meantime air heavy with Amor and Psyche was undulating all about him, he
stepped up to the old oak table to make his test. He pulled a fresh snowy white
lace handkerchief from his coat pocket, the left one, unfolded it and sprinkled
it with a few drops that he extracted from the mixing bottle with the long
pipette. He waved the handkerchief with outstretched arm to aerate it and then
pulled it past his nose with the delicate, well-practiced motion, soaking up
its scent. Letting it out again in little puffs, he sat down on a stool. Where
before his face had been bright red with erupting anger, all at once he had
grown pale. “Incredible,” he murmured softly to himself, “by God— incredible.”
And he pressed the handkerchief to his nose again and again and sniffed and
shook his head and muttered, “Incredible.” It was Amor and Psyche, beyond the
shadow of a doubt Amor and Psyche, that despicable, ingenious blend of scents,
so exactly copied that not even Pelissier himself would have been able to
distinguish it from his own product. “Incredible…”
Small and ashen, the great
Baldini sat on his stool, looking ridiculous with handkerchief in hand,
pressing it to his nose like an old maid with the sniffles. By now he was
totally speechless. He didn’t even say “incredible” anymore, but nodding gently
and staring at the contents of the mixing bottle, could only let out a monotone
“Hmm, hrnm, hmm… hmm, hmm, hmm… hmm, hmm, hmm.” After a while, Gre-nouille
approached, stepping up to the table soundlessly as a shadow.
“It’s not a good perfume,” he
said. “It’s been put together very bad, this perfume has.”
“Hmm, hmm, hmm,” said
Baldini, and Grenouille continued, “If you’ll let me, maitre, I’ll make it
better. Give me a minute and I’ll make a proper perfume out of it!”
“Hmm, hmm, hmm,” said Baldini
and nodded. Not in consent, but because he was in such a helplessly apathetic
condition that he would have said “hmm, hmm, hmm,” and nodded to anything. And
he went on nodding and murmuring “hmm, hmm, hmm,” and made no effort to
interfere as Grenouille began to mix away a second time, pouring the alcohol
from the demijohn into the mixing bottle a second time (right on top of the
perfume already in it), tipping the contents of flacons a second time in
apparently random order and quantity into the funnel. Only at the end of the
procedure-Grenouille did not shake the bottle this time, but swirled it about
gently like a brandy glass, perhaps in deference to Baldini’s delicacy, perhaps
because the contents seemed more precious to him this time-only then, as the
liquid whirled about in the bottle, did Baldini awaken from his numbed state
and stand up, the handkerchief still pressed to his nose, of course, as if he
were arming himself against yet another attack upon his most private self.
“It’s all done, maitre,” Grenouille said. “Now
it’s a really good scent.” “Yes, yes, fine, fine,” Baldini replied and waved
him off with his free hand.
“Don’t you want to test it?”
Grenouille gurgled on. “Don’t you want to, maitre? Aren’t you going to test
it?”
“Later. I’m not in the mood
to test it at the moment… have other things on my mind. Go now! Come on!”
And he picked up one of the
candlesticks and passed through the door into the shop. Grenouille followed him.
They entered the narrow hallway that led to the servants’ entrance. The old man
shuffled up to the doorway, pulled back the bolt, and opened the door. He
stepped aside to let the lad out.
“Can’t I come to work for
you, maitre, can’t I?” Grenouille asked, standing on the threshold, hunched
over again, the lurking look returning to his eye.
“I don’t know,” said Baldini.
“I shall think about it. Go.”
And then Grenouille had
vanished, gone in a split second, swallowed up by the darkness. Baldini stood
there and stared into the night. In his right hand he held the candlestick, in
his left the handkerchief, like someone with a nosebleed, but in fact he was
simply frightened. He quickly bolted the door. Then he took the protective
handkerchief from his face, shoved it into his pocket, and walked back through
the shop to his laboratory.
The scent was so heavenly
fine that tears welled into Baldini’s eyes. He did not have to test it, he
simply stood at the table in front of the mixing bottle and breathed. The perfume
was glorious. It was to Amor and Psyche as a symphony is to the scratching of a
lonely violin. And it was more. Baldini closed his eyes and watched as the most
sublime memories were awakened within him. He saw himself as a young man
walking through the evening gardens of Naples; he saw himself lying in the arms
of a woman with dark curly hair and saw the silhouette of a bouquet of roses on
the windowsill as the night wind passed by; he heard the random song of birds
and the distant music from a harbor tavern; he heard whisperings at his ear, he
heard I-love-you and felt his hair ruffle with bliss, now! now at this very
moment! He forced open his eyes and groaned with pleasure. This perfume was not
like any perfume known before. It was not a scent that made things smell
better, not some sachet, some toiletry. It was something completely new,
capable of creating a whole world, a magical, rich world, and in an instant you
forgot all the loathsomeness around you and felt so rich, so at ease, so free,
so fine…
The hairs that had ruffled up
on Baldini’s arm fell back again, and a befuddling peace took possession of his
soul. He picked up the leather, the goat leather lying at the table’s edge, and
a knife, and trimmed away. Then he laid the pieces in the glass basin and
poured the new perfume over them. He fixed a pane of glass over the basin,
divided the rest of the perfume between two small bottles, applied labels to
them, and wrote the words Nuit Napolitaine on them. Then he extinguished the
candles and left.
Once upstairs, he said
nothing to his wife while they ate. Above all, he said nothing about the solemn
decision he had arrived at that afternoon. And his wife said nothing either,
for she noticed that he was in good spirits, and that was enough for her. Nor
did he walk over to Notre-Dame to thank God for his strength of character.
Indeed, that night he forgot, for the first time ever, to say his evening
prayers.
Sixteen
T HE NEXT MORNING he went straight to Grimal. First he paid for his
goat leather, paid in full, without
a grumble or the least bit of haggling. And then he invited Grimal to the Tour
d’Argent for a bottle of white wine and negotiations concerning the purchase of
Grenouille, his apprentice. It goes without saying that he did not reveal to
him the why’s and wherefore’s of this purchase. He told some story about how he
had a large order for scented leather and to fill it he needed unskilled help.
He required a lad of few needs, who would do simple tasks, cutting leather and
so forth. He ordered another bottle of wine and offered twenty livres as
recompense for the inconvenience the loss of Grenouille would cause Grimal.
Twenty livres was an enormous sum. Grimal immediately took him up on it. They
walked to the tannery, where, strangely enough, Grenouille was waiting with his
bundle already packed. Baldini paid the twenty livres and took him along at
once, well aware that he had just made the best deal of his life.
Grimal, who for his part was convinced that he had just made the
best deal of his life, returned to the Tour d’Argent, there drank two more
bottles of wine, moved over to the Lion d’Or on the other bank around noon, and
got so rip-roaring drunk there that when he decided to go back to the Tour
d’Argent late that night, he got the rue Geoffroi L’Anier confused with the rue
des Nonaindieres, and instead of coming out directly onto the Pont-Marie as he
had intended, he was brought by ill fortune to the Quai des Ormes, where he
splashed lengthwise and face first into the water like a soft mattress. He was
dead in an instant. The river, however, needed considerable time to drag him
out from the shallows, past the barges moored there, into the stronger main
current, and not until the early morning hours did Grimal the tanner-or,
better, his soaked carcass-float briskly downriver toward the west.
As he passed the
Pont-au-Change, soundlessly, without bumping against the bridge piers, sixty
feet directly overhead Jean-Baptiste Grenouille was going to bed. A bunk had
been set up for him in a back corner of Baldini’s laboratory, and he was now
about to take possession of it-while his former employer floated down the cold
Seine, all four limbs extended. Grenouille rolled himself up into a little ball
like a tick. As he fell off to sleep, he sank deeper and deeper into himself,
leading the triumphant entry into his innermost fortress, where he dreamed of an
odoriferous victory banquet, a gigantic orgy with clouds of incense and fogs of
myrrh, held in his own honor.
Seventeen
W ITH THE acquisition of Grenouille, the House of Giuseppe Baidini
began its ascent to national, indeed
European renown. The Persian chimes never stopped ringing, the herons never
stopped spewing in the shop on the Pont-au-Change.
The very first evening,
Grenouille had to prepare a large demijohn full of Nuit Napolitaine, of which
over eighty flacons were sold in the course of the next day. The fame of the
scent spread like wildfire. Chenier’s eyes grew glassy from the moneys paid and
his back ached from all the deep bows he had to make, for only persons of high,
indeed highest, rank-or at least the servants of persons of high and highest
rank— appeared. One day the door was flung back so hard it rattled; in stepped
the footman of Count d’Argenson and shouted, as only footmen can shout, that he
wanted five bottles of this new scent. Chenier was still shaking with awe
fifteen minutes later, for Count d’Argenson was commissary and war minister to
His Majesty and the most powerful man in Paris.
While
Chenier was subjected to the onslaught of customers in the shop, Baidini had
shut himself up in his laboratory with his new apprentice. He justified this
state of affairs to Chenier with a fantastic theory that he called “division of
labor and increased productivity.” For years, he explained, he had patiently
watched while Pelissier and his ilk-despisers of the ancient craft, all-had
enticed his customers away and made a shambles of his business. His forbearance
was now at an end. He was accepting their challenge and striking back at these
cheeky parvenus, and, what was more, with their own weapons. Every season, every
month, if necessary every week, he would play trumps, a new perfume. And what
perfumes they would be! He would draw fully upon his creative talents. And for
that it was necessary that he— assisted only by an unskilled helper-would be
solely and exclusively responsible for the production of scents, while Chenier
would devote himself exclusively to their sale. By using such modern methods,
they would open a new chapter in the history of perfumery, sweeping
aside their competitors and growing
incomparably rich-yes, he had consciously and explicitly said “they,” because
he intended to allow his old and trusted journeyman to share a given percentage
of these incomparable riches.
Only a few days before,
Chenier would have regarded such talk as a sign of his master’s incipient
senility. “Ready for the Charite,” he would have thought. “It won’t be long now
before he lays down the pestle for good.” But now he was not thinking at all. He
didn’t get around to it, he simply had too much to do. He had so much to do
that come evening he was so exhausted he could hardly empty out the cashbox and
siphon off his cut. Not in his wildest dreams would he have doubted that things
were not on the up and up, though Baldini emerged from his laboratory almost
daily with some new scent.
And what scents they were!
Not just perfumes of high, indeed highest, quality, but also cremes and
powders, soaps, hair tonics, toilet waters, oils… Everything meant to have a
fragrance now smelled new and different and more wonderful than ever before.
And as if bewitched, the public pounced upon everything, absolutely
everything-even the newfangled scented hair ribbons that Baldini created one
day on a curious whim. And price was no object. Everything that Baldini
produced was a success. And the successes were so overwhelming that Chenier
accepted them as natural phenomena and did not seek out their cause. That
perhaps the new apprentice, that awkward gnome, who was housed like a dog in
the laboratory and whom one saw sometimes when the master stepped out, standing
in the background wiping off glasses and cleaning mortars-that this cipher of a
man might be implicated in the fabulous blossoming of their business, Chenier would
not have believed had he been told it.
Naturally,
the gnome had everything to do with it. Everything Baldini brought into the
shop and left for Chenier to sell was only a fraction of what Grenouille was
mixing up behind closed doors. Baldini couldn’t smell fast enough to keep up
with him. At times he was truly tormented by having to choose among the glories
that Grenouille produced. This sorcerer’s apprentice could have provided
recipes for all the perfumers of France without once repeating himself, without
once producing something of inferior or even average quality. As a matter of
fact, he could not have provided them with recipes, i.e., formulas, for at
first Grenouille still composed his scents in the totally chaotic and
unprofessional manner familiar to Baldini, mixing his ingredients impromptu and
in apparent wild confusion. Unable to control the crazy business, but hoping at
least to get some notion of it, Baldini demanded one day that Grenouille use
scales, measuring glasses, and the pipette when preparing his mixtures, even
though he considered them unnecessary; further, he was to get used to regarding
the alcohol not as another fragrance, but as a solvent to be added at the end;
and, for God’s sake, he would simply have to go about things more slowly, at an
easier and slower pace, as befitted a craftsman.
Grenouille did it. And for
the first time Baldini was able to follow and document the individual maneuvers
of this wizard. Paper and pen in hand, constantly urging a slower pace, he sat
next to Grenouille and jotted down how many drams of this, how many level
measures of that, how many drops of some other ingredient wandered into the
mixing bottles. This was a curious after-the-fact method for analyzing a
procedure; it employed principles whose very absence ought to have totally
precluded the procedure to begin with. But by employing this method, Baldini
finally managed to obtain such synthetic formulas. How it was that Grenouille
could mix his perfumes without the formulas was still a puzzle, or better, a
miracle, to Baldini, but at least he had captured this miracle in a formula,
satisfying in part his thirst for rules and order and preventing the total
collapse of his perfumer’s universe.
In due time he ferreted out the recipes for all the perfumes
Grenouille had thus far invented, and finally he forbade him to create new
scents unless he, Baldini, was present with pen and paper to observe the
process with Argus eyes and to document it step by step. In his fastidious,
prickly hand, he copied his notes, soon consisting of dozens of formulas, into
two different little books-one he locked in his fireproof safe and the other he
always carried with him, even sleeping with it at night. That reassured him.
For now, should he wish, he could himself perform Gre-nouille’s miracles, which
had on first encounter so profoundly shaken him. He believed that by collecting
these written formulas, he could exorcise the terrible creative chaos erupting
from his apprentice. Also the fact that he no longer merely stood there staring
stupidly, but was able to participate in the creative process by observing and
recording it, had a soothing effect on Baldini and strengthened his
self-confidence. After a while he
even came to believe that he made a not
insignificant contribution to the success of these sublime scents. And when he
had once entered them in his little books and entrusted them to his safe and
his bosom, he no longer doubted that they were now his and his alone.
But
Grenouille, too, profited from the disciplined procedures Baldini had forced
upon him. He was not dependent on them himself. He never had to look up an old
formula to reconstruct a perfume weeks or months later, for he never forgot an
odor. But by using the obligatory measuring glasses and scales, he learned the
language of perfumery, and he sensed instinctively that the knowledge of this
language could be of service to him. After a few weeks Grenouille had mastered
not only the names of all the odors in Baldini’s laboratory, but he was also
able to record the formulas for his perfumes on his own and, vice versa, to
convert other people’s formulas and instructions into perfumes and other
scented products. And not merely that! Once he had learned to express his
fragrant ideas in drops and drams, he no longer even needed the intermediate
step of experimentation. When Baldini assigned him a new scent, whether for a
handkerchief cologne, a sachet, or a face paint, Grenouille no longer reached
for flacons and powders, but instead simply sat himself down at the table and
wrote the formula straight out. He had learned to extend the journey from his
mental notion of a scent to the finished perfume by way of writing down the
formula. For him it was a detour. In the world’s eyes-that is, in Baldini’s-it
was progress. Grenouille’s miracles remained the same. But the recipes he now
supplied along with therii removed the terror, and that was for the best. The
more Grenouille mastered the tricks and tools of the trade, the better he was
able to express himself in the conventional language of perfumery-and the less
his master feared and suspected him. While still regarding him as a person with
exceptional olfactory gifts, Baldini no longer considered him a second
Frangipani or, worse, some weird wizard-and that was fine with Grenouille. The
regulations of the craft functioned as a welcome disguise. He virtually lulled
Baldini to sleep with his exemplary procedures, weighing ingredients, swirling
the mixing bottles, sprinkling the test handkerchief. He could shake it out
almost as delicately, pass it beneath his nose almost as elegantly as his
master. And from time to time, at well-spaced intervals, he would make mistakes
that could not fail to capture Baldini’s notice: forgetting to filter, setting
the scales wrong, fixing the percentage of ambergris tincture in the formula
ridiculously high. And took his scoldings for the mistakes, correcting them
then most conscientiously. Thus he managed to lull Baldini into the illusion
that ultimately this was all perfectly normal. He was not out to cheat the old
man after all. He truly wanted to learn from him. Not how to mix perfumes, not
how to compose a scent correctly, not that of course! In that sphere, there was
no one in the world who could have taught him anything, nor would the
ingredients available in Baldini’s shop have even begun to suffice for his
notions about how to realize a truly great perfume. The scents he could create
at Baldini’s were playthings compared with those he carried within him and that
he intended to create one day. But for that, he knew, two indispensable
prerequisites must be met. The first was the cloak of middle-class respectability,
the status of a journeyman at the least, under the protection of which he could
indulge his true passions and follow his true goals unimpeded. The second was
the knowledge of the craft itself, the way in which scents were produced,
isolated, concentrated, preserved, and thus first made available for higher
ends. For Grenouille did indeed possess the best nose in the world, both
analytical and visionary, but he did not yet have the ability to make those
scents realities.
Eighteen
A ND SO HE gladly let himself be instructed in
the arts of making soap from lard, sewing gloves of chamois, mixing powders from wheat flour and almond bran and
pulverized violet roots. Rolled scented candles made of charcoal, saltpeter,
and sandalwood chips. Pressed Oriental pastilles of myrrh, benzoin, and
powdered amber. Kneaded frankincense, shellac, vetiver, and cinnamon into balls
of incense. Sifted and spatulated poudre impermle out of crushed rose petals,
lavender flowers, cascarilla bark. Stirred face paints, whites and vein blues,
and molded greasy sticks of carmine for the lips. Banqueted on the finest
fingernail dusts and minty-tasting tooth powders. Mixed liquids for curling
periwigs and wart drops for corns, bleaches to remove freckles from the
complexion and nightshade extract for the eyes, Spanish fly for the gentlemen
and hygienic vinegars for the ladies… Grenouille learned to produce all such
eauxand powders, toilet and beauty preparations, plus teas and herbal blends,
liqueurs, marinades, and such-in short, he learned, with no particular interest
but without
complaint and with success, everything that
Baldini knew to teach him from his great store of traditional lore.
He was an especially eager
pupil, however, whenever Baldini instructed him in the production of tinctures,
extracts, and essences. He was indefatigable when it came to crushing bitter
almond seeds in the screw press or mashing musk pods or mincing dollops of
gray, greasy ambergris with a chopping knife or grating violet roots and
digesting the shavings in the finest alcohol. He learned how to use a
separatory funnel that could draw off the purest oil of crushed lemon rinds
from the milky dregs. He learned to dry herbs and flowers on grates placed in
warm, shady spots and to preserve what was once rustling foliage in wax-sealed
crocks and caskets. He learned the art of rinsing pomades and producing,
filtering, concentrating, clarifying, and rectifying infusions.
To be sure, Baldini’s
laboratory was not a proper place for fabricating floral or herbal oils on a
grand scale. It would have been hard to find sufficient quantities of fresh
plants in Paris for that. But from time to time, when they could get cheap,
fresh rosemary, sage, mint, or anise seeds at the market, or a shipment of
valerian roots, caraway seeds, nutmegs, or dried clove blossoms had come in,
then the alchemist in Baldini would stir, and he would bring out the large
alembic, a copper distilling vessel, atop it a head for condensing liquids-a
so-called moor’s head alembic, he proudly announced-which he had used forty
years before for distilling lavender out on the open southern exposures of
Liguria’s slopes and on the heights of the Luberon. And while Grenouille
chopped up what was to be distilled, Baldini hectically bustled about heating a
brick-lined hearth— because speed was the alpha and omega of this procedure-and
placed on it a copper kettle, the bottom well covered with water. He threw in
the minced plants, quickly closed off the double-walled moor’s head, and
connected two hoses to allow water to pass in and out. This clever mechanism
for cooling the water, he explained, was something he had added on later, since
out in the field, of course, one had simply used bellowed air for cooling. And
then he blew on the fire.
Slowly the kettle came to a
boil. And after a while, the distillate started to flow out of the moor’s
head’s third tap into a Florentine flask that Baldini had set below it-at first
hesitantly, drop by drop, then in a threadlike stream. It looked rather
unimpressive to begin with, like some thin, murky soup. Bit by bit,
however-especially after the first flask had been replaced with a second and
set aside to settle-the brew separated into two different liquids: below, the
floral or herbal fluid; above, a thick floating layer of oil. If one carefully
poured off the fluid-which had only the lightest aroma-through the lower spout
of the Florentine flask, the pure oil was left behind-the essence, the heavily
scented principle of the plant.
Grenouille was fascinated by
the process. If ever anything in his life had kindled his enthusiasm— granted,
not a visible enthusiasm but a hidden one, an excitement burning with a cold
flame-then it was this procedure for using fire, water, steam, and a cunning
apparatus to snatch the scented soul from matter. That scented soul, that
ethereal oil, was in fact the best thing about matter, the only reason for his
interest in it. The rest of the stupid stuff-the blossoms, leaves, rind, fruit,
color, beauty, vitality, and all those other useless qualities-were of no
concern to him. They were mere husk and ballast, to be disposed of.
From time to time, when the
distillate had grown watery and clear, they took the alembic from the fire,
opened it, and shook out the cooked muck. It looked as flabby and pale as soggy
straw, like the bleached bones of little birds, like vegetables that had been
boiled too long, insipid and stringy, pulpy, hardly still recognizable for what
it was, disgustingly cadaverous, and almost totally robbed of its own odor.
They threw it out the window into the river. Then they fed the alembic with
new, fresh plants, poured in more water, and set it back on the hearth. And
once again the kettle began to simmer, and again the lifeblood of the plants
dripped into the Florentine flask. This often went on all night long. Baldini
watched the hearth, Grenouille kept an eye on the flasks; there was nothing
else to do while waiting for the next batch.
They sat
on footstools by the fire, under the spell of the rotund flacon-both
spellbound, if for very different reasons. Baldini enjoyed the blaze of the
fire and the flickering red of the flames and the copper, he loved the
crackling of the burning wood, the gurgle of the alembic, for it was like the
old days. You could lose yourself in it! He fetched a bottle of wine from the
shop, for the heat made him thirsty, and drinking wine was like the old days
too. And then he began to tell stories, from the old days, endless stories.
About the War of the Spanish Succession, when his own participation against the
Austrians had had a decisive influence on the
outcome; about the Camisards, together with whom he had haunted the Cevennes;
about the daughter of a Huguenot in the Esterel, who, intoxicated by the scent
of lavender, had complied with his wishes; about a forest fire that he had damn
near started and which would then have probably set the entire Provence ablaze,
as sure as there was a heaven and hell, for a biting mistral had been blowing;
and over and over he told about distilling out in the open fields, at night, by
moonlight, accompanied by wine and the screech of cicadas, and about a lavender
oil that he had created, one so refined and powerful that you could have
weighed it out in silver; about his apprentice years in Genoa, about his
journeyman years in the city of Grasse, where there were as many perfumers as
shoemakers, some of them so rich they lived like princes, in magnificent houses
with shaded gardens and terraces and wainscoted dining rooms where they feasted
with porcelain and golden cutlery, and so on…
Such were the stories Baldini
told while he drank his wine and his cheeks grew ruddy from the wine and the
blazing fire and from his own enthusiastic story-telling. Grenouille, however, who
sat back more in the shadows, did not listen to him at all. He did not care
about old tales, he was interested in one thing only: this new process. He
stared uninterruptedly at the tube at the top of the alembic out of which the
distillate ran in a thin stream. And as he stared at it, he imagined that he
himself was such an alembic, simmering away inside just like this one, out of
which there likewise gushed a distillate, but a better, a newer, an unfamiliar
distillate of those exquisite plants that he tended within him, that blossomed
there, their bouquet unknown to anyone but himself, and that with their unique
scent he could turn the world into a fragrant Garden of Eden, where life would
be relatively bearable for him, olfactorily speaking. To be a giant alembic,
flooding the whole world with a distillate of his own making, that was the
daydream to which Grenouille gave himself up.
But
while Baldini, inflamed by the wine, continued to tell ever more extravagant
tales of the old days and got more and more tangled up in his uninhibited
enthusiasms, Grenouille soon abandoned his bizarre fantasy. For the moment he
banished from his thoughts the notion of a giant alembic, and instead he
pondered how he might make use of his newly gained knowledge for more immediate
goals.
Nineteen
I T WASN’T LONG before he had become a specialist in the field of
distillation. He discovered-and his
nose was of more use in the discovery than Baldini’s rules and regulations-that
the heat of the fire played a significant role in the quality of the
distillate. Every plant, every flower, every sort of wood, and every
oil-yielding seed demanded a special procedure. Sometimes you had to build up
the hottest head of steam, sometimes you just left it at a moderate boil, and
some flowers yielded their best only if you let them steep over the lowest
possible flame.
It was much the same with
their preparation. Mint and lavender could be distilled by the bunch. Other
things needed to be carefully culled, plucked, chopped, grated, crushed, or
even made into pulp before they were placed in the copper kettle. Many things
simply could not be distilled at all-which irritated Grenouille no end.
Having
observed what a sure hand Grenouille had with the apparatus, Baldini had given
him free rein with the alembic, and Grenouille had taken full advantage of that
freedom. While still mixing perfumes and producing other scented and herbal
products during the day, he occupied himself at night exclusively with the art
of distillation. His plan was to create entirely new basic odors, and with them
to produce at least some of the scents that he bore within him. At first he had
some small successes. He succeeded in producing oils from nettles and from
cress seeds, toilet water from the fresh bark of elderberry and from yew
sprigs. These distillates were only barely similar to the odor of their
ingredients, but they were at least interesting enough to be processed further.
But there were also substances with which the procedure was a complete failure.
Grenouille tried for instance to distill the odor of glass, the clayey, cool
odor of smooth glass, something a normal human being cannot perceive at all. He
got himself both window glass and bottle glass and tried working with it in
large pieces, in fragments, in slivers, as dust-all without the least success.
He distilled brass, porcelain, and leather, grain and gravel. He distilled
plain dirt. Blood and wood and fresh fish. His own hair. By the end he was
distilling plain water, water from the Seine, the distinctive odor of which
seemed to him worth preserving. He believed that with the help of an alembic he
could rob these materials of their
characteristic odors, just as could be done
with thyme, lavender, and caraway seeds. He did not know that distillation is
nothing more than a process for separating complex substances into volatile and
less volatile components and that it is only useful in the art of perfumery
because the volatile essential oils of certain plants can be extracted from the
rest, which have little or no scent. For substances lacking these essential
oils, the distilling process is, of course, wholly pointless. For us moderns, educated
in the natural sciences, that is immediately apparent. For Grenouille, however,
this knowledge was won painfully after a long chain of disappointing
experiments. For months on, end he sat at his alembic night after night and
tried every way he could think to distill radically new scents, scents that had
never existed on earth before in a concentrated form. But except for a few
ridiculous plant oils, nothing came of it. From the immeasurably deep and
fecund well of his imagination, he had pumped not a single drop of a real and
fragrant essence, had been unable to realize a single atom of his olfactory
preoccupations.
When it finally became clear
to him that he had failed, he halted his experiments and fell mortally ill.
Twenty
H E CAME DOWN with a high fever, which for the
first few days was accompanied by heavy sweats,
but which later, as if the pores of his skin were no longer enough, produced
countless pustules. Grenouille’s body was strewn with reddish blisters. Many of
them popped open, releasing their watery contents, only to fill up again.
Others grew into true boils, swelling up thick and red and then erupting like
craters, spewing viscous pus and blood streaked with yellow. In time, with his
hundreds of ulcerous wounds, Grenouille looked like some martyr stoned from the
inside out. Naturally, Baldini was worried. It would have been very unpleasant
for him to lose his precious apprentice just at the moment when he was planning
to expand his business beyond the borders of the capital and out across the
whole country. For increasingly, orders for those innovative scents that Paris
was so crazy about were indeed coming not only from the provinces but also from
foreign courts. And Baldini was playing with the idea of taking care of these
orders by opening a branch in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, virtually a small
factory, where the fastest-moving scents could be mixed in quantity and bottled
in quantity in smart little flacons, packed by smart little girls, and sent off
to Holland, England, and Greater Germany. Such an enterprise was not exactly
legal for a master perfumer residing in Paris, but Baldini had recently gained
the protection of people in high places; his exquisite scents had done that for
him-not just with the commissary, but also with such important personages as
the gentleman holding the franchise for the Paris customs office or with a
member of the Conseii Royal des Finances and promoter of flourishing commercial
undertakings like Monsieur Feydeau de Brou. The latter had even held out the
prospect of a royal patent, truly the best thing that one could hope for, a
kind of carte blanche for circumventing all civil and professional
restrictions; it meant the end of all business worries and the guarantee of
secure, permanent, unassailable prosperity.
And Baldini was carrying yet
another plan under his heart, his favorite plan, a sort of counterplan to the
factory in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, where his wares, though not mass
produced, would be made available to anyone. But for a selected number of
well-placed, highly placed clients, he wanted to create -or rather, have
created-personal perfumes that would fit only their wearer, like tailored
clothes, would be used only by the wearer, and would bear his or her
illustrious name. He could imagine a Parfum de la Marquise de Cernay, a Parfum
de la Marechale de Villar, a Parfum du Due d’Aiguillon, and so on. He dreamed
of a Parfum de Madame la Marquise de Pompadour, even of a Parfum de Sa Majeste
le Roi, in a flacon of costliest cut agate with a holder of chased gold and,
hidden on the inside of the base, the engraved words: “Giuseppe Baldini,
Parfumeur.” The king’s name and his own, both on the same object. To such
glorious heights had Baldini’s ideas risen! And now Grenouille had fallen ill.
Even though Grimal, might he rest in peace, had sworn there had never been
anything wrong with him, that he could stand up to anything, had even put the
black plague behind him. And here he had gone and fallen ill, mortally ill.
What if he were to die? Dreadful! For with him would die the splendid plans for
the factory, for the smart little girls, for the patent, and for the king’s
perfume.
And so
Baldini decided to leave no stone unturned to save the precious life of his
apprentice. He
ordered him moved from his bunk in the
laboratory to a clean bed on the top floor. He had the bed made up with damask.
He helped bear the patient up the narrow stairway with his own hands, despite
his unutterable disgust at the pustules and festering boils. He ordered his
wife to heat chicken broth and wine. He sent for the most renowned physician in
the neighborhood, a certain Procope, who demanded payment in advance -twenty
francs!-before he would even bother to pay a call.
The doctor come, lifted up
the sheet with dainty fingers, took one look at Grenouille’s body, which truly
looked as if it had been riddled with hundreds of bullets, and left the room
without ever having opened the bag that his attendant always carried about with
him. The case, so began his report to Baldini, was quite clear. What they had
was a case of syphilitic smallpox complicated by festering measles in stadio
ultimo. No treatment was called for, since a lancet for bleeding could not be
properly inserted into the deteriorating body, which was more like a corpse
than a living organism. And although the characteristic pestilential stench
associated with the illness was not yet noticeable-an amazing detail and a
minor curiosity from a strictly scientific point of view-there could not be the
least doubt of the patient’s demise within the next forty-eight hours, as
surely as his name was Doctor Procope. Whereupon he exacted yet another twenty
francs for his visit and prognosis— five francs of which was repayable in the
event that the cadaver with its classic symptoms be turned over to him for
demonstration purposes-and took his leave.
Baldini was beside himself.
He wailed and lamented in despair. He bit his fingers, raging at his fate. Once
again, just before reaching his goal, his grand, very grand plans had been
thwarted. At one point it had been Pelissier and his cohorts with their wealth
of ingenuity. Now it was this boy with his inexhaustible store of new scents,
this scruffy brat who was worth more than his weight in gold, who had decided
now of all times to come down with syphilitic smallpox and festering measles in
stadio ultimo. Now of all times! Why not two years from now? Why not one? By
then he could have been plundered like a silver mine, like a golden ass. He
could have gone ahead and died next year. But no! He was dying now, God damn it
all, within forty-eight hours!
For a
brief moment, Baldini considered the idea of a pilgrimage to Notre-Dame, where
he would light a candle and plead with the Mother of God for Gre-nouille’s
recovery. But he let the idea go, for matters were too pressing. He ran to get
paper and ink, then shooed his wife out of the sickroom. He was going to keep
watch himself. Then he sat down in a chair next to the bed, his notepaper on
his knees, the pen wet with ink in his hand, and attempted to take
Gre-nouille’s perfumatory confession. For God’s sake, he dare not slip away without
a word, taking along the treasures he bore inside him. Would he not in these
last hours leave a testament behind in faithful hands, so that posterity would
not be deprived of the finest scents of all time? He, Baldini, would faithfully
administer that testament, the canon of formulas for the most sublime scents
ever smelled, would bring them all to full bloom. He would attach undying fame
to Grenouille’s name, he would-yes, he swore it by everything holy-lay the best
of these scents at the feet of the king, in an agate flacon with gold chasing
and the engraved dedication, “From Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, Parfumeur, Paris.”
So spoke-or better, whispered-Baldini into Grenouille’s ear, unremittingly
beseeching, pleading, wheedling.
But all
in vain. Grenouille yielded nothing except watery secretions and bloody pus. He
lay there mute in his damask and parted with those disgusting fluids, but not
with his treasures, his knowledge, not a single formula for a scent. Baldini
would have loved to throttle him, to club him to death, to beat those precious
secrets out of that moribund body, had there been any chance of success… and
had it not so blatantly contradicted his understanding of a Christian’s love
for his neighbor.
And so he went on purring and
crooning in his sweetest tones, and coddled his patient, and-though only after
a great and dreadful struggle with himself— dabbed with cooling presses the
patient’s sweat-drenched brow and the seething volcanoes of his wounds, and
spooned wine into his mouth hoping to bring words to his tongue-all night long
and all in vain. In the gray of dawn he gave up. He fell exhausted into an
armchair at the far end of the room and stared-no longer in rage, really, but
merely yielding to silent resignation-at Grenouille’s small dying body there in
the bed, whom he could neither save nor rob, nor from whom he could salvage
anything else for himself, whose death he could only witness numbly, like a
captain watching his ship sink, taking all his wealth with it into the depths.
And then all at once the lips
of the dying boy opened, and in a voice whose clarity and firmness betrayed
next to nothing of his immediate demise, he spoke. “Tell me, maftre, are there
other ways to
extract the scent from things
besides pressing or distilling?”
Baldini, believing the voice
had come either from his own imagination or from the next world, answered
mechanically, “Yes, there are.”
“What are they?” came the question
from the bed. And Baldini opened his tired eyes wide. Grenouille lay there
motionless among his pillows. Had the corpse spoken?
“What
are they?” came the renewed question, and this time Baldini noticed
Grenouille’s lips move. It’s over now, he thought. This is the end, this is the
madness of fever or the throes of death. And he stood up, went over to the bed,
and bent down to the sick man. His eyes were open and he gazed up at Baldini
with the same strange, lurking look that he had fixed on him at their first
meeting.
“What are they?” he asked.
Baldini felt a pang in his
heart-he could not deny a dying man his last wish-and he answered, “There are
three other ways, my son: enfleurage it chaud, enfleurage a froid, and enfleurage
a I’huile. They are superior to distillation in several ways, and they are used
for extraction of the finest of all scents: jasmine, rose, and orange blossom.”
“Where?” asked Grenouille.
“In the south,” answered Baldini. “Above all,
in the town of Grasse.” “Good,” said Grenouille.
And with that he closed his
eyes. Baldini raised himself up slowly. He was very depressed. He gathered up
his notepaper, on which he had not written a single line, and blew out the
candle. Day was dawning already. He was dead tired. One ought to have sent for
a priest, he thought. Then he made a hasty sign of the cross with his right
hand and left the room.
Grenouille was, however,
anything but dead. He was only sleeping very soundly, deep in dreams, sucking
fluids back into himself. The blisters were already beginning to dry out on his
skin, the craters of pus had begun to drain, the wounds to close. Within a week
he was well again.
Twenty-one
H E WOULD HAVE loved then and there to have left for the south, where
he could learn the new techniques
the old man had told him about. But that was of course out of the question. He
was after all only an apprentice, which was to say, a nobody. Strictly
speaking, as Baldini explained to him-this was after he had overcome his
initial joy at Grenouille’s resurrection-strictly speaking, he was less than a
nobody, since a proper apprentice needed to be of faultless, i.e., legitimate,
birth, to have relatives of like standing, and to have a certificate of indenture,
all of which he lacked. Should he, Baldini, nevertheless decide one day to help
him obtain his journeyman’s papers, that would happen only on the basis of
Grenouille’s uncommon talents, his faultless behavior from then on, and his,
Baldini’s, own infinite kindness, which, though it often had worked to his own
disadvantage, he would forever be incapable of denying.
To be sure, it was a good
while before he fulfilled his promised kindness-just a little under three
years.
During that period and with
Grenouille’s help, Baldini realized his high-flying dreams. He built his
factory in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine, succeeded in his scheme for exclusive
perfumes at court, received a royal patent. His fine fragrances were sold as
far off as St. Petersburg, as Palermo, as Copenhagen. A musk-impregnated item
was much sought after even in Constantinople, where God knows they already had
enough scents of their own. Baldini’s perfumes could be smelled both in elegant
offices in the City of London and at the court in Parma, both in the royal
castle at Warsaw and in the little Schloss of the Graf von und zu
Lippe-Detmold. Having reconciled himself to living out his old age in bitterest
poverty near Messina, Baldini was now at age seventy indisputably Europe’s greatest
perfumer and one of the richest citizens of Paris.
Early in
1756-he had in the meantime acquired the adjoining building on the
Pont-au-Change, using it solely as a residence, since the old building was
literally stuffed full to the attic with scents and spices-he informed
Grenouille that he was now willing to release him, but only on three
conditions: first, he would not be allowed to produce in the future any of the
perfumes now under Baldini’s roof, nor sell their formulas to third parties;
second, he must leave Paris and not enter it again for as long as Baldini
lived; and third, he was to keep the first two conditions absolutely secret. He
was to swear to
this by all the saints, by
the poor soul of his mother, and on his own honor.
Grenouille,
who neither had any honor nor believed in any saints or in the poor soul of his
mother, swore it. He would have sworn to anything. He would have accepted any
condition Baldini might propose, because he wanted those silly journeyman’s
papers that would make it possible for him to live an inconspicuous life, to
travel undisturbed, and to find a job. Everything else was unimportant to him.
What kinds of conditions were those anyway! Not enter Paris again? What did he
need Paris for! He knew it down to its last stinking cranny, he took it with
him wherever he went, he had owned Paris for years now. -Not produce any of
Baldini’s top-selling perfumes, not pass on their formulas? As if he could not
invent a thousand others, just as good and better, if and when he wanted to!
But he didn’t want to at all. He did not in the least intend to go into
competition with Baldini or any other bourgeois perfumer. He was not out to
make his fortune with his art; he didn’t even want to live from it if he could
find another way to make a living. He wanted to empty himself of his innermost
being, of nothing less than his innermost being, which he considered more
wonderful than anything else the world had to offer. And thus Baldini’s
conditions were no conditions at all for Grenouille.
He set out in spring, early
one May morning. Baldini had given him a little rucksack, a second shirt, two
pairs of stockings, a large sausage, a horse blanket, and twenty-five francs.
That was far more than he was obligated to do, Baldini said, considering that
Grenouille had not paid a sol in fees for the profound education he had
received. He was obligated to pay two francs in severance, nothing more. But he
could no more deny his own kindly nature than he could the deep sympathy for
Jean-Baptiste that had accumulated in his heart over the years. He wished him
good luck in his wanderings and once more warned him emphatically not to forget
his oath. With that, he accompanied him to the servants’ entrance where he had
once taken him in, and let him go.
He did not give him his
hand-his sympathy did not reach quite that far. He had never shaken hands with
him. He had always avoided so much as touching him, out of some kind of
sanctimonious loathing, as if there were some danger that he could be infected
or contaminated. He merely said a brief adieu. And Grenouille nodded and ducked
away and was gone. The street was empty.
Twenty-two
B ALDINI WATCHED him go, shuffling across the bridge to the island,
small, bent, bearing his rucksack
like a hunchback, looking from the rear like an old man. On the far side, where
the street made a dogleg at the Palais de Parlement, he lost sight of him and
felt extraordinarily relieved.
He had
never liked the fellow, he could finally admit it now. He had never felt
comfortable the whole time he had housed him under his roof and plundered him.
He felt much as would a man of spotless character who does some forbidden deed
for the first time, who uses underhanded tricks when playing a game. True, the
risk that people might catch up with him was small, and the prospects for
success had been great; but even so, his nervousness and bad conscience were
equally great. In fact, not a day had passed in all those years when he had not
been haunted by the notion that in some way or other he would have to pay for
having got involved with this man. If only it turns out all right!-that had
been his continual anxious prayer-if only I succeed in reaping the profits of
this risky adventure without having to pay the piper! If only I succeed! What
I’m doing is not right, but God will wink His eye, I’m sure He will. He has
punished me hard enough many times in my life, without any cause, so that it
would only be just if He would deal graciously with me this time. What wrong
have I actually done, if there has been a wrong? At the worst I am operating
somewhat outside guild regulations by exploiting the wonderful gifts of an unskilled
worker and passing off his talent as my own. At the worst I have wandered a bit
off the traditional path of guild virtue. At the very worst, I am doing today
what I myself have condemned in the past. Is that a crime? Other people cheat
their whole life long. I have only fudged a bit for a couple of years. And only
because of purest chance I was given a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Perhaps
it wasn’t chance at all, but God Himself, who sent this wizard into my house,
to make up for the days of humiliation by Pelissier and his cohorts. Perhaps
Divine Providence was not directing Himself at me at all, but against
Pelissier! That’s perfectly possible! How else would God have been able to
punish Pelissier other than by raising me up? My luck, in that case, would be
the means by which divine justice has achieved its end, and thus I not only
ought to accept it, but I must, without shame and without the least regret…
Such had often been Baldini’s
thoughts during those years-mornings, when he would descend the narrow stairway
to his shop, evenings, when he would climb back up carrying the contents of the
cashbox to count the heavy gold and silver coins, and at night, when he lay
next to the snoring bag of bones that was his wife, unable to sleep for fear of
his good fortune.
But now such sinister
thoughts had come to an end. His uncanny guest was gone and would never return
again. Yet the riches remained and were secure far into the future. Baldini
laid a hand to his chest and felt, beneath the cloth of his coat, that little
book beside his beating heart. Six hundred formulas were recorded there, more
than a whole generation of perfumers would ever be able to implement. If he
were to lose everything today, he could, with just this wonderful little book,
be a rich man once again within a year. Truly he could not ask for more!
From the gables of the houses
across the way, the morning sun fell golden and warm on his face. Baldini was
still looking to the south, down the street in the direction of the Palais de
Parlement-it was simply too delightful not to see anything more of
Grenouille!-and, washed over by a sense of gratitude, he decided to make that
pilgrimage to Notre-Dame today, to cast a gold coin in the alms box, to light
three candles, and on his knees to thank his Lord for having heaped such good
fortune on him and having spared him from retribution.
But then that same afternoon,
just as he was about to head for the church, something absurd happened: a rumor
surfaced that the English had declared war on France. That was of itself hardly
disquieting. But since Baldini had planned to send a shipment of perfume to
London that very day, he postponed his visit to Notre-Dame and instead went
into the city to make inquiries and from there to go out to his factory in the
Faubourg Saint-Antoine and cancel the shipment to London for the present. That
night in bed, just before falling asleep, he had a brilliant idea: in light of
the hostilities about to break out over the colonies in the New World, he would
launch a perfume under the name of Prestige du Quebec, a heroic, resinous
scent, whose success-this much was certain-would more than repay him for the
loss of business with England. With that sweet thought in his silly old head,
relieved and bedded now on its pillow, beneath which the pressure of the little
book of formulas was pleasantly palpable, Maitre Baldini fell asleep and awoke
no more in this life.
For that night a minor
catastrophe occurred, which, with appropriate delays, resulted in a royal
decree requiring that little by little all the buildings on all the bridges of
Paris be torn down. For with no apparent reason, the west side of the Pont-au-Change,
between the third and fourth piers, collapsed. Two buildings were hurtled into
the river, so completely and suddenly that none of their occupants could be
rescued. Fortunately, it was a matter of only two persons, to wit: Giuseppe
Baldini and his wife, Teresa. The servants had gone out, either with or without
permission. Chenier, who first returned home in the small hours slightly
drunk-or rather, intended to return home, since there was no home left-suffered
a nervous breakdown. He had sacrificed thirty long years of his life in hopes
of being named heir in Baldini’s will, for the old man had neither children nor
relatives. And now, at one blow, the entire inheritance was gone, everything,
house, business, raw materials, laboratory, Baldini himself-indeed even the
will, which perhaps might have offered him a chance of becoming owner of the
factory.
Nothing was found, not the
bodies, not the safe, not the little books with their six hundred formulas.
Only one thing remained of Giuseppe Baldini, Europe’s greatest perfumer: a very
motley odor-of musk, cinnamon, vinegar, lavender, and a thousand other
things-that took several weeks to float high above the Seine from Paris to Le
Havre.
PART
II
Twenty-three
W HEN THE House of Giuseppe Baldini collapsed, Grenouille was already
on the road to Orleans. He had left
the enveloping haze of the city behind him; and with every step he took away
from it, the air about him grew clearer, purer, and cleaner. It became thinner
as well. Gone was the roiling of hundreds, thousands of changing odors at every
pace; instead, the few odors there were-of
the sandy road, meadows, the earth, plants,
water-extended across the countryside in long currents, swelling slowly,
abating slowly, with hardly an abrupt break.
For Grenouille, this
simplicity seemed a deliverance. The leisurely odors coaxed his nose. For the
first time in his life he did not have to prepare himself to catch the scent of
something new, unexpected, hostile -or to lose a pleasant smell-with every
breath. For the first time he could almost breathe freely, did not constantly
have to be on the olfactory lookout. We say “almost,” for of course nothing
ever passed truly freely through Grenouille’s nose. Even when there was not the
least reason for it, he was always alert to, always wary of everything that
came from outside and had to be let inside. His whole life long, even in those
few moments when he had experienced some inkling of satisfaction, contentment,
and perhaps even happiness, he had preferred exhaling to inhaling-just as he
had begun life not with a hopeful gasp for air but with a bloodcurdling scream.
But except for that one proviso, which for him was simply a constitutional
limitation, the farther Grenouille got from Paris, the better he felt, the more
easily he breathed, the lighter his step, until he even managed sporadically to
carry himself erect, so that when seen from a distance he looked almost like an
ordinary itinerant journeyman, like a perfectly normal human being.
Most liberating for him was
the fact that other people were so far away. More people lived more densely
packed in Paris than in any other city in the world. Six, seven hundred
thousand people lived in Paris. Its streets and squares teemed with them, and
the houses were crammed full of them from cellars to attics. There was hardly a
corner of Paris that was not paralyzed with people, not a stone, not a patch of
earth that did not reek of humans.
As he began to withdraw from
them, it became clear to Grenouille for the first time that for eighteen years
their compacted human effluvium had oppressed him like air heavy with an
imminent thunderstorm. Until now he had thought that it was the world in
general he wanted to squirm away from. But it was not the world, it was the
people in it. You could live, so it seemed, in this world, in this world devoid
of humanity.
On the third day of his
journey he found himself under the influence of the olfactory gravity of
Orleans. Long before any visible sign indicated that he was in the vicinity of
a city, Grenouille sensed a condensation of human stuff in the air and,
reversing his original plan, decided to avoid Orleans. He did not want to have
his newfound respiratory freedom ruined so soon by the sultry climate of
humans. He circled the city in a giant arc, came upon the Loire at Chateauneuf,
and crossed it at Sully. His sausage lasted that far. He bought himself a new
one and, leaving the river behind, pushed on to the interior.
He now avoided not just
cities, but villages as well. He was almost intoxicated by air that grew ever
more rarefied, ever more devoid of humankind. He would approach a settlement or
some isolated farm only to get new supplies, buying his bread and disappearing
again into the woods. After a few weeks even those few travelers he met on
out-of-the-way paths proved too much for him; he could no longer bear the
concentrated odor that appeared punctually with farmers out to mow the first
hay on the meadows. He nervously skirted every herd of sheep-not because of the
sheep, but to get away from the odor of the shepherds. He headed straight
across country and put up with mile-long detours whenever he caught the scent
of a troop of riders still several hours distant. Not because, like other
itinerant journeymen and vagabonds, he feared being stopped and asked for his
papers and then perhaps pressed into military service -he didn’t even know
there was a war on-but solely because he was disgusted by the human smell of
the horsemen. And so it happened quite naturally and as the result of no
particular decision that his plan to take the fastest road to Grasse gradually faded;
the plan unraveled in freedom, so to speak, as did all his other plans and
intentions. Grenouille no longer wanted to go somewhere, but only to go away,
away from human beings.
Finally,
he traveled only by night. During the day he crept into thickets, slept under
bushes, in underbrush, in the most inaccessible spots, rolled up in a ball like
an animal, his earthen-colored horse blanket pulled up over his body and head,
his nose wedged in the crook of an elbow so that not the faintest foreign odor could
disturb his dreams. He awoke at sunset, sniffed in all directions, and only
when he could smell that the last farmer had left his fields and the most
daring wanderer had sought shelter from the descending darkness, only when
night and its presumed dangers had swept the countryside clean of people, did
Grenouille creep out of hiding and set out again on his journey. He did not
need light to see by. Even before, when he was traveling by day, he had often
closed his eyes for
hours on end and merely followed his nose. The
gaudy landscape, the dazzling abrupt definition of sight hurt his eyes. He was
delighted only by moonlight. Moonlight knew no colors and traced the contours
of the terrain only very softly. It covered the land with a dirty gray,
strangling life all night long. This world molded in lead, where nothing moved
but the wind that fell sometimes like a shadow over the gray forests, and where
nothing lived but the scent of the naked earth, was the only world that he
accepted, for it was much like the world of his soul.
He headed south.
Approximately south-for he did not steer by magnetic compass, but only by the
compass of his nose, which sent him skirting every city, every village, every
settlement. For weeks he met not a single person. And he might have been able
to cradle himself in the soothing belief that he was alone in a world bathed in
darkness or the cold light of the moon, had his delicate compass not taught him
better.
Humans existed by night as
well. And there were humans in the most remote regions. They had only pulled
back like rats into their lairs to sleep. The earth was not cleansed of them, for
even in sleep they exuded their odor, which then forced its way out between the
cracks of their dwellings and into the open air, poisoning a natural world only
apparently left to its own devices. The more Grenouille had become accustomed
to purer air, the more sensitive he was to human odor, which suddenly, quite
unexpectedly, would come floating by in the night, ghastly as the stench of
manure, betraying the presence of some shepherd’s hut or charcoal burner’s
cottage or thieves’ den. And then he would flee farther, increasingly sensitive
to the increasingly infrequent smell of humankind. Thus his nose led him to
ever more remote regions of the country, ever farther from human beings,
driving him on ever more insistently toward the magnetic pole of the greatest
possible solitude.
Twenty-four
T HAT POLE, the point of the kingdom most distant from humankind, was
located in the Massif Central of the
Auvergne, about five days’ journey south of Clermont, on the peak of a
six-thousand-foot-high volcano named Plomb du Cantal.
The mountain consisted of a
giant cone of blue-gray rock and was surrounded by an endless, barren highland
studded with a few trees charred by fire and overgrown with gray moss and gray brush,
out of which here and there brown boulders jutted up like rotten teeth. Even by
light of day, the region was so dismal and dreary that the poorest shepherd in
this poverty-stricken province would not have driven his animals here. And by
night, by the bleaching light of the moon, it was such a godforsaken wilderness
that it seemed not of this world. Even Lebrun, the bandit of the Auvergne,
though pursued from all sides, had preferred to fight his way through to the
Cevennes and there be captured, drawn, and quartered rather than to hide out on
the Plomb du Cantal, where certainly no one would have sought or found him, but
where likewise he would certainly have died a solitary, living death that had
seemed to him worse still. For miles around the mountain, there lived not one
human being, nor even a respectable mammal-at best a few bats and a couple of
beetles and adders. No one had scaled the peak for decades.
Grenouille reached the
mountain one August night in the year 1756. As dawn broke, he was standing on
the peak. He did not yet know that his journey was at an end. He thought that
this was only a stopping place on the way to ever purer air, and he turned full
circle and let his nose move across the vast panorama of the volcanic
wilderness: to the east, where the broad high plain of Saint-Flour and the
marshes of the Riou River lay; to the north, to the region from which he had
come and where he had wandered for days through pitted limestone mountains; to
the west, from where the soft wind of morning brought him nothing but the
smells of stone and tough grass; finally to the south, where the foothills of
the Plomb stretched for miles to the dark gorges of the Truyere. Everywhere, in
every direction, humanity lay equally remote from him, and a step in any
direction would have meant closer proximity to human beings. The compass spun
about. It no longer provided orientation. Grenouille was at his goal. And at
the same time he was taken captive.
As the
sun rose, he was still standing on the same spot, his nose held up to the air.
With a desperate effort he tried to get a whiff of the direction from which
threatening humanity came, and of the opposite direction to which he could flee
still farther. He assumed that in whatever direction he turned he ought to
detect some latent scrap of human odor. But there was nothing. Here there was
only
peace, olfactory peace, if it can be put that
way. Spread all about, as if softly rustling, lay nothing but the drifting,
homogeneous odor of dead stones, of gray lichen, and of withered
grasses-nothing else.
Grenouille
needed a very long time to believe what he was not smelling. He was not
prepared for his good luck. His mistrust fought against his good sense for
quite a while. He even used his eyes to aid him as the sun rose, and he scanned
the horizon for the least sign of human presence, for the roof of a hut, the
smoke of a fire, a fence, a bridge, a herd. He held his hands to his ears and
listened, for a scythe being whetted, for the bark of a dog or the cry of a
child. That whole day he stood fast in the blazing heat on the peak of the
Plomb du Cantal and waited in vain for the slightest evidence. Only as the sun
set did his mistrust gradually fade before an ever increasing sense of
euphoria. He had escaped the abhorrent taint! He was truly completely alone! He
was the only human being in the world!
He erupted with thundering jubilation.
Like a shipwrecked sailor ecstatically greeting the sight of an inhabited
island after weeks of aimless drifting, Grenouille celebrated his arrival at
the mountain of solitude. He shouted for joy. He cast aside his rucksack,
blanket, walking stick, and stamped his feet on the ground, threw his arms to
the sky, danced in circles, roared his own name to the four winds, clenched his
fists, shaking them triumphantly at the great, wide country lying below him and
at the setting sun-triumphantly, as if he personally had chased it from the
sky. He carried on like a madman until late into the night.
Twenty-five
H E SPENT THE next few days settling in on the mountain-for he had
made up his mind that he would not
be leaving this blessed region all that soon. First he sniffed around for water
and in a crevasse a little below the top found it running across the rock in a
thin film. It was not much, but if he patiently licked at it for an hour, he
could quench his daily need for liquids. He also found nourishment in the form
of small salamanders and ring snakes; he pinched off their heads, then devoured
them whole. He also ate dry lichen and grass and mossberries. Such a diet,
although totally unacceptable by bourgeois standards, did not disgust him in
the least. In the past weeks and months he had no longer fed himself with food
processed by human hands-bread, sausage, cheese -but instead, whenever he felt
hungry, had wolfed down anything vaguely edible that had crossed his path. He
was anything but a gourmet. He had no use for sensual gratification, unless
that gratification consisted of pure, incorporeal odors. He had no use for
creature comforts either and would have been quite content to set up camp on
bare stone. But he found something better.
Near his watering spot he
discovered a natural tunnel leading back into the mountain by many twists and
turns, until after a hundred feet or so it came to an end in a rock slide. The
back of the tunnel was so narrow that Grenouille’s shoulders touched the rock
and so low that he could walk only hunched down. But he could sit, and if he
curled up, could even lie down. That completely satisfied his requirements for
comfort. For the spot had incalculable advantages: at the end of the tunnel it
was pitch-black night even during the day, it was deathly quiet, and the air he
breathed was moist, salty, cool. Grenouille could smell at once that no living
creature had ever entered the place. As he took possession of it, he was
overcome by a sense of something like sacred awe. He carefully spread his horse
blanket on the ground as if dressing an altar and lay down on it. He felt
blessedly wonderful. He was lying a hundred and fifty feet below the earth,
inside the loneliest mountain in France-as if in his own grave. Never in his
life had he felt so secure, certainly not in his mother’s belly. The world
could go up in flames out there, but he would not even notice it here. He began
to cry softly. He did not know whom to thank for such good fortune.
In the
days that followed he went into the open only to lick at his watering spot,
quickly to relieve himself of his urine and excrement, and to hunt lizards and
snakes. They were easy to bag at night when they retreated under flat stones or
into little holes where he could trace them with his nose.
He climbed back up to the
peak a few more times during the first weeks to sniff out the horizon. But soon
that had become more a wearisome habit than a necessity, for he had not once
scented the least threat.
And so he finally gave up
these excursions and was concerned only with getting back into his crypt as
quickly as possible once he had taken care of the most basic chores necessary
for simple survival. For here, inside the crypt, was where he truly lived.
Which is to say, for well over twenty
hours a day in total darkness and in total
silence and in total immobility, he sat on his horse blanket at the end of the
stony corridor, his back resting on the rock slide, his shoulders wedged
between the rocks, and enjoyed himself.
We are familiar with people
who seek out solitude: penitents, failures, saints, or prophets. They retreat
to deserts, preferably, where they live on locusts and honey. Others, however,
live in caves or cells on remote islands; some-more spectacularly-squat in
cages mounted high atop poles swaying in the breeze. They do this to be nearer
to God. Their solitude is a self-mortification by which they do penance. They act
in the belief that they are living a life pleasing to God. Or they wait months,
years, for their solitude to be broken by some divine message that they hope
then speedily to broadcast among mankind.
Grenouille’s case was nothing
of the sort. There was not the least notion of God in his head. He was not
doing penance nor waiting for some supernatural inspiration. He had withdrawn
solely for his own personal pleasure, only to be near to himself. No longer
distracted by anything external, he basked in his own existence and found it
splendid. He lay in his stony crypt like his own corpse, hardly breathing, his
heart hardly beating-and yet lived as intensively and dissolutely as ever a
rake had lived in the wide world outside.
Twenty-six
T HE SETTING FOR these debaucheries was-how could it be otherwise-the
innermost empire where he had buried
the husks of every odor encountered since birth. To enhance the mood, he first
conjured up those that were earliest and most remote: the hostile, steaming
vapors of Madame Gaillard’s bedroom; the bone-dry, leathery bouquet of her
hands; the vinegary breath of Father Terrier; the hysterical, hot maternal
sweat of Bussie the wet nurse; the carrion stench of the Cimetiere des
Innocents; the homicidal odor of his mother. And he wallowed in disgust and
loathing, and his hair stood on end at the delicious horror.
Sometimes, if this repulsive
aperitif did not quite get him into stride, he would allow himself a brief,
odoriferous detour to Grimal’s for a whiff of the stench of raw, meaty skins
and tanning broths, or he imagined the collective effluvium of six hundred
thousand Parisians in the sultry, oppressive heat of late summer.
And then all at once, the
pent-up hate would erupt with orgasmic force-that was, after all, the point of
the exercise. Like a thunderstorm he rolled across these odors that had dared
offend his patrician nose. He thrashed at them as hail thrashes a grainfield;
like a hurricane, he scattered the rabble and drowned them in a grand purifying
deluge of distilled water. And how just was his anger. How great his revenge.
Ah! What a sublime moment! Grenouille, the little man, quivered with
excitement, his body writhed with voluptuous delight and arched so high that he
slammed his head against the roof of the tunnel, only to sink back slowly and
lie there lolling in satiation. It really was too pleasant, this volcanic act
that extinguished all obnoxious odors, really too pleasant… This was almost his
favorite routine in the whole repertoire of his innermost universal theater,
for it imparted to him the wonderful sense of righteous exhaustion that comes
after only truly grand heroic deeds.
Now he
could rest awhile in good conscience. He stretched out-to the extent his body
fit within the narrow stony quarters. Deep inside, however, on the cleanly
swept mats of his soul, he stretched out comfortably to the fullest and dozed
away, letting delicate scents play about his nose: a spicy gust, for instance, as
if borne here from springtime meadows; a mild May wind wafting through the
first green leaves of beech; a sea breeze, with the bitterness of salted
almonds. It was late afternoon when he arose— something like late afternoon,
for naturally there was no afternoon or forenoon or evening or morning, there
was neither light nor darkness, nor were there spring meadows nor green beech
leaves… there were no real things at all in Grenouille’s innermost universe,
only the odors of things. (Which is why the fafon deparler speaks of that
universe as a landscape; an adequate expression, to be sure, but the only
possible one, since our language is of no use when it comes to describing the
smellable world.) It was, then, late afternoon: that is, a condition and a moment
within Grenouille’s soul such as reigns over the south when the siesta is done
and the paralysis of midday slowly recedes and life’s urge begins again after
such constraint. The heat kindled by rage-the enemy of sublime scents-had fled,
the pack of demons was annihilated. The fields within him lay soft and
burnished
beneath the lascivious peace of his awakening
-and they waited for the will of their lord to come upon them.
And Grenouille rose up-as
noted-and shook the sleep from his limbs. He stood up, the great innermost
Grenouille. Like a giant he planted himself, in all his glory and grandeur,
splendid to look upon-damn shame that no one saw him!-and looked about him, proud
and majestic.
Yes! This was his empire! The
incomparable Empire of Grenouille! Created and ruled over by him, the
incomparable Grenouille, laid waste by him if he so chose and then raised up
again, made boundless by him and defended with a flaming sword against every
intruder. Here there was naught but his will, the will of the great, splendid,
incomparable Grenouille. And now that the evil stench of the past had been
swept away, he desired that his empire be fragrant. And with mighty strides he
passed across the fallow fields and sowed fragrance of all kinds, wastefully
here, sparingly there, in plantations of endless dimension and in small,
intimate parcels, strewing seeds by the fistful or tucking them in one by one
in selected spots. To the farthermost regions of his empire, Grenouille the
Great, the frantic gardener, hurried, and soon there was not a cranny left into
which he had not thrown a seed of fragrance.
And when he saw that it was
good and that the whole earth was saturated with his divine Grenouille seeds,
then Grenouille the Great let descend a shower of rectified spirit, soft and
steady, and everywhere and overall the seed began to germinate and sprout,
bringing forth shoots to gladden his heart. On the plantations it rolled in
luxurious waves, and in the hidden gardens the stems stood full with sap. The
blossoms all but exploded from their buds.
Then Grenouille the Great
commanded the rain to stop. And it was so. And he sent the gentle sun of his
smile upon the land; whereupon, to a bud, the hosts of blossoms unfolded their
glory, from one end of his empire unto the other, creating a single rainbowed
carpet woven from myriad precious capsules of fragrance. And Grenouille the
Great saw that it was good, very, very good. And he caused the wind of his
breath to blow across the land. And the blossoms, thus caressed, spilled over
with scent and intermingled their teeming scents into one constantly changing
scent that in all its variety was nevertheless merged into the odor of
universal homage to Him, Grenouille the Great, the Incomparable, the
Magnificent, who, enthroned upon his gold-scented cloud, sniffed his breath
back in again, and the sweet savor of the sacrifice was pleasing unto him. And
he deigned to bless his creation several times over, from whom came
thanksgiving with songs of praise and rejoicing and yet further outpourings of
glorious fragrance. Meanwhile evening was come, and the scents spilled over
still and united with the blue of night to form ever more fantastic airs. A
veritable gala of scent awaited, with one gigantic burst of fragrant
diamond-studded fireworks.
Grenouille the Great,
however, had tired a little and yawned and spoke: “Behold, I have done a great
thing, and I am well pleased. But as with all the works once finished, it
begins to bore me. I shall withdraw, and to crown this strenuous day I shall
allow myself yet one more small delectation in the chambers of my heart.”
So spoke Grenouille the Great
and, while the peasantry of scent danced and celebrated beneath him, he glided
with wide-stretched wings down from his golden clouds, across the nocturnal
fields of his soul, and home to his heart.
Twenty-seven
R ETURNING home was pleasant! The double role of avenger and creator
of worlds was not a little taxing,
and then to be celebrated afterwards for hours on end by one’s own offspring
was not the perfect way to relax either. Weary of the duties of divine creator
and official host, Grenouille the Great longed for some small domestic bliss.
His heart was a purple
castle. It lay in a rock-strewn desert, concealed by dunes, surrounded by a
marshy oasis, and set behind stone walls. It could be reached only from the
air. It had a thousand private rooms and a thousand underground chambers and a
thousand elegant salons, among them one with a purple sofa when Grenouille-no
longer Grenouille the Great, but only the quite private Grenouille, or simply
dear little Jean-Baptiste-would recover from the labors of the day.
The castle’s private rooms,
however, were shelved from floor to ceiling, and on those shelves were all the
odors that Grenouille had collected in the course of his life, several million
of them. And
in the castle’s cellars the
best scents of his life were stored in casks.
When properly aged, they were
drawn off into bottles that lay in miles of damp, cool corridors and were arranged
by vintage and estate. There were so many that they could not all be drunk in a
single lifetime.
Once dear little
Jean-Baptiste had finally returned chez soi, lying on his simple, cozy sofa in
his purple salon-his boots finally pulled off, so to speak-he clapped his hands
and called his servants, who were invisible, intangible, inaudible, and above
all inodorous, and thus totally imaginary servants, and ordered them to go to
the private rooms and get this or that volume from the great library of odors
and to the cellars to fetch something for him to drink. The imaginary servants
hurried off, and Grenouille’s stomach cramped in tormented expectation. He
suddenly felt like a drunkard who is afraid that the shot of brandy he has
ordered at the bar will, for some reason or other, be denied him. What if the
cellar or the library were suddenly empty, if the wine in the casks had gone
sour? Why were they keeping him waiting? Why did they not come? He needed the
stuff now, he needed it desperately, he was addicted, he would die on the spot
if he did not get it.
Calm yourself, Jean-Baptiste!
Calm yourself, my friend! They’re coming, they’re coming, they’re bringing what
you crave. The servants are winging their way here with it. They are carrying
the book of odors on an invisible tray, and in their white-gloved, invisible
hands they are carrying those precious bottles, they set them down, ever so
carefully, they bow, and they disappear.
And then, left alone, at
last-once again!-left alone, Jean-Baptiste reaches for the odors he craves,
opens the first bottle, pours a glass full to the rim, puts it to his lips, and
drinks. Drinks the glass of cool scent down in one draft, and it is luscious.
It is so refreshingly good that dear Jean-Baptiste’s eyes fill with tears of
bliss, and he immediately pours himself a second glass: a scent from the year
1752, sniffed up in spring, before sunrise on the Pont-Roya!, his nose directed
to the west, from where a light breeze bore the blended odors of sea and forest
and a touch of the tarry smell of the barges tied up at the bank. It was the
scent from the end of his first night spent roaming about Paris without GrimaPs
permission. It was the fresh odor of the approaching day, of the first daybreak
that he had ever known in freedom. That odor had been the pledge of freedom. It
had been the pledge of a different life. The odor of that morning was for
Grenouille the odor of hope. He guarded it carefully. And he drank of it daily.
Once he had emptied the
second glass, all his nervousness, all his doubt and insecurity, fell away from
him, and he was filled with glorious contentment. He pressed his back against
the soft cushions of his sofa, opened a book, and began to read from his
memoirs. He read about the odors of his childhood, of his schooldays, about the
odors of the broad streets and hidden nooks of the city, about human odors. And
a pleasant shudder washed over him, for the odors he now called up were indeed
those that he despised, that he had exterminated. With sickened interest,
Grenouille read from the book of revolting odors, and when his disgust
outweighed his interest, he simply slammed the book shut, laid it aside, and
picked up another.
All the while he drank
without pause from his noble scents. After the bottle of hope, he uncorked one
from the year 1744, filled with the warm scent of the wood outside Madame
Gaillard’s house. And after that he drank a bottle of the scent of a summer
evening, imbued with perfume and heavy with blossoms, gleaned from the edge of
a park in Saint-Germain-des-Pres, dated 1753.
He was now scent-logged. His
arms and legs grew heavier and heavier as they pressed into the cushions. His
mind was wonderfully fogged. But it was not yet the end of his debauch. His
eyes could read no more, true, the book had long since fallen from his hand—
but he did not want to call an end to the evening without having emptied one
last bottle, the most splendid of all: the scent of the girl from the rue des
Marais…
He drank it reverently and he
sat upright on the sofa to do so-although that was difficult and the purple
salon whirled and swayed with every move. Like a schoolboy, his knees pressed
together, his feet side by side, his left hand resting on his left thigh, that
was how little Grenouille drank the most precious scent from the cellars of his
heart, glass after glass, and grew sadder and sadder as he drank. He knew that
he was drinking too much. He knew that he could not handle so much good scent.
And yet he drank till the bottle was empty. He walked along the dark passage
from the street into the rear courtyard. He made for the glow of light. The
girl was sitting there pitting yellow plums. Far in the distance, the rockets
and petards of the fireworks were booming…
He put the glass down and sat
there for a while yet, several minutes, stiff with sentimentality and guzzling,
until the last aftertaste had vanished from his palate. He stared vacantly
ahead. His head was suddenly as empty as the bottle. Then he toppled sideways
onto the purple sofa, and from one moment to the next sank into a numbed sleep.
At the same time, the other
Grenouille fell asleep on his horse blanket. And his sleep was just as
fathomless as that of the innermost Grenouille, for the Herculean deeds and
excesses of the one had more than exhausted the other-they were, after all, one
and the same person.
When he awoke, however, he
did not awaken in the purple salon of his purple castle behind the seven walls,
nor upon the vernal fields of scent within his soul, but most decidedly in his
stony dungeon at the end of a tunnel, on hard ground, in the dark. And he was
nauseated with hunger and thirst, and as chilled and miserable as a drunkard
after a night of carousing. He crept on all fours out of his tunnel.
Outside
it would be some time of day or another, usually toward the beginning or end of
night; but even at midnight, the brightness of the starlight pricked his eyes
like needles. The air seemed dusty to him, acrid, searing his lungs; the
landscape was brittle; he bumped against the stones. And even the most delicate
odors came sharp and caustic into a nose unaccustomed to the world. Grenouille
the tick had grown as touchy as a hermit crab that has left its shell to wander
naked through the sea.
He went to his watering spot,
licked the moisture from the wall, for an hour, for two; it was pure torture.
Time would not end, time in which the real world scorched his skin. He ripped a
few scraps of moss from the stones, choked them down, squatted, shitting as he
ate-it must all be done quickly, quickly, quickly. And as if he were a hunted creature,
a little soft-fleshed animal, and the hawks were already circling in the sky
overhead, he ran back to his cave, to the end of the tunnel where his horse
blanket was spread. There he was safe at last.
He leaned back against the
stony debris, stretched out his legs, and waited. He had to hold his body very
still, very still, like some vessel about to slosh over from too much motion.
Gradually he managed to gain control of his breathing. His excited heart beat
more steadily; the pounding of the waves inside him subsided slowly. And
suddenly solitude fell across his heart like a dusky reflection. He closed his
eyes. The dark doors within him opened, and he entered. The next performance in
the theater of Grenouille’s soul was beginning.
Twenty-eight
A ND SO IT WENT, day in day out, week in week out, month in month
out. So it went for seven long
years.
Meanwhile war raged in the
world outside, a world war. Men fought in Silesia and Saxony, in Hanover and
the Low Countries, in Bohemia and Pomerania. The king’s troops died in Hesse
and Westphalia, on the Balearic Islands, in India, on the Mississippi and in
Canada, if they had not already succumbed to typhoid on the journey. The war
robbed a million people of their lives, France of its colonial empire, and all
the warring nations of so much money that they finally decided, with heavy
hearts, to end it.
One winter during this
period, Grenouille almost froze to death, without ever noticing it. For five
days he lay in his purple salon, and when he awoke in his tunnel he was so cold
he could not move. He closed his eyes again and would have slept himself to
death. But then the weather turned around, there was a thaw, and he was saved.
Once the snow was so deep
that he did not have the strength to burrow down to the lichen. He fed himself
on the stiff carcasses of frozen bats.
Once a dead raven lay at the
mouth of the cave. He ate it. These were the only events in the outside world
of which he took notice for seven years. Otherwise he lived only within his mountain,
only within the self-made empire of his soul. And he would have remained there
until his death (since he lacked for nothing), if catastrophe had not struck,
driving him from his mountain, vomiting him back out into the world.
Twenty-nine
T HE CATASTROPHE was not an earthquake, nor a forest fire, nor an
avalanche, nor a cave-in. It was not
an external catastrophe at all, but an internal one, and as such particularly
distressing, because it blocked Grenouille’s favorite means of escape. It
happened in his sleep. Or better, in his dreams. Or better still, in a dream
while he slept in the heart of his fantasies.
He lay on his sofa in the
purple salon and slept, the empty bottles all about him. He had drunk an
enormous amount, with two whole bottles of the scent of the red-haired girl for
a nightcap. Apparently it had been too much; for his sleep, though deep as
death itself, was not dreamless this time, but threaded with ghostly wisps of
dreams. These wisps were clearly recognizable as scraps of odors. At first they
merely floated in thin threads past Grenouille’s nose, but then they grew thicker,
more cloudlike. And now it seemed as if he were standing in the middle of a
moor from which fog was rising. The fog slowly climbed higher. Soon Grenouille
was completely wrapped in fog, saturated with fog, and it seemed he could not
get his breath for the foggy vapor. If he did not want to suffocate, he would
have to breathe the fog in. And the fog was, as noted, an odor. And Grenouille
knew what kind of odor. The fog was his own odor. His, Gre-nouille’s, own body
odor was the fog.
And the awful thing was that
Grenouille, although he knew that this odor was his odor, could not smell it.
Virtually drowning in himself, he could not for the life of him smell himself!
As this
became clear to him, he gave a scream as dreadful and loud as if he were being
burned alive. The scream smashed through the walls of the purple salon, through
the walls of the castle, and sped away from his heart across the ditches and
swamps and deserts, hurtled across the nocturnal landscape of his soul like a
fire storm, howled its way out of his mouth, down the winding tunnel, out into
the world, and far across the high plains of Saint-Flour-as if the mountain
itself were screaming. And Grenouille awoke at his own scream. In waking, he
thrashed about as if he had to drive off the odorless fog trying to suffocate
him. He was deathly afraid, his whole body shook with the raw fear of death.
Had his scream not ripped open the fog, he would have drowned in himself-a
gruesome death. He shuddered as he recalled it. And as he sat there shivering
and trying to gather his confused, terrified thoughts, he knew one thing for
sure: he would change his life, if only because he did not want to dream such a
frightening dream a second time. He would not survive it a second time.
He threw his horse blanket
over his shoulders and crept out into the open. It was already morning outside,
a late February morning. The sun was shining. The earth smelled of moist
stones, moss, and water. On the wind there already lay a light bouquet of
anemones. He squatted on the ground before his cave. The sunlight warmed him.
He breathed in the fresh air. Whenever he thought of the fog that he had
escaped, a shudder would pass over him. And he shuddered, too, from the
pleasure of the warmth he feit on his back. It was good, really, that this
external world still existed, if only as a place of refuge. Nor could he bear
the awful thought of how it would have been not to find a world at the entrance
to the tunnel! No light, no odor, no nothing-only that ghastly fog inside, outside,
everywhere…
Gradually the shock subsided.
Gradually the grip of anxiety loosened, and Grenouille began to feel safer.
Toward noon he was his old cold-blooded self. He laid the index and middle
fingers of his left hand under his nose and breathed along the backs of his
fingers. He smelled the moist spring air spiced with anemones. He did not smell
anything of his fingers. He turned his hand over and sniffed at the palm. He
sensed the warmth of his hand, but smelled nothing. Then he rolled up the ragged
sleeve of his shirt, buried his nose in the crook of his elbow. He knew that
this was the spot where all humans smell like themselves. But he could smell
nothing. He could not smell anything in his armpits, nor on his feet, not
around his genitals when he bent down to them as far as he possibly could. It
was grotesque: he, Grenouille, who could smell other people miles away, was
incapable of smelling his own genitals not a handspan away! Nevertheless, he
did not panic, but considered it all coolly and spoke to himself as follows:
“It is not that I do not smell, for everything smells. It is, rather, that I
cannot smell that I smell, because I have smelled myself day in day out since
my birth, and my nose is therefore dulled against my own smell. If I could separate
my own smell, or at least a part of it, from me and then return to it after
being weaned from it for a while, then I would most certainly be able to smell
it-and therefore me.”
He laid the horse blanket
aside and took off his clothes, or at least what remained of them-rags and
tatters were what he took off. For seven years he had not removed them from his
body. They had to be fully saturated with his own odor. He tossed them into a
pile at the cave entrance and walked
away. Then, for the first
time in seven years, he once again climbed to the top of the mountain. There he
stood on the same spot where he had stood on the day of his arrival, held his
nose to the west, and let the wind whistle around his naked body. His intention
was thoroughly to air himself, to be pumped so full of the west wind-and that
meant with the odor of the sea and wet meadows -that this odor would
counterbalance his own body odor, creating a gradient of odors between himself
and his clothes, which he would then be in a position to smell. And to prevent
his nose from taking in the least bit of his own odor, he bent his body
forward, stretching his neck out as far as he could against the wind, with his
arms stretched behind him. He looked like a swimmer just before he dives into
the water.
He held
this totally ridiculous pose for several hours, and even by such pale sunlight,
his skin, maggot white from lack of sun, was turned a lobster red. Toward
evening he climbed back down to the cave. From far off he could see his clothes
lying in a pile. The last few yards, he held his nose closed and opened it
again only when he had lowered it right down onto the pile. He made the
sniffing test he had learned from Baldini, snatching up the air and then
letting it out again in spurts. And to catch the odor, he used both hands to
form a bell around his clothes, with his nose stuck into it as the clapper. He
did everything possible to extract his own odor from his clothes. But there was
no odor in them. It was most definitely not there. There were a thousand other
odors: the odor of stone, sand, moss, resin, raven’s blood-even the odor of the
sausage that he had bought years before near Sully was clearly perceptible.
Those clothes contained an olfactory diary of the last seven, eight years. Only
one odor was not there-his own odor, the odor of the person who had worn them
continuously all that time.
And now he began to be truly
alarmed. The sun had set. He was standing naked at the entrance to the tunnel,
where he had lived in darkness for seven years. The wind blew cold, and he was
freezing, but he did not notice that he was freezing, for within him was a
counterfrost, fear. It was not the same fear that he had felt in his dream-the
ghastly fear of suffocating on himself-which he had had to shake off and flee
whatever the cost. What he now felt was the fear of not knowing much of
anything about himself. It was the opposite pole of that other fear. He could
not flee it, but had to move toward it. He had to know for certain-even if that
knowledge proved too terrible— whether he had an odor or not. And he had to
know now. At once.
He went
back into the tunnel. Within a few yards he was fully engulfed in darkness, but
he found his way as if by brightest daylight. He had gone down this path many
thousands of times, knew every step and every turn, couid smell every
low-hanging jut of rock and every tiny protruding stone. It was not hard to
find the way. What was hard was fighting back the memory of the claustrophobic
dream rising higher and higher within him like a flood tide with every step he
took. But he was brave. That is to say, he fought the fear of knowing with the
fear of not knowing, and he won the battle, because he knew he had no choice.
When he had reached the end of the tunnel, there where the rock slide slanted
upwards, both fears fell away from him. He felt calm, his mind was quite clear
and his nose sharp as a scalpel. He squatted down, laid his hands over his
eyes, and smelled. Here on this spot, in this remote stony grave, he had lain
for seven years. There must be some smell of him here, if anywhere in this
world. He breathed slowly. He analyzed exactly. He allowed himself time to come
to a judgment. He squatted there for a quarter of an hour. His memory was
infallible, and he knew precisely how this spot had smelled seven years before:
stony and moist, salty, cool, and so pure that no living creature, man or
beast, could ever have entered the place… which was exactly how it smelled now.
He continued to squat there
for a while, quite calm, simply nodding his head gently. Then he turned around
and walked, at first hunched down, but when the height of the tunnel allowed
it, erect, out into the open air.
Outside he pulled on his rags
(his shoes had rotted off him years before), threw the horse blanket over his
shoulders, and that same night left the Plomb du Cantal, heading south.
Thirty
H E LOOKED AWFUL. His hair reached down to the hollows of his knees,
his scraggly beard to his navel. His
nails were like talons, and the skin on his arms and legs, where the rags no
longer covered his body, was peeling off in shreds.
The first people he met,
farmers in a field near the town of Pierrefort, ran off screaming at the sight
of him. But in the town itself, he caused a sensation. By the hundreds people
came running to
gape at him. Many of them believed he was an
escaped galley slave. Others said he was not really a human being, but some
mixture of man and bear, some kind of forest creature. One fellow, who had been
to sea, claimed that he looked like a member of a wild Indian tribe in Cayenne,
which lay on the other side of the great ocean. They led him before the mayor.
There, to the astonishment of the assembly, he produced his journeyman’s
papers, opened his mouth, and related in a few gabbled but sufficiently comprehensible
words— for these were the first words that he had uttered in seven years-how he
had been attacked by robbers, dragged off, and held captive in a cave for seven
years.
He had seen neither daylight
nor another human being during that time, had been fed by an invisible hand
that let down a basket in the dark, and finally set free by a ladder-without
his ever knowing why and without ever having seen his captors or his rescuer.
He had thought this story up, since it seemed to him more believable than the
truth; and so it was, for similar attacks by robbers occurred not infrequently
in the mountains of the Auvergne and Languedoc, and in the Cevennes. At least
the mayor recorded it all without protest and passed his report on to the
marquis de La Taillade-Espinasse, liege lord of the town and member of
parliament in Toulouse.
At the age of forty, the
marquis had turned his back on life at the court of Versailles and retired to
his estates, where he lived for science alone. From his pen had come an
important work concerning dynamic political economy. In it he had proposed the
abolition of all taxes on real estate and agricultural products, as well as the
introduction of an upside-down progressive income tax, which would hit the
poorest citizens the hardest and so force them to a more vigorous development
of their economic activities. Encouraged by the success of his little book, he
authored a tract on the raising of boys and girls between the ages of five and
ten. Then he turned to experimental agriculture. By spreading the semen of
bulls over various grasses, he attempted to produce a milk-yielding
animal-vegetable hybrid, a sort of udder flower. After initial successes that
enabled him to produce a cheese from his milk grass-described by the Academy of
Sciences of Lyon as “tasting of goat, though slightly bitter”— he had to
abandon his experiments because of the enormous cost of spewing bull semen by
the hundreds of quarts across his fields. In any case, his concern with matters
agro-biological had awakened his interest not only in the plowed clod, so to
speak, but in the earth in general and its relationship to the biosphere in
particular.
He had barely concluded his
work with the milk-yielding udder flower when he threw himself with great elan
into unflagging research for a grand treatise on the relationship between
proximity to the earth and vital energy. His thesis was that life could develop
only at a certain distance from the earth, since the earth itself constantly
emits a corrupting gas, a so-called fluidum letale, which lames vital energies
and sooner or later totally extinguishes them. All living creatures therefore
endeavor to distance themselves from the earth by growing-that is, they grow
away from it and not, for instance, into it; which is why their most valuable
parts are lifted heavenwards: the ears of grain, the blossoms of flowers, the
head of man; and therefore, as they begin to bend and buckle back toward the
earth in old age, they will inevitably fall victim to the lethal gas, into which
they are in turn finally changed once they have decomposed after death.
When the marquis de La
Taillade-Espinasse received word that in Pierrefort an individual had been
found who had dwelt in a cave for seven years-that is, completely encapsulated by
the corrupting element of the earth-he was beside himself with delight and
immediately had Grenouille brought to his laboratory, where he subjected him to
a thorough examination. He found his theories confirmed most graphically: the
fluidum letale had already so assaulted Grenouille that his
twenty-five-year-old body clearly showed the marks of senile deterioration. All
that had prevented his death, Taillade-Espinasse declared, was that during his
imprisonment Grenouille had been given earth-removed plants, presumably bread
and fruits, for nourishment. And now his former healthy condition could be
restored only by the wholesale expulsion of the fluidum, using a vital
ventilation machine, devised by Taillade-Espinasse himself. He had such an
apparatus standing in his manor in Montpellier, and if Grenouille was willing
to make himself available as the object of a scientific demonstration, he was
willing not only to free him from hopeless contamination by earth gas, but he
would also provide him with a handsome sum of money…
Two
hours later they were sitting in the carriage. Although the roads were in
miserable condition, they traveled the sixty-four miles to Montpellier in just
under two days, for despite his advanced age, the marquis would not be denied
his right personally to whip both driver and horses and
to lend a hand whenever, as frequently
happened, an axle or spring broke-so excited was he by his find, so eager to
present it to an educated audience as soon as possible. Grenouille, however,
was not allowed to leave the carriage even once. He was forced to sit there all
wrapped up in his rags and a blanket drenched with earth and clay. During the
trip he was given raw vegetable roots to eat. The marquis hoped these
procedures would preserve the contamination by earth’s fluidum in its ideal
state for a while yet.
Upon their arrival in
Montpellier, he had Grenouille taken at once to the cellar of his mansion, and
sent out invitations to all the members of the medical faculty, the botanical
association, the agricultural school, the chemophysical club, the Freemason
lodge, and the other assorted learned societies, of which the city had no fewer
than a dozen. And several days later-exactly one week after he had left his
mountain solitude-Grenouille found himself on a dais in the great hall of the
University of Montpellier and was presented as the scientific sensation of the year
to a crowd of several hundred people.
In his
lecture, Taillade-Espinasse described him as living proof for the validity of
his theory of earth’s fluidum letale. While he stripped Grenouille of his rags
piece by piece, he explained the devastating effect that the corruptive gas had
perpetrated on Gre-nouille’s body: one could see the pustules and scars caused
by the corrosive gas; there on his breast a giant, shiny-red gas cancer; a
general disintegration of the skin; and even clear evidence of fluidal deformation
of the bone structure, the visible indications being a clubfoot and a
hunchback. The internal organs as well had been damaged by the gas-pancreas,
liver, lungs, gallbladder, and intestinal tract-as the analysis of a stool
sample (accessible to the public in a basin at the feet of the exhibit) had
proved beyond doubt. In summary, it could be said that the paralysis of the
vital energies caused by a seven-year contamination with fluidum letale
Taillade had progressed so far that the exhibit-whose external appearance, by
the way, already displayed significant molelike traits -could be described as a
creature more disposed toward death than life. Nevertheless, the lecturer
pledged that within eight days, using ventilation therapy in combination with a
vital diet, he would restore this doomed creature to the point where the signs
of a complete recovery would be self-evident to everyone, and he invited those
present to return in one week to satisfy themselves of the success of this
prognosis, which, of course, would then have to be seen as valid proof that his
theory concerning earth’s fluidum was likewise correct.
The lecture was an immense
success. The learned audience applauded the lecturer vigorously and lined up to
pass the dais where Grenouille was standing. In his state of preserved
deterioration and with all his old scars and deformities, he did indeed look so
impressively dreadful that everyone considered him beyond recovery and already
half decayed, although he himself felt quite healthy and robust. Many of the
gentlemen tapped him up and down in a professional manner, measured him, looked
into his mouth and eyes. Several of them addressed him directly and inquired
about his life in the cave and his present state of health. But he kept
strictly to the instructions the marquis had given him beforehand and answered
all such questions with nothing more than a strained death rattle, making
helpless gestures with his hands to his larynx, as if to indicate that too was already
rotted away by thefluidum letale Taillade.
At the
end of the demonstration, Taillade-Espinasse packed him back up and transported
him home to the storage room of his manor. There, in the presence of several
selected doctors from the medical faculty, he locked Grenouille in his vital
ventilation machine, a box made of tightly jointed pine boards, which by means
of a suction flue extending far above the house roof could be flooded with air
extracted from the higher regions, and thus free of lethal gas. The air could
then escape through a leather flap-valve placed in the floor. The apparatus was
kept in operation by a staff of servants who tended it day and night, so that
the ventilators inside the flue never stopped pumping. And so, surrounded by the
constant purifying stream of air, Grenouille was fed a diet of foods from
earth-removed regions-dove bouillon, lark pie, ragout of wild duck, preserves
of fruit picked from trees, bread made from a special wheat grown at high
altitudes, wine from the Pyrenees, chamois milk, and frozen frothy meringue
from hens kept in the attic of the mansion-all of which was presented at hourly
intervals through the door of a double-walled air lock built into the side of
the chamber.
This
combined treatment of decontamination and revitalization lasted for five days.
Then the marquis had the ventilators stopped and Grenouille brought to a
washroom, where he was softened for several hours in baths of lukewarm
rainwater and finally waxed from head to toe with nut-oil soap
from Potosi in the Andes. His finger— and
toenails were trimmed, his teeth cleaned with pulverized lime from the
Dolomites, he was shaved, his hair cut and combed, coifFed and powdered. A
tailor, a cobbler were sent for, and Grenouille was fitted out in a silk shirt,
with white jabot and white ruffles at the cuffs, silk stockings, frock coat,
trousers, and vest of blue velvet, and handsome buckled shoes of black leather,
the right one cleverly elevated for his crippled foot. The marquis personally
applied white talcum makeup to Gre-nouille’s scarred face, dabbed his lips and
cheeks with crimson, and gave a truly noble arch to his eyebrows with the aid of
a soft stick of linden charcoal. Then he dusted him with his own personal
perfume, a rather simple violet fragrance, took a few steps back, and took some
time to find words for his delight.
“Monsieur,” he began at last,
“I am thrilled with myself. I am overwhelmed at my own genius. I have, to be
sure, never doubted the correctness of my fluidal theory; of course not; but to
find it so gloriously confirmed by an applied therapy overwhelms me. You were a
beast, and I have made a man of you. A veritable divine act. Do forgive me, I
am so touched! -Stand in front of that mirror there and regard yourself. You
will realize for the first time in your life that you are a human being; not a
particularly extraordinary or in any fashion distinguished one, but nevertheless
a perfectly acceptable human being. Go on, monsieur! Regard yourself and admire
the miracle that I have accomplished with you!”
It was the first time that anyone had ever said
“monsieur” to Grenouille. He walked over to the mirror and looked into it.
Before that day he had never
seen himself in a mirror. He saw a gentleman in a handsome blue outfit, with a
white shirt and silk stockings; and instinctively he ducked, as he had always
ducked before such fine gentlemen. The fine gentleman, however, ducked as well,
and when Grenouille stood up straight again, the fine gentleman did the same,
and then they both stared straight into each other’s eyes.
What dumbfounded Grenouille
most was the fact that he looked so unbelievably normal. The marquis was right:
there was nothing special about his looks, nothing handsome, but then nothing
especially ugly either. He was a little short of stature, his posture was a
little awkward, his face a little expressionless-in short, he looked like a
thousand other people. If he were now to go walking down the street, not one
person would turn around to look at him. A man such as he now was, should he
chance to meet him, would not even strike him as in any way unusual. Unless, of
course, he would smell that the man, except for a hint of violets, had as
little odor as the gentleman in the mirror-or himself, standing there in front
of it.
And yet only ten days before,
farmers had run away screaming at the sight of him. He had not felt any
different from the way he did now; and now, if he closed his eyes, he felt not
one bit different from then. He inhaled the air that rose up from his own body
and smelled the bad perfume and the velvet and the freshly glued leather of his
shoes; he smelled the silk cloth, the powder, the makeup, the light scent of
the soap from Potosi. And suddenly he knew that it had not been the dove
bouillon nor the ventilation hocus-pocus that had made a normal person out of
him, but solely these few clothes, the haircut, and the little masquerade with
cosmetics.
He blinked as he opened his
eyes and saw how the gentleman in the mirror blinked back at him and how a
little smile played about his carmine lips, as if signaling to him that he did
not find him totally unattractive. And Grenouille himself found that the
gentleman in the mirror, this odorless figure dressed and made up like a man,
was not all that bad either; at least it seemed to him as if the figure-once
its costume had been perfected-might have an effect on the world outside that
he, Grenouille, would never have expected of himself. He nodded to the figure
and saw that in nodding back it flared its nostrils surreptitiously.
Thirty-one
T HE FOLLOWING DAY-the marquis was just about to instruct him in the
basic poses, gestures, and dance
steps he would need for his coming social debut— Grenouille faked a fainting
spell and, as if totally exhausted and in imminent danger of suffocation, collapsed
onto a sofa.
The
marquis was beside himself. He screamed for servants, screamed for fan bearers
and portable ventilators, and while the servants scurried about, he knelt down
at Grenouille’s side, fanning
him with a handkerchief
soaked in bouquet of violets, and appealed to him, literally begged him, to get
to his feet, and please not to breathe his last just yet, but to wait, if at
all possible, until the day after tomorrow, since the survival of the theory of
the fluidum letale would otherwise be in utmost jeopardy.
Grenouille
twisted and turned, coughed, groaned, thrashed at the handkerchief with his
arms, and finally, after falling from the sofa in a highly dramatic fashion,
crept to the most distant corner of the room. “Not that perfume!” he cried with
his last bit of energy. “Not that perfume! It will kill me!” And only when
Taillade-Espinasse had tossed the handkerchief out the window and his
violet-scented jacket into the next room, did Grenouille allow his attack to
ebb, and in a voice that slowly grew calmer explained that as a perfumer he had
an occupationally sensitive nose and had always reacted very strongly to
certain perfumes, especially so during this period of recuperation. And his
only explanation for the fact that the scent of violets in particular-a lovely
flower in its own right -should so oppress him was that the marquis’s perfume
contained a high percentage of violet root extract, which, being of
subterranean origin, must have a pernicious effect on a person like himself
suffering from the influence offluidum letale. Yesterday, at the first
application of the scent, he had felt quite queasy, and today, as he had once
again perceived the odor of roots, it had been as if someone had pushed him
back into that dreadful, suffocating hole where he had vegetated for several
years. His very nature had risen up against it, that was all he could say; and
now that his grace the marquis had used his art to restore him to a life free
of fluidal air, he would rather die on the spot than once again be at the mercy
of the dreaded fluidum. At the mere thought of a perfume extracted from roots,
he could feel his whole body cramping up. He was firmly convinced, however,
that he would recover in an instant if the marquis would permit him to design a
perfume of his own, one that would completely drive out the scent of violets.
He had in mind an especially light, airy fragrance, consisting primarily of
earth-removed ingredients, like eaux of almond and orange blossom, eucalyptus,
pine, and cypress oils. A splash of such a scent on his clothes, a few drops on
his neck and cheeks-and he would be permanently immune to any repetition of the
embarrassing seizure that had just overwhelmed him…
For clarity’s sake, the
proper forms of reported speech have been used here, but in reality this was a
verbal eruption of uninterrupted blubberings, accompanied by numerous coughs
and gasps and struggles for breath, all of which Grenouille accented with
quiverings and fidgetings and rollings of the eyes. The marquis was deeply
impressed. It was, however, not so much his ward s symptoms of suffering as the
deft argumentation, presented totally under the aegis of the theory of fluidum
letale, that convinced him. Of course it was the violet perfume! An obnoxious,
earth-bound-indeed subterranean-product! He himself was probably infected by it
after years of use. Had no idea that day in day out he had been bringing
himself ever nearer to death by using the scent. His gout, the stiffness in his
neck, the enervation of his member, his hemorrhoids, the pressure in his ears,
his rotten tooth-all of it doubtless came from the contagious fluidal stench of
violet roots. And that stupid little man, that lump of misery there in the
corner of the room, had given him the idea. He was touched. He would have loved
to have gone over to him, lifted him up, and pressed him to his enlightened heart.
But he feared that he still smelled too much of violets, and so he screamed for
his servants yet again and ordered that all the violet perfume be removed from
the house, the whole mansion aired, his clothes disinfected in the vital-air
ventilator, and that Grenouille at once be conveyed in his sedan chair to the
best perfumer in the city. And of course this was precisely what Grenouille had
intended his seizure to accomplish.
The science of perfumery was
an old tradition in Montpellier, and although in more recent times it had lost
ground to its competitor, the town of Grasse, there were still several good
perfumers and glovers residing in the city. The most prestigious of them, a
certain Runel-well aware of the trade he enjoyed with the house of the marquis
de La Taillade-Espinasse as its purveyor of soaps, oils, and scents— declared
himself prepared to take the unusual step of surrendering his studio for an
hour to the strange journeyman perfumer from Paris who had been conveyed
thither in a sedan chair. The latter refused all instructions, did not even
want to know where things were; he knew his way around, he said, would manage
well enough. And he locked himself in the laboratory and stayed there a good
hour, while Runel joined the marquis’s majordomo for a couple of glasses of
wine in a tavern, where he was to learn why his violet cologne was no longer a
scent worth smelling.
Runel’s laboratory and shop
fell far short of being so grandly equipped as Baldini’s perfume shop in Paris
had been in its day. An average perfumer would not have made any great progress
with
its few floral oils, colognes, and spices.
Grenouille, however, recognized with the first inhaled sniff that the
ingredients on hand would be quite sufficient for his purposes. He did not want
to create a great scent; he did not want to create a prestigious cologne such
as he had once made for Baldini, one that stood out amid a sea of mediocrity
and tamed the masses. Nor was even the simple orange blossom scent that he had
promised the marquis his true goal. The customary essences of neroli,
eucalyptus, and cypress were meant only as a cover for the actual scent that he
intended to produce: that was the scent of humanness. He wanted to acquire the
human-being odor-if only in the form of an inferior temporary surrogate-that he
did not possess himself. True, the odor of human being did not exist, any more
than the human countenance. Every human being smelled different, no one knew
that better than Grenouille, who recognized thousands upon thousands of
individual odors and could sniff out the difference of each human being from
birth on. And yet-there was a basic perfumatory theme to the odor of humanity,
a rather simple one, by the way: a sweaty-oily, sour-cheesy, quite richly
repulsive basic theme that clung to all humans equally and above which each
individual’s aura hovered only as a small cloud of more refined particularity.
That aura, however, the
highly complex, unmistakable code of a personal odor, was not perceptible for
most people in any case. Most people did not know that they even had such a
thing, and moreover did everything they could to disguise it under clothes or
fashionable artificial odors. Only that basic odor, the primitive human
effluvium, was truly familiar to them; they lived exclusively within it and it
made them feel secure; and only a person who gave off that standard vile vapor
was ever considered one of their own.
It was a strange perfume that
Grenouille created that day. There had never before been a stranger one on
earth. It did not smell like a scent, but like a human being who gives off a
scent. If one had smelled this perfume in a dark room, one would have thought a
second person was standing there. And if a human being, who smelled like a
human being, had applied it, that person would have seemed to have the smell of
two people, or, worse still, to be a monstrous double creature, like some figure
that you can no longer clearly pinpoint because it looks blurred and out of
focus, like something at the bottom of a lake beneath the shiver of waves.
And to imitate this human
odor-quite unsatisfactorily, as he himself knew, but cleverly enough to deceive
others-Grenouille gathered up the most striking ingredients in Runel’s
workshop.
There was a little pile of
cat shit behind the threshold of the door leading out to the courtyard, still
rather fresh. He took a half teaspoon of it and placed it together with several
drops of vinegar and finely ground salt in a mixing bottle. Under the worktable
he found a thumbnail-sized piece of cheese, apparently from one of Runel’s
lunches. It was already quite old, had begun to decompose, and gave off a
biting, pungent odor. From the lid of a sardine tub that stood at the back of
the shop, he scratched off a rancid, fishy something-or-other, mixed it with
rotten egg and castoreum, ammonia, nutmeg, horn shavings, and singed pork rind,
finely ground. To this he added a relatively large amount of civet, mixed these
ghastly ingredients with alcohol, let it digest, and filtered it into a second
bottle. The bilge smelled revolting. Its stink was putrid, like a sewer, and if
you fanned its vapor just once to mix it with fresh air, it was as if you were
standing in Paris on a hot summer day, at the comer of the rue aux Fers and the
rue de la Lingerie, where the odors from Les Halles, the Cimetiere des
Innocents, and the overcrowded tenements converged.
On top
of this disgusting base, which smelled more like a cadaver than a human being,
Grenouille spread a layer of fresh, oily scents: peppermint, lavender,
turpentine, lime, eucalyptus, which he then simultaneously disguised and tamed
with the pleasant bouquet of fine floral oils-geranium, rose, orange blossom,
and jasmine. After a second dilution with alcohol and a splash of vinegar there
was nothing left of the disgusting basic odor on which the mixture was built.
The latent stench lay lost and unnoticeable under the fresh ingredients; the
nauseous part, pampered by the scent of flowers, had become almost interesting;
and, strangely enough, there was no putrefaction left to smell, not the least.
On the contrary, the perfume seemed to exhale the robust, vivacious scent of
life.
Grenouille
filled two flacons with it, stoppered them, and stuck them in his pocket. Then
he washed the bottles, mortars, funnels, and spoons carefully with water,
rubbed them down with bitter-almond oil to remove all traces of odor, and
picked up a second mixing bottle. In it he quickly composed another perfume, a
sort of copy of the first, likewise consisting of fresh and floral elements,
but containing nothing of the witches’ brew as a base, but rather a totally
conventional one of musk,
ambergris, a tiny bit of civet, and cedarwood
oil. By itself it smelled totally different from the first-flatter, more
innocent, detoxified-for it lacked the components of the imitation human odor.
But once a normal human being applied it and married it to his own odor, it
could no longer be distinguished from the one that Grenouille had created
exclusively for himself.
After he had poured the second
perfume into flacons, he stripped and sprinkled his clothes with the first.
Then he dabbed himself in the armpits, between the toes, on the genitals, on
the chest, neck, ears, and hair, put his clothes back on, and left the
laboratory.
Thirty-two
A S HE CAME OUT onto the street, he was suddenly afraid, for he knew
that for the first time in his life
he was giving off a human odor. He found that he stank, stank quite
disgustingly. And because he could not imagine that other people would not also
perceive his odor as a stench, he did not dare go directly into the tavern
where Runel and the marquis’s majordomo were waiting for him. It seemed less
risky to him first to try out his new aura in an anonymous environment.
He slipped down toward the
river through the darkest and narrowest alleyways, where tanners and dyers had
their workshops and carried on their stinking business. When someone
approached, or if he passed an entryway where children were playing or women
were sitting, he forced himself to walk more slowly, bringing his odor with him
in a large, compact cloud.
From his
youth on, he had been accustomed to people’s passing him and taking no notice
of him whatever, not out of contempt-as he had once believed-but because they
were quite unaware of his existence. There was no space surrounding him, no
waves broke from him into the atmosphere, as with other people; he had no
shadow, so to speak, to cast across another’s face. Only if he ran right into
someone in a crowd or in a street-corner collision would there be a brief
moment of discernment; and the person encountered would bounce off and stare at
him for a few seconds as if gazing at a creature that ought not even to exist,
a creature that, although undeniably there, in some way or other was not present-and
would take to his heels and have forgotten him, Grenouille, a moment later…
But now, in the streets of
Montpellier, Grenouille sensed and saw with his own eyes-and each time he saw
it anew, a powerful sense of pride washed over him-that he exerted an effect on
people. As he passed a woman who stood bent down over the edge of a well, he
noticed how she raised her head for a moment to see who was there, and then,
apparently satisfied, turned back to her bucket. A man who was standing with
his back to him turned around and gazed after him with curiosity for a good
while. The children he met scooted to one side-not out of fear, but to make
room for him; and even when they came hurtling out of a side doorway right
toward him, they were not frightened, but simply slipped naturally on past him
as if they had anticipated an approaching person.
Several such meetings taught
him to assess more precisely the power and effect of his new aura, and he grew
more self-assured and cocky. He moved more rapidly toward people, passed by
them more closely, even stretched out one arm a little, grazing the arm of a
passerby as if by chance. Once he jostled a man as if by accident while moving
to pass around him. He stopped, apologized, and the man-who only yesterday would
have reacted to Grenouille’s sudden appearance as if to a thunderbolt-behaved
as though nothing had happened, accepted the apology, even smiled briefly, and
clapped Grenouille on the shoulder.
He left the back streets and
entered the square before the cathedral of Saint-Pierre. The bells were
ringing. There was a crush of people at both sides of the portal. A wedding had
just ended. People wanted to see the bride. Grenouille hurried over and mingled
with the crowd. He shoved, bored his way in to where he wanted to be, where
people were packed together most densely, where he could be cheek by jowl with
them, rubbing his own scent directly under their noses. And in the thick of the
crush, he spread his arms, spread his legs, and opened his collar so that the
odor could flow unimpeded from his body… and his joy was boundless when he
noticed that the others noticed nothing, nothing whatever, that all these men,
women, and children standing pressed about him could be so easily duped, that
they could inhale his concoction of cat shit, cheese, and vinegar as an odor
just like their own and accept him, Grenouille the cuckoo’s egg, in their midst
as a human being among human beings.
He felt
a child against his knee, a little girl standing wedged in among the adults. He
lifted her up
with hypocritical concern and held her with one
arm so that she could see better. The mother not only tolerated this, she
thanked him as well, and the kid yowled with delight.
Grenouille stood there like
that in the bosom of the crowd for a good quarter of an hour, a strange child
pressed sanctimoniously to his chest. And while the wedding party passed by-to
the accompaniment of the booming bells and the cheers of the masses and a
pelting shower of coins-Grenouille broke out in a different jubilation, a black
jubilation, a wicked feeling of triumph that set him quivering and excited him
like an attack of lechery, and he had trouble keeping from spurting it like
venom and spleen over all these people and screaming exultantly in their faces:
that he was not afraid of them; that he hardly hated them anymore; but that his
contempt for them was profound and total, because they were so dumb they stank;
because they could be deceived by him, let themselves be deceived; because they
were nothing, and he was everything! And as if to mock them, he pressed the
child still closer to him, bursting out and shouting in chorus with the others:
“Hurrah for the bride! Long live the bride! Long live the glorious couple!”
When the wedding party had
departed and the crowd had begun to disperse, he gave the child back to its
mother and went into the church-to recover from his excitement and rest a
little. Inside the cathedral the air was still filled with incense billowing up
in cold clouds from two thuribles at each side of the altar and lying in a
suffocating layer above the lighter odors of the people who had just been
sitting there. Grenouille hunched down on a bench behind the choir.
All at once great contentment
came over him. Not a drunken one, as in the days when he had celebrated his
lonely orgies in the bowels of the mountain, but a very cold and sober
contentment, as befits awareness of one’s own power. He now knew what he was
capable of. Thanks to his own genius, with a minimum of contrivance he had
imitated the odor of human beings and at one stroke had matched it so well that
even a child had been deceived. He now knew that he could do much more. He knew
that he could improve on this scent. He would be able to create a scent that
was not merely human, but superhuman, an angel’s scent, so indescribably good
and vital that whoever smelled it would be enchanted and with his whole heart
would have to love him, Grenouille, the bearer of that scent.
Yes, that was what he
wanted-they would love him as they stood under the spell of his scent, not just
accept him as one of them, but love him to the point of insanity, of
self-abandonment, they would quiver with delight, scream, weep for bliss, they
would sink to their knees just as if under God’s cold incense, merely to be
able to smell him, Grenouille! He would be the omnipotent god of scent, just as
he had been in his fantasies, but this time in the real world and over real
people. And he knew that all this was within his power. For people could close
their eyes to greatness, to horrors, to beauty, and their ears to melodies or
deceiving words. But they could not escape scent. For scent was a brother of
breath. Together with breath it entered human beings, who could not defend
themselves against it, not if they wanted to live. And scent entered into their
very core, went directly to their hearts, and decided for good and all between
affection and contempt, disgust and lust, love and hate. He who ruled scent
ruled the hearts of men.
Grenouille sat at his ease on
his bench in the cathedral of Saint-Pierre and smiled. His mood was not
euphoric as he formed his plans to rule humankind. There were no mad flashings
of the eye, no lunatic grimace passed over his face. He was not out of his
mind, which was so clear and buoyant that he asked himself why he wanted to do
it at all. And he said to himself that he wanted to do it because he was evil,
thoroughly evil. And he smiled as he said it and was content. He looked quite
innocent, like any happy person.
He sat there for a while,
with an air of devout tranquillity, and took deep breaths, inhaling the
incense-laden air. And yet another cheerful grin crossed his face. How
miserable this God smelled!
How ridiculously bad the
scent that this God let spill from Him. It was not even genuine frankincense
fuming up out of those thuribles. A bad substitute, adulterated with linden and
cinnamon dust and saltpeter. God stank. God was a poor little stinker. He had
been swindled, this God had, or was Himself a swindler, no different from
Grenouille-only a considerably worse one!
Thirty-three
T HE
MARQUIS de La Taillade-Espinasse was thrilled with his new perfume. It was
staggering,
he said, even for the discoverer of the fluidum
letale, to note what a striking influence on the general condition of an
individual such a trivial and ephemeral item as perfume could have as a result
of its being either earth-bound or earth-removed in origin. Grenouille, who but
a few hours before had lain pale and near swooning, now appeared as fresh and
rosy as any healthy man his age could. Why-even with all the qualifications
appropriate to a man of his rank and limited education-one might almost say
that he had gained something very like a personality. In any case, he, Taillade-Espinasse,
would discuss the case in the chapter on vital dietetics in his
soon-to-be-published treatise on the theory of the fluidum letale. But first he
wished to anoint his own body with this new perfume. Grenouille handed him both
flacons of conventional floral scent, and the marquis sprinkled himself with
it. He seemed highly gratified by the effect. He confessed that after years of
being oppressed by the leaden scent of violets, a mere dab of this made him
feel as if he had sprouted floral wings; and if he was not mistaken, the
beastly pain in his knee was already subsiding, likewise the buzzing in his
ears. All in all he felt buoyant, revitalized, and several years younger. He
approached Grenouille, embraced him, and called him “my fluidal brother,”
adding that this was in no way a form of social address, but rather a purely
spiritual one in conspectu universalitatis fluidi letalis, before which-and
before which alone!-all men were equal. Also-and this he said as he disengaged
himself from Grenouille, in a most friendly disengagement, without the least
revulsion, almost as if he were disengaging himself from an equal-he was
planning soon to found an international lodge that stood above all social rank
and the goal of which would be utterly to vanquish the fluidum letale and
replace it in the shortest possible time with purest fluidum vitale-and even
now he promised to win Grenouille over as the first proselyte. Then he had him
write the formula for the floral perfume on a slip of paper, pocketed it, and
presented Grenouille with fifty louis d’or.
Precisely one week after the
first lecture, the marquis de La Taillade-Espinasse once again presented his
ward in the great hall of the university. The crush was monstrous. All Montpellier
had come, not just scientific Montpellier, but also and in particular social
Montpellier, among whom were many Sadies desirous of seeing the fabled caveman.
And although Taillade’s enemies, primarily the champions of the Friends of the
University Botanical Gardens and members of the Society for the Advancement of
Agriculture, had mobilized all their supporters, the exhibition was a
scintillating success. In order to remind his audience of Grenouille’s
condition of only the week before, Taillade-Espinasse first circulated drawings
depicting the caveman in all his ugliness and depravity. He then had them lead
in the new Gre-nouille dressed in a handsome velvet blue coat and silk shirt,
rouged, powdered, and coiffed; and merely by the way he walked, so erect and
with dainty steps and an elegant swing of the hips, by the way he climbed to
the dais without anyone’s assistance, bowing deeply and nodding with a smile
now to one side now to the other, he silenced every skeptic and critic. Even
the friends of the university’s botanical garden were embarrassedly speechless.
The change was too egregious, the apparent miracle too overwhelming: where but
a week ago had cowered a drudge, a brutalized beast, there now stood a truly
civilized, properly proportioned human being. An almost prayerful mood spread
through the hall, and as Taillade-Espinasse commenced his lecture, perfect
silence reigned. He once again set forth his all too familiar theory about
earth’sfluidum letale, explained how and with what mechanical and dietetic
means he had driven it from the body of his exhibit, replacing it withfluidum
vitale. Finally he demanded of all those present, friend and foe alike, that in
the face of such overwhelming evidence they abandon their opposition to this
new doctrine and make common cause with him, Taillade-Espinasse, against the
evilfluidum and open themselves to the beneficial fluidum vitale. At this he
spread his arms wide, cast his eyes heavenwards-and many learned men did
likewise, and women wept.
Grenouille stood at the dais
but did not listen. He watched with great satisfaction the effect of a totally
different fluid, a much realer one: his own. As was appropriate for the size of
the great hall, he had doused himself with perfume, and no sooner had he climbed
the dais than the aura of his scent began to radiate powerfully from him. He
saw-literally saw with his own eyes!-how it captured the spectators sitting
closest, was transmitted to those farther back, and finally reached the last
rows and the gallery. And whomever it captured-and Grenouille’s heart leapt for
joy within him-was visibly changed. Under the sway of the odor, but without
their being aware of it, people’s facial expressions, their airs, their
emotions were altered. Those who at first had gawked at him out of pure
amazement now gazed at him with a milder eye; those who had made a point of
leaning back in their seats with
furrowed critical brows and mouths markedly
turned down at the corners now leaned forward more relaxed and with a look of
childlike ease on their faces. And as his odor reached them, even the faces of
the timorous, frightened, and hypersensitive souls who had borne the sight of
his former self with horror and beheld his present state with due misgiving now
showed traces of amity, indeed of sympathy.
At lecturer’s end the entire
assemblage rose to its feet and broke into frenetic cheering. “Long live the fluidum
vitale! Long live Taillade-Espinasse! Hurrah for the fluidal theory! Down with
orthodox medicine!”-such were the cries of the learned folk of Montpellier, the
most important university town in the south of France, and the marquis de La
Taillade-Espinasse experienced the greatest hour of his life.
Grenouille, however, having
climbed down from the dais to mingle among the crowd, knew that these ovations
were in reality meant for him, for him alone, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille-although
not one of those cheering in the hall suspected anything of the sort.
Thirty-four
H E STAYED ON in Montpellier for several weeks. He had achieved a
certain fame and was invited to
salons where he was asked about his life in the cave and about how the marquis
had cured him. He had to tell the tale of the robbers over and over, how they
had dragged him off, and how the basket was let down, and about the ladder. And
every time he added more lovely embellishments and invented new details. And so
he gained some facility in speaking-admittedly only a very limited one, since
he had never in all his life handled speech well-and, what was even more
important to him, a practiced routine for lying.
In essence, he could tell
people whatever he wanted. Once they had gained confidence in him-and with the
first breath, they gained confidence in him, for they were inhaling his
artificial odor-they believed everything. And in time he gained a certain
self-assurance in social situations such as he had never known before. This was
apparent even in his body. It was as if he had grown. His humpback seemed to
disappear. He walked almost completely erect. And when someone spoke to him, he
no longer hunched over, but remained erect and returned the look directed at
him. Granted, in this short time he did not become a man-of-the-world, no
dandy-about-town, no peerless social lion. But his cringing, clumsy manner fell
visibly from him, making way for a bearing that was taken for natural modesty
or at worst for a slight, inborn shyness that made a sympathetic impression on
many gentlemen and many ladies— sophisticated circles in those days had a
weakness for everything natural and for a certain unpolished charm.
When March came he packed his
things and was off, secretly, so early in the morning that the city gates had
only just been opened. He was wearing an inconspicuous brown coat that he had
bought secondhand at a market the day before and a shabby hat that covered half
his face. No one recognized him, no one saw or noticed him, for he had intentionally
gone without his perfume that day. And when around noon the marquis had
inquiries made, the watchmen swore by all that’s holy that they had seen all
kinds of people leaving the city, but not the caveman, whom they knew and would
most certainly have noticed. The marquis then had word spread that with his
permission Grenouille had left Montpeliier to look after family matters in
Paris. Privately he was dreadfully annoyed, for he had intended to take
Grenouille on a tour through the whole kingdom, recruiting adherents for his
fluidal theory.
After a while he calmed down again, for his own fame had spread
without any such tour, almost without any action on his part. A long article
about the fluidum letale Taillade appeared in the Journal des Sqavans and even
in the Courier de I’Europe and fluidally contaminated patients came from far
and wide for him to cure them. In the summer of 1764, he founded the first
Lodge of the Vital Fluidum, with 120 members in Montpellier, and established
branches in Marseille and Lyon. Then he decided to dare the move to Paris and
from there to conquer the entire civilized world with his teachings. But first
he wanted to provide a propaganda base for his crusade by accomplishing some
heroic fluidal feat, one that would overshadow the cure of the caveman, indeed
all other experiments. And in early December he had a company of fearless
disciples join him on an expedition to the Pic du Canigou, which was on the
same longitude with Paris and was considered the highest mountain in the
Pyrenees. Though on the threshold of
senescence, the man wanted to be borne to the summit at nine thousand feet and
left there in the sheerest, finest vital air for three whole weeks, whereupon,
he announced, he would descend from the mountain precisely on Christmas Eve as
a strapping lad of twenty.
The
disciples gave up shortly beyond Vernet, the last human settlement at the foot
of the fearsome mountain. But nothing daunted the marquis. Casting his garments
from him in the icy cold and whooping in exultation, he began the climb alone.
The last that was seen of him was his silhouette: hands lifted ecstatically to
heaven and voice raised in song, he disappeared into the blizzard.
His followers waited in vain
that Christmas Eve for the return of the marquis de La Taillade-Espinasse. He
returned neither as an old man nor a young one. Nor when early summer came the
next year and the most audacious of them went in search of him, scaling the
still snowbound summit of the Pic du Canigou, did they find any trace of him,
no clothes, no body parts, no bones.
His teachings, however,
suffered no damage at all. On the contrary. Soon the legend was abroad that
there on the mountain peak he had wedded himself to the eternal fluidum vitale,
merging with it and it with him, and now forever floated-invisible but eternally
young-above the peaks of the Pyrenees, and whoever climbed up to him would
encounter him there and remain untouched by sickness or the process of aging
for one full year. Well into the nineteenth century Taillade’s fluidal theory
was advocated from many a chair at faculties of medicine and put into
therapeutic practice by many an occult society. And even today, on both sides
of the Pyrenees, particularly in Perpi-gnan and Figueras, there are secret
Tailladic lodges that meet once a year to climb the Pic du Canigou.
There they light a great
bonfire, ostensibly for the summer solstice and in honor of St. John-but in
reality it is to pay homage to their master, Taillade-Espinasse, and his grand
fluidum, and to seek eternal life.
PART
III
Thirty-five
W HEREAS GRENOUILLE had needed seven years for the first stage of his
journey through France, he put the
second behind him in less than seven days. He no longer avoided busy roads and
cities, he made no detours. He had an odor, he had money, he had self-confidence,
and he had no time to lose.
By evening of the day he left
Montpellier, he had arrived at Le Grau-du-Roi, a small harbor town southwest of
Aigues-Mortes, where he boarded a merchant ship for Marseille. In Marseille he
did not even leave the harbor, but immediately sought out a ship that brought
him farther along the coast to the east. Two days later he was in Toulon, in
three more in Cannes. The rest of the way he traveled on foot. He followed a
back road that led up into the hills, northward into the interior.
Two hours later he was
standing on a rise and before him was spread a valley several miles wide, a
kind of basin in the landscape-its surrounding rim made up of gently rising
hills and a ridge of steep mountains, its broad bowl covered with fields,
gardens, and olive groves. The basin had its own special, intimate climate.
Although the sea was so near that one could see it from the tops of the hills,
there was nothing maritime, nothing salty and sandy, nothing expansive about
this climate; instead, it possessed a secluded tranquillity as if you were many
days’ journey distant from the coast. And although to the north the high
mountains were covered with snow that would remain for a good while yet, it was
not in the least raw or barren and no cold wind blew. Spring was further
advanced than in Montpellier. A mild haze lay like a glass bell over the
fields. Apricot and almond trees were in bloom, and the warm air was infused
with the scent of jonquils.
At the other end of the wide
basin, perhaps two miles off, a town lay among-or better, clung to-the rising
mountains. From a distance it did not make a particularly grand impression.
There was no mighty cathedral towering above the houses, just a little stump of
a church steeple, no commanding fortress, no magnificent edifice of note. The
walls appeared anything but defiant-here and there the houses spilled out from
their limits, especially in the direction of the plain, lending the outskirts a
somewhat disheveled look. It was as if the
place had been overrun and then retaken so often that it was weary of offering
serious resistance to any future intruders— not out of weakness, but out of
indolence, or maybe even out of a sense of its own strength. It looked as if it
had no need to flaunt itself. It reigned above the fragrant basin at its feet,
and that seemed to suffice.
This equally homely and self-confident
place was the town of Grasse, for decades now the uncontested center for
production of and commerce in scents, perfumes, soaps, and oils. Giuseppe
Baldini had always uttered the name with enraptured delight. The town was the
Rome of scents, the promised land of perfumes, and the man who had not earned
his spurs here did not rightfully bear the title of perfumer.
Grenouille gazed very coolly
at the town of Grasse. He was not seeking the promised land of perfumers, and
his heart did not leap at the sight of this small town clinging to the far
slopes. He had come because he knew that he could learn about several
techniques for production of scent there better than elsewhere. And he wanted
to acquire them, for he needed them for his own purposes. He pulled the flacon
with his perfume from his pocket, dabbed himself lightly, and continued on his
way. An hour and a half later, around noon, he was in Grasse.
He ate at an inn near the top
of the town, on the place aux Aires, The square was divided lengthwise by a
brook where tanners washed their hides and afterwards spread them out to dry.
The odor was so pungent that many a guest lost his appetite for his meal. But
not Grenouille. It was a familiar odor to him; it gave him a sense of security.
In every city he always sought out the tanning district first. And then,
emerging from that region of stench to explore the other parts of the place, he
no longer felt a stranger.
He spent all that afternoon
wandering about the town. It was unbelievably filthy, despite-or perhaps
directly because of-all the water that gushed from springs and wells, gurgling
down through the town in unchanneled rivulets and brooks, undermining the
streets or flooding them with muck. In some neighborhoods the houses stood so
close together that only a yard-wide space was left for passageways and stairs,
forcing pedestrians to jostle one another as they waded through the mire. And
even in the squares and along the few broader streets, vehicles could hardly
get out of each other’s way.
Nevertheless, however filthy,
cramped, and slovenly, the town was bursting with the bustle of commerce.
During his tour, Grenouille spotted no less than seven soapworks, a dozen
master perfumers and glovers, countless small distilleries, pomade studios, and
spice shops, and finally some seven wholesalers in scents.
These were in fact merchants
who completely controlled the wholesale supply of scent. One would hardly know
it by their houses. The facades to the street looked modestly middle class. But
what was stored behind them, in warehouses and in gigantic cellars, in kegs of
oil, in stacks of finest lavender soaps, in demijohns of floral colognes,
wines, alcohols, in bales of scented leather, in sacks and chests and crates
stuffed with spices-GrenouilSe smelled out every detail through the thickest
walls-these were riches beyond those of princes. And when he smelled his way
more penetratingly through the prosaic shops and storerooms fronting the
streets, he discovered that at the rear of these provincial family homes were
buildings of the most luxurious sort. Around small but exquisite gardens, where
oleander and palm trees flourished and fountains bordered by ornamental flowers
leapt, extended the actual residential wings, usually built in a U-shape toward
the south: on the upper floors, bedchambers drenched in sunlight, the walls
covered with silk; on the ground floor wainscoted salons and dining rooms,
sometimes with terraces built out into the open air, where, just as Baldini had
said, people ate from porcelain with golden cutlery. The gentlemen who lived
behind these modest sham facades reeked of gold and power, of carefully secured
riches, and they reeked of it more strongly than anything Grenouille had
smelled thus far on his journey through the provinces.
He stopped and stood for a
good while in front of one of these camouflaged palazzi. The house was at the
beginning of the rue Droite, a main artery that traversed the whole length of the
city, from west to east. It was nothing extraordinary to look at, perhaps the
front was a little wider and ampler than its neighbors’, but certainly not
imposing. At the gateway stood a wagon from which kegs were being unloaded down
a ramp. A second vehicle stood waiting. A man with some papers went into the
office, came back out with another man, both of them disappeared through the
gateway. Grenouille stood on the opposite side of the street and watched the
comings and goings. He was not interested in
what was happening. And yet
he stood there. Something else was holding him fast.
He closed his eyes and concentrated
on the odors that came floating to him from the building across the way. There
were the odors of the kegs, vinegar and wine, then the hundredfold heavy odors
of the warehouse, then the odors of wealth that the walls exuded like a fine
golden sweat, and finally the odors of a garden that had to lie on the far side
of the building. It was not easy to catch the delicate scents of the garden,
for they came only in thin ribbons from over the house’s gables and down into
the street. Grenouille discerned magnolia, hyacinth, daphne, and rhododendron…
but there seemed to be something else besides, something in the garden that
gave off a fatally wonderful scent, a scent so exquisite that in all his life
his nose had never before encountered one like it-or, indeed, only once before…
He had to get closer to that scent.
He considered whether he
ought simply to force his way through the gate and onto the premises. But
meanwhile so many people had become involved in unloading and inventorying the
kegs that he was sure to be noticed. He decided to walk back down the street
and find an alley or passageway that would perhaps lead him along the far side
of the house. Within a few yards he had reached the town gate at the start of
the rue Droite. He walked through it, took a sharp left, and followed the town
wall downhill. He had not gone far before he smelled the garden, faintly at
first, blended with the air from the fields, but then ever more strongly.
Finally he knew that he was very close. The garden bordered on the town wall.
It was directly beside him. If he moved back a bit, he could see the top
branches of the orange trees just over the wall.
Again he closed his eyes. The
scents of the garden descended upon him, their contours as precise and clear as
the colored bands of a rainbow. And that one, that precious one, that one that
mattered above all else, was among them. Grenouille turned hot with rapture and
cold with fear. Blood rushed to his head as if he were a little boy caught
red-handed, and then it retreated to his solar plexus, and then rushed up again
and retreated again, and he could do nothing to stop it. This attack of scent
had come on too suddenly. For a moment, for a breath, for an eternity it seemed
to him, time was doubled or had disappeared completely, for he no longer knew
whether now was now and here was here, or whether now was not in fact then and
here there-that is, the rue des Marais in Paris, September 1753. The scent
floating out of the garden was the scent of the redheaded girl he had murdered
that night. To have found that scent in this world once again brought tears of
bliss to his eyes— and to know that it could not possibly be true frightened
him to death.
He was
dizzy, he tottered a little and had to support himself against the wall,
sinking slowly down against it in a crouch. Collecting himself and gaining
control of his senses, he began to inhale the fatal scent in short, less
dangerous breaths. And he established that, while the scent from behind the
wall bore an extreme resemblance to the scent of the redheaded girl, it was not
completely the same. To be sure, it also came from a redheaded girl, there was
no doubt of that. In his olfactory imagination, Grenouille saw this girl as if
in a picture: she was not sitting still, she was jumping about, warming up and
then cooling off, apparently playing some game in which she had to move quickly
and then just as quickly stand still-with a second person, by the way, someone
with a totally insignificant odor. She had dazzlingly white skin. She had green
eyes. She had freckles on her face, neck, and breasts… that is-and Grenouille’s
breath stopped for a moment, then he sniffed more vigorously and tried to
suppress the memory of the scent of the girl from the rue des Marais-that is,
this girl did not even have breasts in the true sense of the word! She barely
had the rudimentary start of breasts. Infinitely tender and with hardly any
fragrance, sprinkled with freckles, just beginning to expand, perhaps only in
the last few days, perhaps in the last few hours, perhaps only just at this
moment-such were the little cupped breasts of this girl. In a word: the girl
was still a child. But what a child!
The sweat stood out on Grenouille’s forehead. He knew that children
did not have an exceptional scent, any more than green buds of flowers before
they blossom. This child behind the wall, however, this bud still almost closed
tight, which only just now was sending out its first fragrant tips, unnoticed by
anyone except by him, Grenouille-this child already had a scent so terrifyingly
celestial that once it had unfolded its total glory, it would unleash a perfume
such as the world had never smelled before. She already smells better now,
Grenouille thought, than that girl did back then in the rue des Marais-not as
robust, not as voluminous, but more refined, more richly nuanced, and at the
same time more natural. In a year or two this scent will be ripened and take on
a gravity that no one, man or woman, will be able to escape. People will be
overwhelmed, disarmed, helpless before the magic of
this girl, and they will not know why. And because people are stupid and use their noses only for blowing, but believe absolutely anything they see with their eyes, they will say it is because this is a girl with beauty and grace and charm. In their obtuseness, they will praise the evenness of her features, her slender figure, her faultless breasts. And her eyes, they will say, are like emeralds and her teeth like pearls and her limbs smooth as ivory-and all those other idiotic comparisons. And they will elect her Queen of the Jasmine, and she will be painted by stupid portraitists, her picture will be ogled, and people will say that she is the most beautiful woman in France. And to the strains of mandolins, youths will howl the nights away sitting beneath her window… rich, fat old men will skid about on their knees begging her father for her hand… and women of every age will sigh at the sight of her and in their sleep dream of looking as alluring as she for just one day. And none of them will know that it is truly not how she looks that has captured them, not her reputed unblemished external beauty, but solely her incomparable, splendid scent! Only he would know that, only Grenouille, he alone. He knew it already in fact.
Ah! He wanted to have that
scent! Not in the useless, clumsy fashion by which he had had the scent of the
girl in the rue des Marais. For he had merely sucked that into himself and
destroyed it in the process. No, he wanted truly to possess the scent of this
girl behind the wall; to peel it from her like skin and to make her scent his
own. How that was to be done, he did not know yet. But he had two years in
which to learn. Ultimately it ought to be no more difficult than robbing a rare
flower of its perfume.
He stood up, almost
reverently, as if leaving behind something sacred or someone in deep sleep. He
moved on, softly, hunched over, so that no one might see him, no one might hear
him, no one might be made aware of his precious discovery. And so he fled along
the wall to the opposite end of the town, where he finally lost the girl’s
scent and reentered by way of the Porte des Feneants. He stood in the shadow of
the buildings. The stinking vapors of the streets made him feel secure and
helped him to tame the passions that had overcome him. Within fifteen minutes
he had grown perfectly calm again. To start with, he thought, he would not
again approach the vicinity of the garden behind the wall. That was not
necessary. It excited him too much. The flower would flourish there without his
aid, and he knew already in what manner it would flourish. He dared not intoxicate
himself with that scent prematurely. He had to throw himself into his work. He
had to broaden his knowledge and perfect the techniques of his craft in order
to be equipped for the time of harvest. He had a good two years.
Thirty-six
N OT FAR FROM the Porte des F6n6ants, in the rue de la Louve,
Grenouille discovered a small perfumer’s
workshop and asked for a job.
It turned out that the
proprietor, maitre parfumeur Honore Arnulfi, had died the winter before and
that his widow, a lively, black-haired woman of perhaps thirty, was managing
the business alone, with the help of a journeyman.
After
complaining at length about the bad times and her own precarious financial
situation, Madame Arnulfi declared that she really could not afford a second
journeyman, but on the other hand she needed one for all the upcoming work;
that she could not possibly put up a second journeyman here in the house, but
on the other hand she did have at her disposal a small cabin in an olive grove
behind the Franciscan cloister-not ten minutes away-in which a young man of
modest needs could sleep in a pinch; further, that as an honest mistress she
certainly knew that she was responsible for the physical well-being of her
journeymen, but that on the other hand she did not see herself in a position to
provide two warm meals a day-in short (as Grenouille had of course smelled for
some time already): Madame Amulfi was a woman of solid prosperity and sound
business sense. And since he was not concerned about money and declared himself
satisfied with a salary of two francs a week and with the other niggardly
provisions, they quickly came to an agreement. The first journeyman was called
in, a giant of a man named Druot. Grenouille at once guessed that he regularly
shared Madame’s bed and that she apparently did not make certain decisions
without first consulting him. With legs spread wide and exuding a cloud of
spermy odor, he planted himself before Grenouille, who looked ridiculously
frail in the presence of this Hun, and inspected him, looked him straight in
the eye-as if this technique
would allow him to recognize any improper
intentions or a possible rival-finally grinned patronizingly, and signaled his
agreement with a nod.
That settled it. Grenouille
got a handshake, a cold evening snack, a blanket, and a key to the cabin-a
windowless shack that smelled pleasantly of old sheep dung and hay, where he
made himself at home as well as he could. The next day he began work for Madame
Arnulfi.
It was jonquil season. Madame
Arnulfi had the flowers grown on small parcels of land that she owned in the broad
basin below the city, or she bought them from farmers, with whom she haggled
fiercely over every ounce. The blossoms were delivered very early in the
morning, emptied out in the workshop by the basketfuls into massive but
lightweight and fragrant piles. Meanwhile, in a large caldron Druot melted pork
lard and beef tallow to make a creamy soup into which he pitched shovelfuls of
fresh blossoms, while Grenouille constantly had to stir it all with a spatula
as long as a broom. They lay on the surface for a moment, like eyes facing
instant death, and lost all color the moment the spatula pushed them down into
the warm, oily embrace. And at almost the same moment they wilted and withered,
and death apparently came so rapidly upon them that they had no choice but to
exhale their last fragrant sighs into the very medium that drowned them;
for-and Gre-aouille observed this with indescribable fascination -the more
blossoms he stirred under into the caldron, the sweeter the scent of the oil.
And it was not that the dead blossoms continued to give off scent there in the
oil-no, the oil itself had appropriated the scent of the blossoms.
Now and then the soup got too
thick, and they had to pour it quickly through a sieve, freeing it of macerated
cadavers to make room for fresh blossoms. Then they dumped and mixed and sieved
some more, all day long without pause, for the procedure allowed no delays,
until, as evening approached, all the piles of blossoms had passed through the
caldron of oil. Then-so that nothing might be wasted-the refuse was steeped in
boiling water and wrung out to the last drop in a screw press, yielding still
more mildly fragrant oil. The majority of the scent, however, the soul of the
sea of blossoms, had remained in the caldron, trapped and preserved in an
unsightly, slowly congealing grayish white grease.
The following day, the
maceration, as this procedure was called, continued-the caldron was heated once
again, the oil melted and fed with new blossoms. This went on for several days,
from morning till evening. It was tiring work. Grenouille had arms of lead,
calluses on his hands, and pains in his back as he staggered back to his cabin
in the evening. Although Druot was at least three times as strong as he, he did
not once take a turn at stirring, but was quite content to pour in more
feather-light blossoms, to tend the fire, and now and then, because of the
heat, to go out for a drink. But Grenouille did not mutiny. He stirred the
blossoms into the oil without complaint, from morning till night, and hardly
noticed the exertion of stirring, for he was continually fascinated by the
process taking place before his eyes and under his nose: the sudden withering
of the blossoms and the absorption of their scent.
After a while, Druot would
decide that the oil was finally saturated and could absorb no more scent. He
would extinguish the fire, sieve the viscous soup one last time, and pour it
into stoneware crocks, where almost immediately it solidified to a wonderfully
fragrant pomade.
This was
the moment for Madame Araulfi, who came to assay the precious product, to label
it, and to record in her books the exact quality and quantity of the yield.
After she had personally capped the crocks, had sealed them and borne them to
the cool depths of her cellar, she donned her black dress, took out her widow’s
veil, and made the rounds of the city’s wholesalers and vendors of perfume. In
touching phrases she described to these gentlemen her situation as a woman left
all on her own, let them make their offers, compared the prices, sighed, and
finally sold— or did not sell. Perfumed pomades, when stored in a cool place,
keep for a long time. And when the price leaves something to be desired, who
knows, perhaps it will climb again come winter or next spring. Also you had to
consider whether instead of selling to these hucksters you ought not to join
with other small producers and together ship a load of pomade to Genoa or share
in a convoy to the autumn fair in Beaucaire-risky enterprises, to be sure, but
extremely profitable when successful. Madame Arnulfi carefully weighed these
various possibilities against one another, and sometimes she would indeed sign
a contract, selling a portion of her treasure, but hold another portion of it
in reserve, and risk negotiating for a third part all on her own. But if during
her inquiries she had got the impression that there was a glut on the pomade
market and that in the foreseeable future there would be no scarcity to
her advantage, she would hurry back home, her
veil wafting behind her, and give Druot instructions to subject the whole yield
to a lavage and transform it into an essence absolue.
And the pomade would be
brought up again from the cellar, carefully warmed in tightly covered pots,
diluted with rectified spirits, and thoroughly blended and washed with the help
of a built-in stirring apparatus that Grenouille operated. Returned to the
cellar, this mixture quickly cooled; the alcohol separated from the congealed
oil of the pomade and could be drained off into a bottle. A kind of perfume had
been produced, but one of enormous intensity, while the pomade that was left
behind had lost most of its fragrance. Thus the fragrance of the blossoms had
been transferred to yet another medium. But the operation was still not at an
end. After carefully filtering the perfumed alcohol through gauze that retained
the least little clump of oil, Druot filled a small alembic and distilled it
slowly over a minimum flame. What remained in the matrass was a tiny quantity
of a pale-hued liquid that Grenouille knew quite well, but had never smelled in
such quality and purity either at Baldini’s or Runel’s: the finest oil of the
blossom, its polished scent concentrated a hundred times over to a little
puddle of essence absolue. This essence no longer had a sweet fragrance. Its
smell was almost painfully intense, pungent, and acrid. And yet one single
drop, when dissolved in a quart of alcohol, sufficed to revitalize it and
resurrect a whole field of flowers.
The yield was frightfully
small. The liquid from the matrass filled three little flacons and no more.
Nothing was left from the scent of hundreds of thousands of blossoms except
those three flacons. But they were worth a fortune, even here in Grasse. And
worth how much more once delivered to Paris or Lyon, to Grenoble, Genoa, or
Marseille! Madame Arnulfi’s glance was suffused with beauty when she looked at
the little bottles, she caressed them with her eyes; and when she picked them
up and stoppered them with snugly fitting glass stoppers, she held her breath
to prevent even the least bit of the precious contents from being blown away.
And to make sure that after stoppering not the tiniest atom would evaporate and
escape, she sealed them with wax and encapsulated them in a fish bladder
tightly tied around the neck of the bottle. Then she placed them in a crate
stuffed with wadded cotton and put them under lock and key in the cellar.
Thirty-seven
I N APRIL THEY macerated broom and orange blossoms, in May a sea of
roses, the scent from which
submerged the city in a creamy, sweet, invisible fog for a whole month.
Grenouille worked like a horse. Self-effacing and as acquiescent as a slave, he
did every menial chore Druot assigned him. But all the while he stirred,
spatulated, washed out tubs, cleaned the workshop, or lugged firewood with
apparent mindlessness, nothing of the essential business, nothing of the
metamorphosis of scent, escaped his notice. Grenouille used his nose to observe
and monitor more closely than Druot ever could have the migration of scent of
the flower petals-through the oil and then via alcohol to the precious little
flacons. Long before Druot noticed it, he would smell when the oil was
overheated, smell when the blossoms were exhausted, when the broth was
impregnated with scent. He could smell what was happening in the interior of
the mixing pots and the precise moment when the distilling had to be stopped.
And occasionally he let this be known-of course, quite unassumingly and without
abandoning his submissive demeanor. It seemed to him, he said, that the oil
might possibly be getting too hot; he almost thought that they could filter
shortly; he somehow had the feeling that the alcohol in the alembic had
evaporated now… And in time Druot, who was not fabulously intelligent, but not
a complete idiot either, came to realize that his decisions turned out for the
best when he did or ordered to be done whatever Grenouille “almost thought” or
“somehow had a feeling about.” And since Grenouille was never cocky or
know-it-all when he said what he thought or felt, and because he
never-particularly never in the presence of Madame Arnulfi!-cast Druofs
authority and superior position of first journeyman in doubt, not even
ironically, Druot saw no reason not to follow Grenouille’s advice or, as time
went on, not to leave more and more decisions entirely to his discretion.
It was
increasingly the case that Grenouille did not just do the stirring, but also
the feeding, the heating, and the sieving, while Druot stepped round to the
Quatre Dauphins for a glass of wine or went upstairs to check out how things
were doing with Madame. He knew that he could depend on Grenouille. And
although it meant twice the work, Grenouille enjoyed being alone, perfecting
himself
in these new arts and trying an occasional
experiment. And with malicious delight, he discovered that the pomades he made
were incomparably finer, that his essence absolue was several percent purer
than those that he produced together with Druot.
Jasmine
season began at the end of July, August was for tuberoses. The perfume of these
two flowers was both so exquisite and so fragile that not only did the blossoms
have to be picked before sunrise, but they also demanded the most gentle and
special handling. Warmth diminished their scent; suddenly to plunge them into
hot, macerating oil would have completely destroyed it. The souls of these
noblest of blossoms could not be simply ripped from them, they had to be
methodically coaxed away. In a special impregnating room, the flowers were
strewn on glass plates smeared with cool oil or wrapped in oil-soaked cloths;
there they would die slowly in their sleep. It took three or four days for them
to wither and exhale their scent into the adhering oil. Then they were
carefully plucked off and new blossoms spread out. This procedure was repeated
a good ten, twenty times, and it was September before the pomade had drunk its
fill and the fragrant oil could be pressed from the cloths. The yield was
considerably less than with maceration. But in purity and verisimilitude, the
quality of the jasmine paste or the huile antique de tubereuse won by such a
cold enfleurage exceeded that of any other product of the perfumer’s art.
Particularly with jasmine, it seemed as if the oiled surface were a mirror
image that radiated the sticky-sweet, erotic scent of the blossom with lifelike
fidelity-cum grano sails, of course. For Grenouille’s nose obviously recognized
the difference between the odor of the blossoms and their preserved scent: the
specific odor of the oil-no matter how pure-lay like a gossamer veil over the
fragrant tableau of the original, softening it, gently diluting its
bravado-and, perhaps, only then making its beauty bearable for normal people…
But in any case, cold enfleurage was the most refined and effective method to
capture delicate scents. There was no better. And even if the method was not
good enough completely to satisfy Grenouille’s nose, he knew quite well that it
would suffice a thousand times over for duping a world of numbed noses.
Just as with maceration, after only a brief time he had likewise
surpassed his tutor Druot in the art of cold perfumery-and had made this clear
to him in the approved, discreet, and groveling fashion. Druot gladly left it
to him to go to the slaughterhouse and buy the most suitable fats, to purify
and render them, to filter them and adjust their proportions-a terribly
difficult task that Druot himself was always skittish about performing, since
an adulterated or rancid fat, or one that smelled too much of pig, sheep, or
cow, could ruin the most expensive pomade. He let Gre-nouille decide how to
arrange the oiled plates in the impregnating room, when to rotate the blossoms,
and whether the pomade was sufficiently impregnated. Druot soon let Grenouille
make all the delicate decisions that he, just as Baldini before him, could only
approximate with rules of thumb, but which Grenouille made by employing the
wisdom of his nose— something Druot, of course, did not suspect.
“He’s got a fine touch,” said
Druot. “He’s got a good feel for things.” And sometimes he also thought: Really
and truly, he is more talented than me, a hundred times a better perfumer. And
all the while he considered him to be a total nitwit, because Grenouille-or so
he believed-did not cash in at all on his talent, whereas he, Druot, even with
his more modest gifts, would soon become a master perfumer. And Grenouilie
encouraged him in this opinion, displaying doltish drudgery and not a hint of
ambition, acting as if he comprehended nothing of his own genius and were
merely executing the orders of the more experienced Druot, without whom he
would be a cipher. After their fashion, they got along quite well.
Then came autumn and winter.
Things were quieter in the workshop. The floral scents lay captive in their
crocks and flacons in the cellar, and if Madame did not wish some pomade or
other to be washed or for a sack of dried spices to be distilled, there was not
all that much to do. There were still the olives, a couple of basketfuls every
week. They pressed the virgin oil from them and put what was left through the
oil mill.
And wine, some of which
Grenouille distilled to rectified spirit.
Druot
made himself more and more scarce. He did his duty in Madame’s bed, and when he
did appear, stinking of sweat and semen, it was only to head off at once for
the Quatre Dauphins. Nor did Madame come downstairs often. She was busy with
her investments and with converting her wardrobe for the period that would
follow her year of mourning. For days, Grenouille might often see no one except
the maid who fixed his midday soup and his evening bread and olives. He hardly
went out at all. He took part in corporate life-in the regular meetings and
processions of the journeymen-only just
often enough as to be conspicuous neither by
his absence nor by his presence. He had no friends or close acquaintances, but
took careful pains not to be considered arrogant or a misfit. He left it to the
other journeymen to find his society
dull and unprofitable. He was a master in the art of spreading boredom and
playing the clumsy fool-though never so egregiously that people might enjoy
making fun of him or use him as the butt of some crude practical joke inside
the guild. He succeeded in being considered totally uninteresting. People left
him alone. And that was all he wanted.
Thirty-eight
H E SPENT HIS time in the workshop. He explained to Druot that he was
trying to invent a formula for a new
cologne. In reality, however, he was experimenting with scents of a very
different sort. Although he had used it very sparingly, the perfume that he had
mixed in Montpellier was slowly running out. He created a new one. But this
time he was not content simply to imitate basic human odor by hastily tossing
together some ingredients; he made it a matter of pride to acquire a personal
odor, or better yet, a number of personal odors.
First he made an odor for
inconspicuousness, a mousy, workaday outfit of odors with the sour, cheesy
smell of humankind still present, but only as if exuded into the outside world
through a layer of linen and wool garments covering an old man’s dry skin.
Bearing this smell, he could move easily among people. The perfume was robust
enough to establish the olfactory existence of a human being, but at the same
time so discreet that it bothered no one. Using it, Grenouille was not actually
present, and yet his presence was justified in the most modest sort of way-a
bastard state that was very handy both in the Arnulfi household and on his
occasional outings in the town.
On certain occasions, to be
sure, this modest scent proved inconvenient. When he had errands to run for
Druot or wanted to buy his own civet or a few musk pods from a merchant, he
might prove to be so perfectly inconspicuous that he was either ignored and no
one waited on him, or was given the wrong item or forgotten while being waited
on. For such occasions he had blended a somewhat more redolent, slightly sweaty
perfume, one with a few olfactory edges and hooks, that lent him a coarser
appearance and made people believe he was in hurry and on urgent business. He
also had good success with a deceptive imitation of Druot’s aura seminalis,
which he learned to produce by impregnating a piece of oily linen with a paste
of fresh duck eggs and fermented wheat flour and used whenever he needed to
arouse a certain amount of notice.
Another perfume in his
arsenal was a scent for arousing sympathy that proved effective with
middle-aged and elderly women. It smelled of watery milk and fresh, soft wood.
The effect Grenouille created with it-even when he went out unshaved, scowling,
and wrapped in a heavy coat-was of a poor, pale lad in a frayed jacket who
simply had to be helped. Once they caught a whiff of him, the market women
filled his pockets with nuts and dried pears because he seemed to them so
hungry and helpless. And the butcher’s wife, an implacably callous old hag if
there ever was one, let him pick out, for free, smelly old scraps of meat and bone,
for his odor of innocence touched her mother’s heart. He then took these
scraps, digested them directly in alcohol, and used them as the main component
for an odor that he applied when he wanted to be avoided and left completely
alone. It surrounded him with a slightly nauseating aura, like the rancid
breath of an old slattern’s mouth when she awakens. It was so effective that
even Druot, hardly a squeamish sort, would automatically turn aside and go in
search of fresh air, without any clear knowledge, of course, of what had
actually driven him away. And sprinkling a few drops of the repellent on the
threshold of his cabin was enough to keep every intruder, human or animal, at a
distance.
Protected by these various
odors, which he changed like clothes as the situation demanded and which
permitted him to move undisturbed in the world of men and to keep his true
nature from them, Gre-nouille devoted himself to his real passion: the subtle
pursuit of scent. And because he had a great goal right under his nose and over
a year still left to him, he not only went about the task with burning zeal,
but he also systematically planned how to sharpen his weapons, polish his
techniques, and gradually perfect his methods. He began where he had left off
at Baldini’s, with extracting the scent from inert objects: stone, metal,
glass, wood, salt, water, air…
What before had failed so
miserably using the crude process of distillation succeeded now, thanks to the
strong absorptive powers of oil. Grenouille took a brass doorknob, whose cool,
musty,
brawny smell he liked, and wrapped it in beef
tallow for a few days. And sure enough, when he peeled off the tallow and
examined it, it smelled quite clearly like the doorknob, though very faintly.
And even after a lavage in alcohol, the odor was still there, infinitely
delicate, distant, overshadowed by the vapor of the spirits, and in this world
probably perceptible only to Gre-nouille’s nose-but it was certainly there. And
that meant, in principle at least, at his disposal. If he had ten thousand
doorknobs and wrapped them in tallow for a thousand days, he could produce a
tiny drop of brass-doorknob essence absolue strong enough for anyone to have the
indisputable illusion of the original under his nose.
He likewise succeeded with
the porous chalky dust from a stone he found in the olive grove before his
cabin. He macerated it and extracted a dollop of stone pomade, whose
infinitesimal odor gave him indescribable delight. He combined it with other
odors taken from ail kinds of objects lying around his cabin, and painstakingly
reproduced a miniature olfactory model of the olive grove behind the Franciscan
cloister. Carrying it about with him bottled up in a tiny flacon, he could
resurrect the grove whenever he felt like it.
These were virtuoso odors,
executed as wonderful little trifles that of course no one but he could admire
or would ever take note of. He was enchanted by their meaningless perfection;
and at no time in his life, either before or after, were there moments of such
truly innocent happiness as in those days when he playfully and eagerly set
about creating fragrant landscapes, still lifes, and studies of individual
objects. For he soon moved on to living subjects.
He hunted for winter flies,
for maggots, rats, small cats, and drowned them in warm oil. At night he crept
into stalls to drape cows, goats, and piglets for a few hours in cloths smeared
with oil or to wrap them in greasy bandages. Or he sneaked into sheepfolds and
stealthily sheared a lamb and then washed the redolent wool in rectified
spirit. At first the results were not very satisfactory. For in contrast to the
patient things, doorknobs and stones, animals yielded up their odor only under
protest. The pigs scraped off the bandages by rubbing against the posts of
their sties. The sheep bleated when he approached them by night with a knife.
The cows obstinately shook the greasy cloths from their udders. Some of the
beetles that he caught gave off foully stinking secretions while he was trying
to work with them, and the rats, probably out of fear, would shit in the
olfactorily sensitive pomades. Unlike flowers, the animals he tried to macerate
would not yield up their scent without complaints or with only a mute sigh-they
fought desperately against death, absolutely did not want to be stirred under,
but kicked and struggled, and in their fear of death created large quantities
of sweat whose acidity ruined the warm oil. You could not, of course, do sound
work under such conditions. The objects would have to be quieted down, and so
suddenly that they would have no time to become afraid or to resist. He would
have to kill them.
He first tried it with a
puppy. He enticed it away from its mother with a piece of meat, all the way
from the slaughterhouse to the laboratory, and as the animal panted excitedly
and lunged joyfully for the meat in Grenouille’s left hand, he gave one quick,
hard blow to the back of its head with a piece of wood he held in his right.
Death descended on the puppy so suddenly that the expression of happiness was
still on its mouth and in its eyes long after Grenouille had bedded it down in
the impregnating room on a grate between two greased plates, where it exuded
its pure doggy scent, unadulterated by the sweat of fear. To be sure, one had
to be careful! Carcasses, just as plucked blossoms, spoiled quickly. And so
Grenouille stood guard over his victim, for about twelve hours, until he
noticed that the first wisps of carrion scent-not really unpleasant, but
adulterating nevertheless-rose up from the dog’s body. He stopped the
enfleurage at once, got rid of the carcass, and put the impregnated oil in a
pot, where he carefully rinsed it. He distilled the alcohol down to about a
thimbleful and filled a tiny glass tube with these few remaining drops. The
perfume smelled clearly of dog-moist, fresh, tallowy, and a bit pungent. It
smelled amazingly like dog. And when Grenouille let the old bitch at the slaughterhouse
sniff at it, she broke out in yelps of joy and whimpered and would not take her
nose out of the glass tube. Grenouille closed it up tight and put it in his
pocket and bore it with him for a long time as a souvenir of his day of
triumph, when for the first time he had succeeded in robbing a living creature
of its aromatic soul.
Then, very gradually and with
utmost caution, he went to work on human beings. At first he stalked them from
a safe distance with a wide-meshed net, for he was less concerned with bagging
large game than with testing his hunting methods.
Disguised by his faint
perfume for inconspicuous-ness, he mingjed with the evening’s guests at the
Quatre Dauphins inn and stuck tiny scraps of cloth drenched in oil and grease
under the benches and tables and in hidden nooks. A few days later he collected
them and put them to the test. And indeed, along with all sorts of kitchen
odors, tobacco smoke, and wine smells, they exhaled a little human odor. But it
remained very vague and masked, was more the suggestion of general exhalations
than a personal odor. A similar mass aura, though purer and more sublimely
sweaty, could be gleaned from the cathedral, where on December 24 Grenouille
hung his experimental flags under the pews and gathered them in again on the
twenty-sixth, after no less than seven masses had been sat through just above
them. A ghastly conglomerate of odor was reproduced on the impregnated swatches:
anal sweat, menstrual blood, moist hollows of knees, and clenched hands, mixed
with the exhaled breath of thousands of hymn-singing and Ave Maria-mumbling
throats and the oppressive fumes of incense and myrrh. A horrible concentration
of nebulous, amorphous, nauseating odors— and yet unmistakably human.
Grenouille garnered his first
individual odor in the Hopital de la Charite”. He managed to pilfer sheets that
were supposed to be burned because the journeyman sackmaker who had lain
wrapped in them for two months had just died of consumption. The cloth was so
drenched in the exudations of the sackmaker that it had absorbed them like an
enfleurage paste and could be directly subjected to lavage. The result was
eerie: right under Grenouille’s nose, the sackmaker rose olfactonly from the
dead, ascending from the alcohol solution, hovering there-the phantom slightly
distorted by the peculiar methods of reproduction and the countless miasmas of
his disease-but perfectly recognizable in space as an olfactory personage. A
small man of about thirty, blond, with a bulbous nose, short limbs, flat,
cheesy feet, swollen gem’talia, choleric temperament, and a stale mouth
odor-not a handsome man, aromatically speaking, this sack-maker, not worth
being held on to for any length of time, like the puppy. And yet for one whole
night Grenouille let the scent-specter flutter about his cabin while he sniffed
at him again and again, happy and deeply satisfied with the sense of power that
he had won over the aura of another human being. He poured it out the next day.
He tried one more experiment
during these winter days. He discovered a deaf-mute beggar woman wandering
through the town and paid her one franc to wear several different sets of rags
smeared with oils and fats against her naked skin. It turned out that lamb
suet, pork lard, and beef tallow, rendered many times over, combined in a ratio
of two to five to three-with the addition of a small amount of virgin oil-was
best for absorbing human odor.
Grenouille let it go at that.
He refrained from overpowering some whole, live person and processing him or
her perfumatorily. That sort of thing would have meant risks and would have
resulted in no new knowledge. He knew he now was master of the techniques
needed to rob a human of his or her scent, and he knew it was unnecessary to
prove this fact anew.
Indeed, human odor was of no
importance to him whatever. He could imitate human odor quite well enough with
surrogates. What he coveted was the odor of certain human beings: that is,
those rare humans who inspire love. These were his victims.
Thirty-nine
I N JANUARY THE widow Arnulfi married her first journeyman, Dominique
Druot, who was thus promoted to
mattre gantier et parfumeur. There was a great banquet for the guild masters
and a more modest one for the journeymen; Madame bought a new mattress for her
bed, which she now shared officially with Druot, and took her gay finery from
the armoire. Otherwise, everything remained as it was. She retained the fine
old name of Arnulfi and retained her fortune for herself, as well as the
management of the finances and the keys to the cellar; Druot fulfilled his
sexual duties daily and refreshed himself afterwards with wine; and although he
was now the one and only journeyman, Grenouille took care of most of the work
at hand in return for the same small salary, frugal board, and cramped
quarters.
The year
began with a yellow flood of cassias, then hyacinths, violet petals, and
narcotic narcissus. One Sunday in March-it was about a year now since his
arrival in Grasse-Grenouille set out to see how things stood in the garden
behind the wall at the other end of town. He was ready for the scent this time,
knew more or less exactly what awaited him… and nevertheless, as he caught a
whiff
of it, at the Porte Neuve, no more than halfway
to the spot beside the wall, his heart beat more loudly and he felt the blood
in his veins tingle with pleasure: she was still there, the incomparably
beautiful flower, she had survived the winter unblemished, her sap was running,
she was growing, expanding, driving forth the most exquisite ranks of buds! Her
scent had grown stronger, just as he had expected, without losing any of its
delicacy. What a year before had been sprinkled and dappled about was now
blended into a faint, smooth stream of scent that shimmered with a thousand
colors and yet bound each color to it and did not break. And this stream,
Grenouille recognized blissfully, was fed by a spring that grew ever fuller.
Another year, just one more year, just twelve more months, and that spring
would gush over, and he could come to cap it and imprison the wild flow of its
scent.
He walked along the wall to
the spot behind which he knew the garden was located. Although the girl was
apparently not in the garden but in the house, in her room behind closed
windows, her scent floated down to him like a steady, gentle breeze. Grenouille
stood quite still. He was not intoxicated or dizzy as he had been the first
time he had smelled it. He was filled with the happiness of a lover who has
heard or seen his darling from afar and knows that he will bring her home
within the year. It was really true-Grenouille, the solitary tick, the
abomination, Grenouille the Monster, who had never felt love and would never be
able to inspire it, stood there beside the city wall of Grasse on that day in
March and loved and was profoundly happy in his love.
True, he did not love another
human being, certainly not the girl who lived in the house beyond the wall. He
loved her scent-that alone, nothing else, and only inasmuch as it would one day
be his alone. He would bring it home within the year, he swore it by his very
life. And after this strange oath, or betrothal, this promise of loyalty given
to himself and to his future scent, he left the place light of heart and
returned to town through the Porte du Cours.
That night, as he lay in his
cabin, he conjured up the memory of the scent-he could not resist the
temptation-and immersed himself in it, caressed it, and let it caress him, so near
to it, as fabulously close as if he possessed it already in reality, his scent,
his own scent; and he made love to it and to himself through it for an
intoxicatingly, deliciously long time. He wanted this self-loved feeling to
accompany him in his sleep. But at the very instant when he closed his eyes, in
the moment of the single breath it takes to fall asleep, it deserted him, was
suddenly gone, and in its place the room was filled with the cold, acrid smell
of goat stall.
Grenouille was terrified. What
happens, he thought, if the scent, once I possess it… what happens if it runs
out? It’s not the same as it is in your memory, where all scents are
indestructible. The real thing gets used up in this world. It’s transient. And
by the time it has been used up, the source I took it from will no longer
exist. And I will be as naked as before and will have to get along with
surrogates, just like before. No, it will be even worse than before! For in the
meantime I will have known it and possessed it, my own splendid scent, and I
will not be able to forget it, because I never forget a scent. And for the rest
of my life I will feed on it in my memory, just as I was feeding right now from
the premonition of what I will possess… What do I need it for at all?
This was a most unpleasant
thought for Grenouille. It frightened him beyond measure to think that once he
did possess the scent that he did not yet possess, he must inevitably lose it.
How long could he keep it? A few days? A few weeks? Perhaps a whole month, if
he perfumed himself very sparingly with it? And then? He saw himself shaking
the last drops from the bottle, rinsing the flacon with alcohol so that the
last little bit would not be lost, and then he saw, smelled, how his beloved
scent would vanish in the air, irrevocably, forever. It would be like a long
slow death, a kind of suffocation in reverse, an agonizing gradual
self-evaporation into the wretched world.
He felt chilled. He was
overcome with a desire to abandon his plans, to walk out into the night and
disappear. He would wander across the snow-covered mountains, not pausing to
rest, hundreds of miles into the Auvergne, and there creep into his old cave
and fall asleep and die. But he did not do it. He sat there and did not yield
to his desire, although it was strong. He did not yield, because that desire
was an old one of his, to run away and hide in a cave. He knew about that
already. What he did not yet know was what it was like to possess a human scent
as splendid as the scent of the girl behind the wall. And even knowing that to
possess that scent he must pay the terrible price of losing it again, the very
possession and the loss seemed to him more desirable than a prosaic
renunciation of both. For he had renounced things all his life. But never once
had he possessed and lost.
Gradually the doubts receded
and with them the chill. He sensed how the warmth of his blood
revitalized him and how the will to do what he
had intended to do again took possession of him. Even more powerfully than
before in fact, for that will no longer originated from simple lust, but
equally from a well-considered decision. Grenouille the tick, presented the
choice between drying up inside himself or letting himself drop, had decided
for the latter, knowing full well that this drop would be his last. He lay back
on his makeshift bed, cozy in his straw, cozy under his blanket, and thought
himself very heroic.
Grenouille would not have
been Grenouille, however, if he had long been content with a fatalist’s heroic
feelings. His will to survive and conquer was too tough, his nature too
cunning, his spirit too crafty for that. Fine-he had decided to possess the
scent of the girl behind the wall. And if he lost it again after a few weeks
and died of the loss, that was fine too. But better yet would be not to die and
still possess the scent, or at least to delay its loss as long as humanly
possible. One simply had to preserve it better. One must subdue its evanescence
without robbing it of its character-a problem of the perfumer’s art.
There
are scents that linger for decades. A cupboard rubbed with musk, a piece of
leather drenched with cinnamon oil, a glob of ambergris, a cedar chest— they
all possess virtually eternal olfactory life. While other things-lime oil,
bergamot, jonquil and tuberose extracts, and many floral scents-evaporate
within a few hours if they are exposed to the air in a pure, unbound form. The
perfumer counteracts this fatal circumstance by binding scents that are too
volatile, by putting them in chains, so to speak, taming their urge for
freedom-though his art consists of leaving enough slack in the chains for the
odor seemingly to preserve its freedom, even when it is tied so deftly that it
cannot flee. Grenouille had once succeeded in performing this feat perfectly
with some tuberose oil, whose ephemeral scent he had chained with tiny
quantities of civet, vanilla, labdanum, and cypress-only then did it truly come
into its own. Why should not something similar be possible with the scent of
this girl? Why should he have to use, to waste, this most precious and fragile
of all scents in pure form? How crude! How extraordinarily unsophisticated! Did
one leave diamonds uncut? Did one wear gold in nuggets around one’s neck? Was
he, Grenouille, a primitive pillager of scents like Druot or these other
maceraters, distillers, and blossom crushers? Or was he not, rather, the
greatest perfumer in the world?
He banged his fist against
his brow-to think he had not realized this before. But of course this unique
scent could not be used in a raw state. He must set it like the most precious
gemstone. He must design a diadem of scent, and at its sublime acme,
intertwined with the other scents and yet ruling over them, his scent would
gleam. He would make a perfume using all the precepts of the art, and the scent
of the girl behind the wall would be the very soul of it.
As the adjuvants, as bass,
tenor, and soprano, as zenith and as fixative, musk and civet, attar of roses
or neroli were inappropriate-that was certain. For such a perfume, for a human
perfume, he had need of other ingredients.
Forty
I N MAY OF that same year, the naked body of a fifteen-year-old girl
was found in a rose field, halfway
between Grasse and the hamlet of Opio east of town. She had been killed by a
heavy blow to the back of the head. The farmer who discovered her was so
disconcerted by the gruesome sight that he almost ended up a suspect himself,
when in a quivering voice he told the police lieutenant that he had never seen
anything so beautiful-when he had really wanted to say that he had never seen
anything so awful.
She was indeed a girl of
exquisite beauty. She was one of those languid women made of dark honey, smooth
and sweet and terribly sticky, who take control of a room with a syrupy
gesture, a toss of the hair, a single slow whiplash of the eyes-and all the
while remain as still as the center of a hurricane, apparently unaware of the
force of gravity by which they irresistibly attract to themselves the yearnings
and the souls of both men and women. And she was young, so very young, that the
flow of her allure had not yet grown viscous. Her full limbs were still smooth
and solid, her breasts plump and pert as hard-boiled eggs, and the planes of
her face, brushed by her heavy black hair, still had the most delicate contours
and secret places. Her hair, however, was gone. The murderer had cut it off and
taken it with him, along with her clothes.
People
suspected the gypsies. Gypsies were capable of anything. Gypsies were known to
weave
carpets out of old clothes and to stuff their
pillows with human hair and to make dolls out of the skin and teeth of the
hanged. Only gypsies could be involved in such a perverse crime. There were,
however, no gypsies around at the time, not a one near or far; gypsies had last
come through the area in December.
For lack of gypsies, people
decided to suspect the Italian migrant workers. But there weren’t any Italians
around either, it was too early in the year for them; they would first arrive
in the region in June, at the time of the jasmine harvest, so it could not have
been the Italians either. Finally the wigmakers came under suspicion, and they
were searched for the hair of the murdered girl. To no avail. Then it was the
Jews who were suspect, then the monks of the Benedictine cloister, reputedly a
lecherous lot-although all of them were well over seventy-then the Cistercians,
then the Freemasons, then the lunatics from the Charite, then the charcoal
burners, then the beggars, and last but not least the nobility, in particular
the marquis of Cabris, for he had already been married three times and
organized-so it was said-orgiastic black masses in his cellars, where he drank
the blood of virgins to increase his potency. Of course nothing definite could
be proved. No one had witnessed the murder, the clothes and hair of the dead
woman were not found. After several weeks the police lieutenant halted his
investigation.
In mid-June the Italians
arrived, many with families, to hire themselves out as pickers. The farmers put
them to work as usual, but, with the murder still on their minds, forbade their
wives and daughters to have anything to do with them. You couldn’t be too
cautious. For although the migrant workers were in fact not responsible for the
actual murder, they could have been responsible for it on principle, and so it
was better to be on one’s guard.
Not long after the beginning
of the jasmine harvest, two more murders occurred. Again the victims were very
lovely young girls, again of the languid, raven-haired sort, again they were
found naked and shorn and lying in a flower field with the backs of their heads
bludgeoned. Again there was no trace of the perpetrator. The news spread like
wildfire, and there was a threat that hostile action might be taken against the
migrants-when it was learned that both victims were Italians, the daughters of
a Genoese day laborer.
And now fear spread over the
countryside. People no longer knew against whom to direct their impotent rage.
Although there were still those who suspected the lunatics or the cryptic
marquis, no one really believed that, for the former were under guard day and
night, and the latter had long since departed for Paris. So people huddled
closer together. The farmers opened up their barns for the migrants, who until
then had slept in the open fields. The townsfolk set up nightly patrols in
every neighborhood. The police lieutenant reinforced the watch at the gates.
But all these measures proved useless. A few days after the double murder, they
found the body of yet another girl, abused in the same manner as the others.
This time it was a Sardinian washerwoman from the bishop’s palace; she had been
struck down near the great basin of the Fontaine de la Foux, directly before
the gates of the town. And although at the insistence of the citizenry the
consuls initiated still further measures-the tightest possible control at the
gates, a reinforced nightwatch, a curfew for all female persons after
nightfall-all that summer not a single week went by when the body of a young
girl was not discovered. And they were always girls just approaching womanhood,
and always very beautiful and usually dark, sugary types. Soon, however, the
murderer was no longer rejecting the type of girl more common among the local population:
soft, pale-skinned, and somewhat more full-bodied. Even brown-haired girls and
some dark blondes-as long as they weren’t too skinny-were among the later
victims. He tracked them down everywhere, not just in the open country around
Grasse, but in the town itself, right in their homes. The daughter of a
carpenter was found slain in her own room on the fifth floor, and no one in the
house had heard the least noise, and although the dogs normally yelped the
moment they picked up the scent of any stranger, not one of them had barked.
The murderer seemed impalpable, incorporeal, like a ghost.
People were outraged and
reviled the authorities. The least rumor caused mob scenes. A traveling
salesman of love potions and other nostrums was almost massacred, for word
spread that one of the ingredients in his remedies was female hair. Fires were
set at both the Cabris mansion and the Hopital de la Charite. A servant
returning home one night was shot down by his own master, the woolen draper
Alexandre Misnard, who mistook him for the infamous murderer of young girls.
Whoever could afford it sent his adolescent daughters to distant relatives or
to boarding schools in
Nice, Aix, or Marseille. The police lieutenant
was removed from office at the insistence of the town council. His successor
had the college of medicine examine the bodies of the shorn beauties to
determine the state of their virginity. It was found that they had all remained
untouched.
Strangely enough, this
knowledge only increased the sense of horror, for everyone had secretly assumed
that the girls had been ravished. People had at least known the murderer’s
motive. Now they knew nothing at all, they were totally perplexed. And whoever
believed in God sought succor in the prayer that at least his own house should
be spared this visitation from hell.
The town
council was a committee of thirty of the richest and most influential commoners
and nobles in Grasse. The majority of them were enlightened and anticlerical,
paid not the least attention to the bishop, and would have preferred to turn
the cloisters and abbeys into warehouses or factories. In their distress, the proud,
powerful men of the town council condescended to write an abject petition
begging the bishop to curse and excommunicate this monster who murdered young
girls and yet whom temporal powers could not capture, just as his illustrious
predecessor had done in the year 1708, when terrible locusts had threatened the
land. And indeed, at the end of September, the slayer of the young women of
Grasse, having cut down no fewer than twenty-four of its most beautiful virgins
out of every social class, was made anathema and excommunicated both in writing
and from all the pulpits of the city, including a ban spoken by the bishop
himself from the pulpit of Notre-Dame-du-Puy.
The result was conclusive.
From one day to the next, the murders ceased. October and November passed with
no corpses. At the start of December, reports came in from Grenoble that a
murderer there was strangling young girls, then tearing their clothes to shreds
and pulling their hair out by the handfuls. And although these coarse methods
in no way squared with the cleanly executed crimes of the Grasse murderer,
everyone was convinced that it was one and the same person. In their relief
that the beast was no longer among them but instead ravaging Grenoble a good
seven days’ journey distant, the citizens of Grasse crossed themselves three
times over. They organized a torchlight procession in honor of the bishop and
celebrated a mass of thanksgiving on December 24. On January 1, 1766, the
tighter security measures were relaxed and the nighttime curfew for women was
lifted. Normality returned to public and private life with incredible speed.
Fear had melted into thin air, no one spoke of the terror that had ruled both
town and counlryside only a few months before. Not even the families involved
still spoke of it. It was as if the bishop’s curse had not only banned the
murderer, but every memory of him. And the people were pleased that it was so.
But any man who still had a
daughter just approaching that special age did not, even now, allow her to be without
supervision; twilight brought misgivings, and each morning, when he found her
healthy and cheerful, he rejoiced-though of course without actually admitting
the reason why.
Forty-one
T HERE WAS one man in Grasse, however, who did not trust this peace.
His name was Antoine Richis, he held
the title of second consul, and he lived in a grand residence at the entrance
to the rue Droite.
Richis was a widower and had
a daughter named Laure. Although not yet forty years old and of undi-minished
vigor, he intended to put off a second marriage for some time yet. First he
wanted to find a husband for his daughter. And not the first comer, either, but
a man of rank. There was a baron de Bouyon who had a son and an estate near
Vence, a man of good reputation and miserable financial situation, with whom
Richis had already concluded a contract concerning the future marriage of their
children. Once he had married Laure off, he planned to put out his own courting
feelers in the direction of the highly esteemed houses of Dree, Maubert, or
Fontmichel-not because he was vain and would be damned if he didn’t get a noble
bedmate, but because he wanted to found a dynasty and to put his own posterity
on a track leading directly to the highest social and political influence. For
that he needed at least two sons, one to take over his business, the other to
pursue a law career leading to the parliament in Aix and advancement to the
nobility. Given his present rank, however, he could hold out hopes for such
success only if he managed intimately to unite his own person and family with
provincial nobility.
Only one
thing justified such high-soaring plans: his fabulous wealth. Antoine Richis
was far and away the wealthiest citizen anywhere around. He possessed
latifundia not only in the area of Grasse,
where he planted oranges, oil, wheat, and hemp,
but also near Vence and over toward Antibes, where he leased out his farms. He
owned houses in Aix and houses in the country, owned shares in ships that
traded with India, had a permanent office in Genoa, and was the largest
wholesaler for scents, spices, oils, and leathers in France.
The most precious thing that
Richis possessed, however, was his daughter. She was his only child, just
turned sixteen, with auburn hair and green eyes. She had a face so charming that
visitors of all ages and both sexes would stand stockstill at the sight of her,
unable to pull their eyes away, practically licking that face with their eyes,
the way tongues work at ice cream, with that typically stupid, single-minded
expression on their faces that goes with concentrated licking. Even Richis
would catch himself looking at his daughter for indefinite periods of time, a
quarter of an hour, a half hour perhaps, forgetting the rest of the world, even
his business-which otherwise did not happen even in his sleep-melting away in
contemplation of this magnificent girl and afterwards unable to say what it was
he had been doing. And of late-he noticed this with uneasiness-of an evening,
when he brought her to her bed or sometimes of a morning when he went in to
waken her and she still lay sleeping as if put to rest by God’s own hand and
the forms of her hips and breasts were molded in the veil of her nightgown and
her breath rose calm and hot from the frame of bosom, contoured shoulder,
elbow, and smooth forearm in which she had laid her face-then he would feel an
awful cramping in his stomach and his throat would seem too tight and he would
swallow and, God help him, would curse himself for being this woman’s father
and not some stranger, not some other man, before whom she lay as she lay now
before him, and who then without scruple and full of desire could lie down next
to her, on her, in her. And he broke out in a sweat, and his arms and legs
trembled while he choked down this dreadful lust and bent down to wake her with
a chaste fatherly kiss. During the year just past, at the time of the murders,
these fatal temptations had not yet come over him. The magic that his daughter
worked on him then-or so at least it seemed to him-had still been a childish
magic. And thus he had not been seriously afraid that Laure would be one of the
murderer’s victims, since everyone knew that he attacked neither children nor
grown women, but exclusively ripening but virginal girls. He had indeed
augmented the watch of his home, had had new grilles placed at the windows of
the top floor, and had directed Laure’s maid to share her bedchamber with her.
But he was loath to send her away as his peers had done with their daughters,
some even with their entire families. He found such behavior despicable and
unworthy of a member of the town council and second consul, who, he suggested,
should be a model of composure, courage, and resolution to his fellow citizens.
Besides which, he was a man who did not let his decisions be made for him by
other people, nor by a crowd thrown into panic, and certainly not by some
anonymous piece of criminal trash. And so all during those terrible days, he
had been one of the few people in the town who were immune to the fever of fear
and kept a cool head. But, strange to say, this had now changed. While others
publicly celebrated the end of the rampage as if the murderer were already
hanged and had soon fully forgotten about those dreadful days, fear crept into
Antoine Richis’s heart like a foul poison. For a long time he would not admit
that it was fear that caused him to delay trips that ought to have been made
some time ago, or to be reluctant merely to leave the house, or to break off
visits and meetings just so that he could quickly return home. He gave himself
the excuse that he was out of sorts or overworked, but admitted as well that he
was a bit concerned, as every father with a daughter of marriageable age is
concerned, a thoroughly normal concern… Had not the fame of her beauty already
gone out to the wider world? Did not people stretch their necks even now when
he accompanied her to church on Sundays? Were not certain gentlemen on the
council already making advances, in their own names or in those of their sons…?
Forty-two
B UT, THEN, one day in March, Richis was sitting in the salon and
watched as Laure walked out into the
garden. She was wearing a blue dress, her red hair falling down over it and
blazing in the sunlight-he had never seen her look so beautiful. She
disappeared behind a hedge. And it took about two heartbeats longer than he had
expected before she emerged again-and he was frightened to death, for during
those two heartbeats he thought he had lost her forever.
remember, but it had had to do with Laure, and
he burst into her room convinced that she was dead, lay there in her bed
murdered, violated, and shorn-and found her unharmed.
He went back to his chamber,
bathed in sweat and trembling with agitation, no, not with agitation, but with
fear, for he finally admitted it to himself: it was naked fear that had seized him,
and in admitting it he grew calmer and his thoughts clearer. To be honest, he
had not believed in the efficacy of the bishop’s anathema from the start, nor
that the murderer was now prowling about Grenoble, nor that he had ever left
town. No, he was still living here, among the citizens of Grasse, and at some
point he would strike again. Richis had seen several of the girls murdered
during August and September. The sight had horrified him, and at the same time,
he had to admit, fascinated him, for they all, each in her own special way, had
been of dazzling beauty. He never would have thought that there was so much
unrecognized beauty in Grasse. The murderer had opened his eyes. The murderer
possessed exquisite taste. And he had a system. It was not just that all the
murders had been carried out in the same efficient manner, but the very choice
of victims betrayed intentions almost economical in their planning. To be sure,
Richis did not know what the murderer actually craved from his victims, since
he could not have robbed them of the best that they offered-their beauty and
the charm of youth… or could he? In any case, it seemed to him, as absurd as it
sounded, that the murderer was not a destructive personality, but rather a
careful collector. For if one imagined-and so Richis imagined-all the victims
not as single individuals, but as parts of some higher principle and thought of
each one’s characteristics as merged in some idealistic fashion into a unifying
whole, then the picture assembled out of such mosaic pieces would be the
picture of absolute beauty, and the magic that radiated from it would no longer
be of human, but of divine origin. (As we can see, Richis was an enlightened
thinker who did not shrink from blasphemous conclusions, and though he was not
thinking in olfactory categories, but rather in visual ones, he was
nevertheless very near the truth.) Assuming then-Richis continued in his
thoughts -that the murderer was just such a collector of beauty and was working
on the picture of perfection, even if only in the fantasy of his sick brain;
assuming, moreover, that he was the man of sublime taste and perfect methods
that he indeed appeared to be-then one could not assume that he would waive
claim to the most precious component on earth needed for his picture: the
beauty of Laure. His entire previous homicidal work would be worth nothing
without her. She was the keystone to his building.
As he drew this horrifying
conclusion, Richis was sitting in his nightshirt on the edge of his bed, and he
was amazed at how calm he had become. He no longer felt chilled, was no longer
trembling. The vague fear that had plagued him for weeks had vanished and was
replaced by the awareness of a specific danger: Laure had quite obviously been
the goal of all the murderer’s endeavors from the beginning. And all the other
murders were adjuncts to the last, crowning murder. It remained quite unclear
what material purpose these murders were intended to serve or if they even had
one at all. But Richis had perceived the essence of the matter: the murderer’s
systematic method and his idealistic motive. The longer he thought about it,
the better both of these pleased him and the greater his admiration for the
murderer-an admiration, admittedly, that reflected back upon him as would a
polished mirror, for after all, it was he, Richis, who had picked up his
opponent’s trail with his own refined and analytical powers of reasoning.
If he, Richis, had been the
murderer and were himself possessed by the murderer’s passions and ideas, he
would not have been able to proceed in any other fashion than had been employed
thus far, and like him, he would do his utmost to crown his mad work with the
murder of the unique and splendid Laure.
This last thought appealed to him especially. Because he was in the
position to put himself inside the mind of the would-be murderer of his
daughter, he had made himself vastly superior to the murderer. For all his
intelligence, that much was certain, the murderer was not in the position to
put himself inside Richis’s mind-if only because he could not even begin to
suspect that Richis had long since imagined himself in the murderer’s own
situation. This was fundamentally no different from how things worked in
business-mutatis mutandis, to be sure. You were master of a competitor whose
intentions you had seen through; there was no way he could get the better of
you-not if your name was Antoine Richis, and you were a natural fighter, a
seasoned fighter. After all, the largest wholesale perfume business in France,
his wealth, his office as second consul, these had not fallen into his lap as
gracious gifts, but he had fought for them, with doggedness and deceit,
recognizing dangers ahead of
time, shrewdly guessing his competitors’ plans,
and outdistancing his opponents. And in just the same way he would achieve his
future goals, power and noble rank for his heirs. And in no other way would he
counter the plans of the murderer, his competitor for the possession of
Laure-if only because Laure was also the keystone in the edifice of his, of
Richis’s, own plans. He loved her, certainly; but he needed her as well. And he
would let no one wrest from him whatever it was he needed to realize his own
highest ambitions-he would hold on tooth and claw to that.
He felt better now. Having
succeeded by these nocturnal deliberations in bringing his struggle with the
demon down to the level of a business rivalry, he felt fresh courage, indeed arrogance,
take hold of him.
The last remnants of fear
were gone, the despondency and anxious care that had tormented him into
doddering senility had vanished, the fog of gloomy forebodings in which he had
tapped about for weeks had lifted. He found himself on familiar terrain and
felt himself equal to every challenge.
Forty-three
R ELIEVED, ALMOST elated, he sprang from his bed, pulled the bell
rope, and ordered the drowsy valet
who staggered into his room to pack clothes and provisions because at daybreak
he intended to set out for Grenoble in the company of his daughter. Then he
dressed and chased the rest of the servants from their beds.
In the middle of the night,
the house on the rue Droite awoke and bustled with life. The fire blazed up in
the kitchen, excited maids scurried along the corridors, servants dashed up and
down the stairs, in the vaulted cellars the keys of the steward rattled, in the
courtyard torches shone, grooms ran among the horses, others tugged mules from
their stalls, there was bridling and saddling and running and loading— one
would have almost believed that the Austro-Sardinian hordes were on the march,
pillaging and torching, just as in 1746, and that the lord of the manor was
mobilizing to flee in panic. Not at all! The lord of the manor was sitting at
his office desk, as sovereign as a marshal of France, drinking cafe au lait,
and providing instructions for the constant stream of domestics barging in on
him. All the while, he wrote letters to the mayor, to the first consul, to his
secretary, to his solicitor, to his banker in Marseille, to the baron de
Bouyon, and to diverse business partners.
By around six that morning,
he had completed his correspondence and given all the orders necessary to carry
out his plans. He tucked away two small traveling pistols, buckled on his money
belt, and locked his desk. Then he went to awaken his daughter.
By eight o’clock, the little
caravan was on the move. Richis rode at its head; he was a splendid sight in his
gold-braided, burgundy coat beneath a black riding coat and black hat with
jaunty feathers. He was followed by his daughter, dressed less showily, but so
radiantly beautiful that the people along the street and at the windows had
eyes only for her, their fervent ah’s and oh’s passing through the crowd while
the men doffed their hats-apparently for the second consul, but in reality for
her, the regal woman. Then, almost unnoticed, came her maid, then Richis’s
valet with two packhorses-the notoriously bad condition of the road to Grenoble
meant that a wagon could not be used-and the end of the parade was drawn up by
a dozen mules laden with all sorts of stuff and supervised by two grooms. At
the Porte du Cours the watch presented arms and only let them drop when the
last mule had tramped by. Children ran behind them for a good little while,
waving at the baggage crew as they slowly moved up the steep, winding road into
the mountains.
The departure of Antoine
Richis and his daughter made a strange but deep impression on people. It was as
if they had witnessed some archaic sacrificial procession. The word spread that
Richis was going to Grenoble, to the very city where the monster who murdered
young girls was now residing. People did not know what to think about that. Did
what Richis was doing show criminal negligence or admirable courage? Was he
daring or placating the gods? They had only the vague foreboding that they had
just seen this beautiful girl with the red hair for the last time. They
suspected that Laure Richis might be lost.
This
suspicion would prove correct, although the presumptions it was based upon were
completely false. Richis was not heading for Grenoble at all. The pompous
departure was nothing but a diversionary tactic. A mile and a half northwest of
Grasse, near the village of Saint-Vallier, he ordered a halt. He handed his
valet letters of attorney and transmittal and ordered him to bring the mule
train
and grooms to Grenoble by
himself.
He, however, turned off with
Laure and her maid in the direction of Cabris, where they rested at midday, and
then rode straight across the mountains of the Tanneron toward the south. The
path was an extremely arduous one, but it allowed them to circumvent Grasse and
its basin in a great arc and to arrive on the coast by evening without being
recognized… The following day-according to Richis’s plan-he would ferry across
with Laure to the lies de Lerins, on the smaller of which was located the
well-fortified monastery of Saint-Honorat. It was managed by a handful of
elderly but quite ablebodied monks whom Richis knew very well, since for years
he had bought and resold the monastery’s total production of eucalyptus
cordial, pine nuts, and cypress oil. And there in the monastery of
Saint-Honorat-which except for the prison of Chateau d’lf and the state prison
on the He Sainte-Marguerite was probably the safest place in the Provence-he
intended to lodge his daughter for the present. But he would immediately return
to the mainland, this time circumventing Grasse on the east via Antibes and
Cagnes, and arrive in Vence by evening of the same day. He had ordered his
secretary to proceed there in order to prepare the agreement with baron de
Bouyon concerning the marriage of their children Laure and Alphonse. He hoped
to make Bouyon an offer that he could not refuse: assumption of his debts up to
forty thousand livres, a dowry consisting of an equal sum as well as diverse
landhold-ings and an oil mill near Maganosc, a yearly income of three thousand
livres for the young couple. Richis’s only conditions were that the marriage
should take place within ten days and be consummated on the wedding day, and
that the couple should thereafter take up residence in Vence.
Richis knew that in acting so
hastily he was driving the price excessively high for the union of his house
with the house of Bouyon. He would have got it cheaper had he waited longer.
The baron would have begged for permission to raise the social rank of the
daughter of a bourgeois wholesaler through a marriage to his son, for the fame
of Laure’s beauty would only grow, just as would Richis’s wealth and Bouyon’s
financial miseries. But what did that matter! His opponent in this deal was not
the baron, but the unknown murderer. He was the one whose business had to be
spoiled. A married woman, deflowered and if possible already pregnant, would no
longer fit into his exclusive gallery. The last mosaic stone would be
tarnished, Laure would have lost all value for the murderer, his enterprise
would have failed. And he was to feel his defeat! Richis wanted to hold the
wedding ceremony in Grasse, with great pomp and open to the public. And even if
he could not know his adversary, would never know him, he would take personal
pleasure in knowing that he was in attendance at the event and would have to
watch with his own eyes as that which he most desired was snatched away from
under his nose.
The plan was nicely thought
out. And once again we must admire Richis’s acumen for coming so close to the
truth. For in point of fact the marriage of Laure Richis to the son of the
baron de Bouyon would have meant a devastating defeat for the murderer of the
maidens of Grasse. But the plan was not yet carried out. Richis had not yet
rescued his daughter by marrying her off. He had not yet ferried her across to
the safety of the monastery of Saint-Honorat. The three riders were still
passing through the inhospitable mountains of the Tanneron. Sometimes the path
was so bad that they had to dismount from their horses. It was all going too
slowly. By evening, they hoped to reach the sea near La Napoule, a small town
west of Cannes.
Forty-four
A T THE SAME time that Laure Richis and her father were leaving
Grasse, Grenouille was at the other
end of town in the Arnulfi workshop macerating jonquils. He was alone and he
was in good spirits. His days in Grasse were coming to an end. His day of
triumph was imminent. Out in his cabin was a crate padded with cotton, in it
were twenty-four tiny flacons filled with drops of the congealed aura of
twenty-four virgins-precious essences that Grenouille had produced over the
last year by cold-oil enfleurage of their bodies, digestion of their hair and
clothes, lavage, and distillation. And the twenty-fifth, the most precious and
important of all, he planned to fetch today. For his final fishing expedition,
he had at the ready a small pot of oils purified several times over, a cloth of
finest linen, and a demijohn of high-proof alcohol. The terrain had been
studied down to the last detail. The moon was new.
He knew that any attempt to
break into the well-protected mansion on the rue Droite was pointless. Which
was why he planned, just as dusk fell and before the doors were closed, to
sneak in under his cover of odorlessness, which like a magic cape deprived man
and beast of their perceptive faculties, and there to hide in some nook of the
house. Then later, when everyone was asleep, he would follow the compass of his
nose through the darkness and climb up to the chamber that held his treasure.
He would set to work on it with his oil-drenched cloths right then and there.
All that he would take with him would be, as usual, the hair and clothes, since
these could be washed directly in rectified spirit, which could be done more
conveniently in the workshop. He estimated it would take an additional night to
complete the production of the pomade and to distill the concentrate. And if
everything went well-and he had no reason to doubt that everything would go
well— then by the day after tomorrow he would possess all of the essences
needed for the best perfume in the world, and he would leave Grasse as the
world’s most fragrant human being.
Around noon he was finished
with his jonquils. He doused the fire, covered the pot of oil, and stepped
outside the workshop to cool off. The wind was from the west.
With his very first breath,
he knew something was wrong. The atmosphere was not as it should be. In the
town’s aromatic garb, that veil of many thousands of woven threads, the golden
thread was missing. During the last few weeks the fragrance of that thread had
grown so strong that Grenouilie had clearly discerned it from his cabin on the
far side of the town. Now it was gone, vanished, untraceable despite the most
intensive sniffing. Grenouilie was almost paralyzed with fright.
She is dead, he thought.
Then, more terrifying still: Someone else has got to her before me. Someone
else has plucked my flower and taken its odor for himself! He could not so much
as scream, the shock was too great for that, but he could produce tears that
welled up in the corners of his eyes and suddenly streamed down both sides of
his nose.
Then Druot, returning home
from the Quatre Dauphins for lunch, remarked in passing that early this morning
the second consul had left for Grenoble together with twelve mules and his
daughter. Gre-nouille forced back the tears and ran off, straight through town
to the Porte du Cours. He stopped to sniff in the square before the gate. And
in the pure west wind, unsullied by the odors of the town, he did indeed find
his golden thread again, thin and fragile, but absolutely unmistakable. The
precious scent, however, was not blowing from the northwest, where the road
leads toward Grenoble, but more from the direction of Cabris-if not directly
out of the southwest.
Grenouille asked the watch
which road the second consul had taken. The guard pointed north. Not the road
to Cabris? Or the other one, that went south toward Auribeau and La Napoule?
Definitely not, said the guard, he had watched with his own eyes.
Grenouille ran back through
town to his cabin, packed linen, pomade pot, spatula, scissors, and a small,
smooth club of olivewood into his knapsack and promptly took to the road-not
the road to Grenoble, but the one to which his nose directed him: to the south.
This road, the direct road to
La Napoule, led along the foothills of the Tanneron, through the river valleys
of the Frayere and Siagne. It was an easy walk. Grenouille made rapid progress.
As Auribeau emerged on his right, clinging to the mountains above him, he could
smell that he had almost caught up with the runaways. A little later and he had
drawn even with them. He could now smell each one, could smell the aroma of
their horses. At most they were no more than a half mile west of him, somewhere
in the forests of the Tanneron. They were holding course southwards, toward the
sea. Just as he was.
Around five o’clock that
evening, Grenouille reached La Napoule. He went to the inn, ate, and asked for
cheap lodging. He was a journeyman tanner from Nice, he said, on his way to
Marseille. He could spend the night in a stall, they told him. There he lay
down in a corner and rested. He could smell the three riders approaching. He
need only wait.
Two hours later-it was deep
dusk by then-they arrived. To preserve their disguise, they had changed
costumes. The two women now wore dark cloaks and veils, Richis a black frock
coat. He identified himself as a nobleman on his way from Castellane; in the
morning he wanted to be ferried over to the lies de LSrins, the innkeeper should
make arrangements for a boat to be ready by sunrise. Were there any other
guests in the house besides himself and his people? No, said the innkeeper,
only a journeyman tanner from Nice who was spending the night in a stall.
Richis sent the women to
their room. He was going out to the stalls, he said, to get something
from the saddlebags. At first he could not find
the journeyman tanner, he had to ask a groom to give him a lantern. Then he saw
him, lying on some straw and an old blanket in one corner, his head resting on
his knapsack, sound asleep. He looked so totally insignificant that for a
moment Richis had the impression that he was not even there, but was merely a
chimera cast by the swaying shadow of the lantern candle. At any rate, Richis
was immediately convinced that there was no danger whatever to fear from this
almost touchingly harmless creature, and he left very quietly so as not to
disturb his sleep and went back into the inn.
He took his evening meal in
his own room along with his daughter. He had not explained the purpose and goal
of their journey to her and did not do it even now, although she asked him.
Tomorrow he would let her in on the secret, he said, but she could be certain
that everything that he was planning and doing was for her good and would work
toward her future happiness.
After their meal they played
a few games of I’hombre, which he lost because he was forever gazing at her
face to delight in her beauty instead of looking at his cards. Around nine
o’clock he brought her to her room, directly across from his own, kissed her
good night, and locked the door from the outside. Then he went to bed himself.
He was suddenly very tired
from the exertions of the day and of the night before and equally very
satisfied with himself and how things had gone. Without the least thought of
care, without any of the gloomy suspicions that until yesterday had plagued him
and kept him awake every time he had put out his light, he instantly fell
asleep and slept without a dream, without a moan, without a twitch or a nervous
toss of his body back and forth. For the first time in a good while, Richis
found deep, peaceful, refreshing sleep.
Around
the same time, Grenouille got up from his bed in the stall. He too was
satisfied with how things were going and felt completely refreshed, although he
had not slept a single second. When Richis had come to the stall looking for
him, he had only feigned sleep, augmenting the impression of obvious
harmlessness he already exuded with his odor of inconspicuous-ness. Moreover,
in contrast to the way in which Richis had perceived him, he had observed
Richis with utmost accuracy, olfactory accuracy, and Richis’s relief at the
sight of him had definitely not escaped him.
And so at their meeting each
had convinced himself of the other’s harmlessness, both correctly and falsely,
and that was how it should be, Grenouille thought, for his apparent and
Richis’s true harmlessness made it much easier for him, Grenouille, to go about
his work-an opinion that, to be sure, Richis would definitely have shared had
the situation been reversed.
Forty-five
G RENOUILLE SET to work with professional
circumspection. He opened his knapsack, took out the linen, pomade, and spatula, spread the cloth over the
blanket on which he had lain, and began to brush on the fatty paste. This job
took time, for it was important that the oil be applied in thinner or thicker
layers depending on what part of the body would end up lying on a particular
patch of the cloth. The mouth and armpits, breasts, genitals, and feet gave off
greater amounts of scent than, for instance, shins, back, and elbows; the palms
more than the backs of the hands; eyebrows more than eyelids, etc.-and
therefore needed to be provided with a heavier dose of oil. Grenouille was
creating a model, as it were, transferring onto the linen a scent diagram of the
body to be treated, and this part of the job was actually the one that
satisfied him most, for it was a matter of an artistic technique that
incorporated equally one’s knowledge, imagination, and manual dexterity, while
at the same time it anticipated on an ideal plane the enjoyment awaiting one
from the final results. Once he had applied the whole potful of pomade, he
dabbed about here and there, removing a bit of oil from the cloth here, adding
another there, retouching, checking the greasy landscape he had modeled one
last time-with his nose, by the way, not with his eyes, for the whole business
was carried on in total darkness, which was perhaps yet another reason for
Grenouille’s equably cheerful mood. There was nothing to distract him on this
night of new moon. The world was nothing but odor and the soft sound of surf
from the sea. He was in his element. Then he folded the cloth together like a
tapestry, so that the oiled surfaces lay against one another. This was a
painful procedure for him, because he knew well that despite the utmost caution
certain parts of the sculpted contours would be flattened or shifted. But there
was no other way to transport the cloth. After he had folded it up small enough
to be carried under his arm
without all too much difficulty, he tucked
spatula, scissors, and the little olive wood club in his pockets and crept out
into the night.
The sky was clouded over.
There were no lights burning in the inn. The only glimmer on this pitch-dark
night was the winking of the lighthouse at the fort on the He
Sainte-Marguerite, over a mile away to the east, a tiny bright needlepoint in a
raven-black cloth. A light, fishy wind was blowing from the bay. The dogs were
asleep.
Grenouille walked to the back
dormer of the threshing shed, where a ladder stood propped. He picked the
ladder up, and balancing it vertically, three rungs clamped under his free
right arm, the rest of it pressed against his right shoulder, he moved across
the courtyard until he was under her window. The window stood half ajar. As he
climbed the ladder, as easily as a set of stairs, he congratulated himself on
the circumstances that made it possible for him to harvest the girl’s scent
here in La Napoule. In Grasse, where the house had barred windows and was
tightly guarded, all this would have been much more difficult. She was even
sleeping by herself here. He would not have to bother with eliminating the
maid.
He pushed up the casement,
slipped into the room, and laid down his cloth. Then he turned to the bed. The
dominant scent came from her hair, for she was lying on her stomach with her
head pressed into the pillow and framed by the crook of her arm— presenting the
back of her head in an almost ideal position for the blow by the club.
The sound of the blow was a
dull, grinding thud. He hated it. He hated it solely because it was a sound, a
sound in the midst of his otherwise soundless procedure. He could bear that
gruesome sound only by clenching his teeth, and, after it was all over,
standing off to one side stiff and implacable, as if he feared the sound would
return from somewhere as a resounding echo. But it did not return, instead
stillness returned to the room, an increased stillness in fact, for now even
the shuffle of the girl’s breathing had ceased. And at once Grenouille’s
tenseness dissolved (one might have interpreted it more as a posture of
reverence or some sort of crabbed moment of silence) and his body fell back to
a pliable ease.
He tucked the club away and
from here on was all bustle and business. First he unfolded the impregnating
cloth, spread it loosely on its back over the table and chairs, taking care
that the greased side not be touched. Then he pulled back the bedclothes. The
glorious scent of the girl, welling up so suddenly warm and massive, did not
stir him. He knew that scent, of course, and would savor it, savor it to
intoxication, later on, once he truly possessed it. But now the main thing was
to capture as much of it as possible, let as little of it as possible
evaporate; for now the watchwords were concentration and haste.
With a few quick snips of his
scissors, he cut open her nightgown, pulled it off, grabbed the oiled linen, and
tossed it over her naked body. Then he lifted her up, tugged the overhanging
cloth under her, rolled her up in it as a baker rolls strudel, tucking in the
corners, enveloping her from toes up to brow. Only her hair still stuck out
from the mummy clothes. He cut it off close to her scalp and packed it inside
her nightgown, which he then tied up into a bundle. Finally he took a piece of
cloth still dangling free and flapped it over the shaved skull, smoothed down
the overlapping ends, gently pressed it tight with a finger. He examined the
whole package. Not a slit, not a hole, not one bulging pleat was left through
which the girl’s scent could have escaped. She was perfectly packed. There was
nothing to do but wait, for six hours, until the gray of dawn.
He took
the little armchair on which her clothes lay, dragged it to the bed, and sat
down. The gentle breath of her scent still clung to the ample black cloak,
blending with the odor of aniseed cakes she had put in her pocket as a snack
for the journey. He put his feet up on the end of the bed, near her feet,
covered himself with her dress, and ate aniseed cakes. He was tired. But he did
not want to fall asleep, because it was improper to sleep on the job, even if
your job was merely to wait. He recalled the nights he had spent distilling in
Baldini’s workshop: the soot-blackened alembic, the flickering fire, the soft
spitting sound the distillate made as it dripped from the cooling tube into the
Florentine flask. From time to time you had to tend the fire, pour in more
distilling water, change Florentine flasks, replace the exhausted stuff you
were distilling. And yet it had always seemed to him that you stayed awake not
so that you could take care of these occasional tasks, but because being awake
had its own unique purpose. Even here in this bedchamber, where the process of
enfleurage was proceeding all on its own, where in fact premature checking,
turning, or poking the fragrant package could only cause
trouble-even here, it seemed to Grenoble, his
waking presence was important. Sleep would have endangered the spirit of
success.
It was not especially
difficult for him to stay awake and wait, despite his weariness. He loved this
waiting. He had also loved it with the twenty-four other girls, for it was aot
a dull waiting-till-it’s-over, not even a yearning, expectant waiting, but an
attendant, purposeful, in a certain sense active, waiting. Something was
happening while you waited. The most essential thing was happening. And even if
he himself was doing nothing, it was happening through him nevertheless. He had
done his best. He had employed all his artistic skill. He had made not one
single mistake. His performance had been unique. It would be crowned with
success… He need only wait a few more hours. It filled him with profound
satisfaction, this waiting. He had never felt so fine in all his life, so
peaceful, so steady, so whole and at one with himself-not even back inside his
mountain-as during these hours when a craftsman took his rest sitting in the
dark of night beside his victim, waiting and watching. They were the only
moments when something like cheerful thoughts formed inside his gloomy brain.
Strangely
enough, these thoughts did not look toward the future. He did not think of the
scent that he would glean in a few hours, nor of the perfume made of the auras
of twenty-five maidens, nor of future plans, happiness, and success. No, he
thought of his past. He remembered the stations of his life, from Madame
Gaillard’s house and the moist, warm woodpile in front of it to his journey
today to the little village of La Napoule, which smelled like fish. He thought of
Grimal the tanner, of Giuseppe Baldini, of the marquis de La
Taillade-Espinasse. He thought of the city of Paris, of its great effluvium,
that evil smell of a thousand iridescences; he thought of the redheaded girl in
the rue des Marais, of open country, of the spare wind, of forests. He thought,
too, of the mountain in the Auvergne-he did not avoid such memories in the
least-of his cave, of the air void of human beings. He thought of his dreams.
And he thought of all these things with great satisfaction. Yes, it seemed to
him as he looked back over it that he was a man to whom fortune had been
especially kind, and that fate had led him down some tortuous paths, but that
ultimately they had proved to be the right ones-how else would it have been
possible for him to have found his way here, into this dark chamber, at the
goal of his desires? He was, now that he really considered it, a truly blessed
individual!
Feelings of humility and
gratitude welled up within him. “I thank you,” he said softly, “I thank you,
Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, for being what you are!” So touched was he by
himself.
Then his eyelids closed-not
for sleep, but so that he could surrender himself completely to the peace of
this holy night. The peace filled his heart. But it seemed also as if it
reigned all about him. He smelled the peaceful sleep of the maid in the
adjoining room, the deep contentment of Antoine Richis’s sleep on the other
side of the corridor; he smelled the peaceful slumber of the innkeeper and his
servants, of the dogs, of the animals in their stalls, of the whole village,
and of the sea. The wind had died away. Everything was still. Nothing disturbed
the peace.
Once he turned his foot to
one side and ever so softly touched Laure’s foot. Not actually her foot, but
simply the cloth that enveloped it and beneath that the thin layer of oil
drinking up her scent, her glorious scent, his scent.
Forty-six
A S THE BIRDS began to squawk-that is, a good while before the break
of dawn-he got up and finished his
task. He threw open the cloth and pulled it from the dead woman like a bandage.
The fat peeled off nicely from her skin. Little scraps of it were left hanging
only in the smallest crannies, and these he had to scrape off with his spatula.
The remaining streaks of pomade he wiped off with her undershirt, using it to
rub down her body from head to foot one last time, so thoroughly that even the
oil in her own pores pearled from her skin, and with it the last flake and
filament of her scent. Only now was she really dead for him, withered away,
pale and limp as a fallen petal.
He
tossed the undershirt into the large scent-impregnated cloth-the only place
where she had life now-placed her nightgown and her hair in it as well, and
rolled it all up into a small, firm package that he clamped under his arm. He
did not even take the trouble to cover the body on the bed. And although the
black of night had already become the blue gray of dawn and objects in the room
had begun to regain their contours, he did not cast a single glance at the bed
to rest his eyes on her at least once in
his life. Her form did not interest him. She no
longer existed for him as a body, but only as a disembodied scent. And he was
carrying that under his arm, taking it with him.
Softly he swung out over the windowsill
and climbed down the ladder. The wind had come up again outside, and the sky
was clearing, pouring a cold, dark blue light over the land.
A half hour later, the
scullery maid started the fire in the kitchen. As she came out of the house to
fetch wood she saw the ladder leaning there, but was still too sleepy to make
any rhyme or reason of it. Shortly after six the sun rose. Gigantic and golden
red, it lifted up out of the sea between the lies de Lerins. Not a cloud was in
the sky. A radiant spring day had begun.
With his room facing west,
Richis did not awaken until seven. He had slept truly splendidly for the first
time in months, and contrary to his custom lay there yet another quarter of an
hour, stretching and sighing with enjoyment as he listened to the pleasant
hubbub rising up from the kitchen below. When he finally did get up and open
the window wide, taking in the beautiful weather outside and breathing in the
fresh morning air and listening to the sound of the surf, his good mood knew no
bounds, and he puckered his lips and whistled a bright melody.
While he dressed, he went on
whistling, and was whistling still as he left his room and on winged feet
approached the door to his daughter’s room across the hall. He rapped. And
rapped again, very softly, so as not to frighten her. There was no answer. He
smiled. He could well understand that she was still sleeping.
Carefully he inserted the key
in the lock and turned the bolt, softly, very softly, considerately, not
wanting to wake her, eager almost to find her still sleeping, wanting to kiss
her awake once again-one iast time, before he must give her to another man.
The door sprang open, he
entered, and the sunlight fell full into his eyes. Everything in the room
sparkled, as if it were filled with glittering silver, and for a moment he had
to shut his eyes against the pain of it.
When he opened them again, he
saw Laure lying on her bed, naked and dead and shorn clean and sparkling white.
It was like his nightmare, the one he had dreamt in Grasse the night before
last and had forgotten again. Every detail came back to him now as if in a
blazing flash. In that instant everything was exactly as it had been in the
dream, only very much brighter.
Forty-seven
T HE NEWS OF Laure Richis’s murder spread through the region of
Grasse as fast as if the message had
been “The king is dead!” or “War’s been declared!” or “Pirates have landed on
the coast!”-and the awful sense of terror it triggered was similar as well. All
at once the fear that they had so carefully forgotten was back again, as
virulent as it had been last autumn and with all the accompanying phenomena:
panic, outrage, anger, hysterical suspicions, desperation. People stayed in
their houses at night, locked up their daughters, barricaded themselves in,
mistrusted one another, and slept no more. Everyone assumed it would continue
this time as it had before, a murder a week. The calendar seemed to have been
set back six months.
The
dread was more paralyzing, however, than six months earlier, for people felt
helpless at the sudden return of a danger that they had thought well behind
them. If even the bishop’s anathema had proved useless! If even Antoine Richis,
the great Richis, the richest man in town, the second consul, a powerful,
prudent man who had every kind of assistance available, if even he could not
protect his child! If the murderer’s hand was not be deterred even by the
hallowed beauty of Laure-for indeed she seemed a saint to everyone who had
known her, especially now, afterwards, now that she was dead-what hope was
there of escaping this murderer? He was more cruel than the plague, for you
could flee before the plague, but not before this murderer, as the case of
Richis had proved. Apparently he possessed supernatural powers. He was most
certainly in league with the devil, if he was not tue devil himself. And so
many people, especially the simpler souls, knew no better course than to go to
church and pray, every tradesman to his patron: the locksmiths to St. Aloysius,
the weavers to St. Crispin, the gardeners to St. Anthony, the perfumers to St.
Joseph. And they took their wives and daughters with them, praying together,
eating and sleeping in the church; they did not leave during the day themselves
now, convinced that the only possible refuge from this monster-if any refuge
was to be had-was under the protection of the despairing parish and the gaze of
the Madonna.
Seeing that the church had
failed once already, other, quicker wits banded together in occult groups.
Hiring at great expense a certified witch from Gour-don, they crept into one of
the many limestone grottoes of subterranean Gasser and celebrated black masses
to curry the Old Gentleman’s favor. Still others, in particular members of the
upper middle class and the educated nobility, put their money on the most
modern scientific methods, magnetizing their houses, hypnotizing their
daughters, gathering in their salons for secret fluidal meetings, and employing
telepathy to drive off the murderer’s spirit with communal thought emissions.
The guilds organized a penitential procession from Gasser to La Napoleon and
back. The monks from the town’s five monasteries established services of
perpetual prayer and ceaseless chants, so that soon unbroken lamentation was
heard day and night, now on one street comer, now on another. Hardly anyone
worked.
Thus, with feverish passivity
and something very like impatience, the people of Grasse awaited the murderer’s
next blow. No one doubted that it would fall. And secretly everyone yearned to
hear the horrible news, if only in the hope that it would not be about him, but
someone else.
This time, however, the
civil, regional, and provincial authorities did not allow themselves to be
infected by the hysterical mood of the citizenry. For the first time since the
murderer of maidens had appeared on the scene, well-planned and effective
cooperative efforts were instituted among the prefectures of Grasse,
Draguignan, and Toulon, among magistrates, police, commissaries, parliament,
and the navy.
This cooperation among the
powerful arose partly from fear of a general civil uprising, partly from the
fact that only since Laure Richis’s murder did they have clues that made
systematic pursuit of the murderer possible for the first time. The murderer
had been seen. Obviously they were dealing with the ominous journeyman tanner
who had spent the night of the murder in the inn stables and disappeared the
next morning without a trace. According to the joint testimony of the
innkeeper, the groom, and Richis, he was a nondescript, shortish fellow with a
brownish coat and a coarse linen knapsack. Although in other respects the
recollections of the three witnesses remained unusually vague-they had been
unable to describe the man’s face, hair color, or manner of speech-the
innkeeper did add that, if he was not mistaken, he had noticed something
awkward or limping about the stranger’s posture and gait, as if he had a
wounded leg or a crippled foot.
Armed
with these clues, two mounted troops had taken up pursuit of the murderer by
noon of the same day, following the Mar6chaussee in the direction of
Marseille-one along the coast, the other taking the inland road. The environs
of La Napoule were combed by volunteers. Two commissioners from the provincial
court at Grasse traveled to Nice to make inquiries about journeyman tanners.
All ships departing from the ports of Frejus, Cannes, and Antibes were checked;
the roads leading across the border into Savoy were blocked and travelers
required to identify themselves. For those who could read, an arrest warrant
and description of the culprit appeared on all the town gates of Grasse, Vence,
and Gourdon, and on village church doors. Town criers made three announcements
daily. The report of a suspected club-foot, of course, merely confirmed the
view that the culprit was none other than the devil himself and tended more to
arouse panic among the populace than to bring in useful information.
But only
after the presiding judge of the court in Grasse had, on Richis’s behalf,
offered a reward of no less than two hundred livres for information leading to
the apprehension of the murderer did denunciations bring about the arrest of
several journeyman tanners in Grasse, Opio, and Gourdon-one of whom indeed had
the rotten luck of limping. They were already considering subjecting the man to
torture despite a solid alibi supported by several witnesses, when, ten days
after the murder, a man from the city watch appeared at the magistrate’s office
and gave the following deposition: At noon on the day in question, he, Gabriel Tagliasco,
captain of the guard, while engaged in his customary duties at the Porte du
Cours, had been approached by an individual, who, as he now realized, fit the
description in the warrant almost exactly, and had been questioned repeatedly
and insistently concerning the road by which the second consul and his caravan
had departed the city that same morning. He had ascribed no importance to the
incident, neither then nor later, and would most certainly have been unable to
recall the individual purely on the basis of his own memory-so thoroughly
unremarkable was the man-had he not seen him by chance only yesterday, right
here in Grasse, in the rue de la Louve, in front of the studio of Maitre Druot
and Madame Arnulfi, on which occasion he had noticed that as the man walked
back into the workshop he had a definite limp.
Grenouille
was arrested an hour later. The innkeeper and his groom from La Napoule, who
were
in Grasse to identify the other suspects,
immediately recognized him as the journeyman tanner who had spent the night
with them: it was he, and no other— this must be the wanted murderer.
They searched the workshop,
they searched the cabin in the olive grove behind the Franciscan cloister. In
one comer, hardly hidden, lay the shredded nightgown, the undershirt, and the
red hair of Laure Richis. And when they dug up the floor, piece by piece the
clothes and hair of the other twenty-four girls came to light. The wooden club
used to kill the victims was found, and the linen knapsack. The evidence was
overwhelming. The order was given to toll the church bells. The presiding judge
announced by proclamation and public notice that the infamous murderer of young
girls, sought now for almost one year, had finally been captured and was in
custody.
Forty-eight
A T FIRST people did not believe the report. They assumed it was a
ruse by which the officials were
covering up their own incompetence and attempting to calm the dangerously
explosive mood of the populace. People remembered only too well when the word
had been that the murderer had departed for Grenoble. This time fear had set
its jaws too firmly into their souls.
Not until the next day, when
the evidence was displayed on the church square in front of the provost
court-and it was a ghastly sight to behold, twenty-five garments with
twenty-five crops of hair, all mounted like scarecrows on poles set up across
the top of the square opposite the cathedral-did public opinion change.
Hundreds of people filed by
the macabre gallery. The victims’ relatives would recognize the clothes and
collapse screaming. The rest of the crowd, partly because they were sensation
seekers, partly because they wanted to be totally convinced, demanded to see
the murderer. The call soon became so loud, the unrest of the churning crowd in
the small square so menacing, that the presiding judge decided to have
Grenouille brought up out of his cell and to exhibit him at the window on the
second floor of the provost court.
As Grenouille appeared at the
window, the roar turned to silence. All at once it was as totally quiet as if
this were noon on a hot summer day, when everyone is oat in the fields or has
crept into the shade of his own home. Not a footfall, not a cough, not a breath
was to be heard. The crowd was all eyes and one mouth agape, for minutes on
end. Not a soul could comprehend how this short, paltry, stoop-shouldered man
there at the window-this mediocrity, this miserable nonentity, this
cipher-could have committed more than two dozen murders. He simply did not look
like a murdefer. No one could have said just how he had imagined the murderer,
the devil himself, ought to look, but they were all agreed: not like this! And
nevertheless-although the murderer did not in the least match their conception,
and the exhibition, one would presume, could not have been less
convincing-simply because of the physical reality of this man at the window,
because he and no other was presented to them as the murderer, the effect was
paradoxically persuasive. They all thought: It simply can’t be true!-and at the
very same moment knew that it had to be true.
To be sure, only after the
guards had led the mannikin bade into the shadows of the room, only after he
was no longer present and visible but existed, if for the briefest time, merely
as a memory, one might almost say as a concept, the concept of an abominable
murderer within people’s brains, only then did the crowd’s bewilderment subside
and make away for an appropriate reaction: the mouths closed tight, the
thousand eyes came alive again. And then there rang out as if in one voice a
thundering cry of rage and revenge: “We want him!” And they set about to storm
the provost court, to strangle him with their own hands, to tear him apart and
scatter the pieces. It was all the guards could do to barricade the gate and
force the mob back. Grenouille was promptly returned to his dungeon. The
presiding judge appeared at the window and promised a trial remarkable for its
swift and implacable justice. It took several hours, however, for the crowd to
disperse, and several days for the town to quiet down to any extent.
The proceedings against Grenouille
did indeed move at an extraordinarily rapid pace, not only because the evidence
was overwhelming, but also because the accused himself freely confessed to all
the murders charged against him.
But when
asked about his motives, he had no convincing answer to give them. His repeated
reply was that he had needed the girls and that was why he had slain them. What
had he needed them for or
what was that supposed to mean, “he needed
them”?-to that he was silent. They then subjected him to torture, hanged him by
his feet for hours, pumped him full of seven pints of water, put clamps on his
feet-without the least success. The man seemed immune to physical pain, did not
utter a sound, and when questioned again replied with nothing more than: “I
needed them.” The judges considered him insane. They discontinued the torture
and decided to bring the case to an end without further interrogation.
The only delay that occurred
after that was a legal squabble with the magistrate of Draguignan, in whose
jurisdiction La Napoule was located, and with the parliament in Aix, both of
whom wanted to take over the trial themselves. But the judges of Grasse would not
let the matter be wrested from them now. They were the ones who had arrested
the culprit, the overwhelming majority of the murders had been committed in the
area under their jurisdiction, and if they handed the murderer over to another
court, there was the threat of the pent-up anger of the citizenry. His blood
would have to flow in Grasse.
On April 15, 1766, a verdict
was rendered and read to the accused in his cell: “The journeyman perfumer,
Jean-Baptiste Grenouille,” it stated, “shall within the next forty-eight hours
be led out to the parade ground before the city gates and there be bound to a
wooden cross, his face toward heaven, and while still alive be dealt twelve
blows with an iron rod, breaking the joints of his arms, legs, hips, and
shoulders, and then, still bound to the cross, be raised up to hang until
death.” The customary act of mercy, by which the offender was strangled with a
cord once his body had been crushed, was expressly forbidden the executioner,
even if the agonies of death should take days. The body was to be buried by
night in an unmarked grave in the knacker’s yard.
Grenouille received the
verdict without emotion. The bailiff asked him if he had a last wish. “No,
nothing,” Grenouille said; he had everything he needed.
A priest entered the cell to
hear his confession, but came out again after fifteen minutes with nothing
accomplished. When he had mentioned the name of God, the condemned man had
looked at him with total incomprehension, as if he had heard the name for the
first time, had then stretched out on his plank bed and sunk at once into a
deep sleep. To have said another word would have been pointless.
During the next two days,
many people came to see the famous murderer at close range. The guards let them
peek through the shutter in the door and demanded six sol per peek. An etcher,
who wanted to prepare a sketch, had to pay two francs. His subject, however,
was rather a disappointment. The prisoner, bound at his wrists and ankles, lay
on his plank bed the whole time and slept. His face was turned to the wall, and
he responded to neither knocks nor shouts. Visitors were strictly banned from
the cell, and despite some tempting offers, the guards did not dare disregard
this prohibition. It was feared the prisoner might be murdered ahead of time by
a relative of one of his victims. For the same reason no one was allowed to
offer him food. It might have been poisoned. During the whole period of
imprisonment, Grenouille’s food came from the servants’ kitchen in the bishop’s
palace and had first to be tasted by the prison warden. The last two days,
however, he ate nothing at all. He lay on his bed and slept. Occasionally his
chains rattled, and if the guard hurried over to the shutter, he could watch
Grenouille take a drink from his canteen, then throw himself back on his plank
bed, and go back to sleep. It seemed as if the man was so tired of life that he
did not want to experience his last hours awake.
Meanwhile
the parade grounds were readied for the execution. Carpenters built a scaffold,
nine feet by nine feet square and six feet high, with a railing and a sturdy
set of stairs-Grasse had never had one as fine as this. Plus a wooden
grandstand for local notables and a fence to separate them from the common
people, who were to be kept at some distance. In the buildings to the left and
right of the Porte du Cours and in the guardhouse itself, places at the windows
had long since been rented out at exorbitant rates. The executioner’s
assistants had even leased the rooms of the patients in the Charit6, which was
located off to one side, and resold them to curious spectators at a handsome
profit. The lemonade vendors stocked up with pitcherfuls of licorice water, the
etcher printed up several hundred copies of the sketch he had made of the
murderer in prison-touched up a bit from his own imagination-itinerant peddlers
streamed into town by the dozens, the bakers baked souvenir cookies.
The executioner, Monsieur
Papon, who had not had an offender to smash for years now, had a heavy, squared
iron rod forged for him and went off to the slaughterhouse to practice blows on
carcasses. He was permitted only tweive hits,
and he had to strike true, crushing all twelve joints without damaging the
vital body parts, like the chest or head-a difficult business that demanded a
fine touch and good timing.
The citizens readied
themselves for the event as if for a high holiday. That there would be no work
that day went without saying. The women ironed their holiday dresses, the men
dusted off their frock coats and had their boots polished to a high gloss.
Whoever held military rank or occupied public office, whoever was a guild
master, an attomey-at-law, a notary, a head of a fraternal order, or held any
other position of importance, donned his uniform or official garb, along with
his medals, sashes, chains, and periwig powdered to a chalky white. Pious folk
intended to assemble immediately afterwards for religious services, the
disciples of Satan planned a hearty Luci-ferian mass of thanksgiving, the
educated aristocracy were going to gather for magnetic seances at the manors of
the Cabris, Villeneuves, and Fontmichels. The roasting and baking had begun in
the kitchens, the wine had been fetched from the cellars, the floral displays
from the market, and the organist and choir were practicing in the cathedral.
In the Richis household on
the rue Droite everything remained quiet. Richis had forbidden any preparations
for the “Day of Liberation,” as people were calling the murderer’s execution
day. It all disgusted him. The sudden eruption of renewed fear among the
populace had disgusted him, their feverish joy of anticipation disgusted him.
The people themselves, every one of them, disgusted him. He had not
participated in the presentation of the culprit and his victims in the
cathedral square, nor in the trial, nor in the obscene procession of sensation
seekers filing past the cell of the condemned man. He had requested that the
court come to his home for him to identify his daughter’s hair and clothing,
had given his testimony briefly and calmly, and had asked that they leave him
those items as keepsakes, which they did. He carried them to Laure’s room, laid
the shredded nightgown and undershirt on her bed, spread the red hair over the
pillow, sat down beside them, and did not leave the room again day or night, as
if by pointlessly standing guard now, he could make good what he had neglected
to do that night in La Napoule. He was so full of disgust, disgust at the world
and at himself, that he could not weep.
He was
also disgusted by the murderer. He did not want to regard him as a human being,
but only as a victim to be slaughtered. He did not want to see him until the
execution, when he would be laid on the cross and the twelve blows crashed down
upon him— then he would want to see him, want to see him from up close, and he
had had a place reserved for himself in the front row. And when the crowd had
wandered off after a few hours, he wanted to climb up onto the bloody scaffold
and crouch next to him, keeping watch, by night, by day, for however long he
had to, and look into the eyes of this man, the murderer of his daughter, and
drop by drop to trickle the disgust within him into those eyes, to pour out his
disgust like burning acid over the man in his death agonies-until the beast
perished…
And after that? What would he
do after that? He did not know. Perhaps resume his normal life, perhaps get
married, perhaps father a son, perhaps do nothing at all, perhaps die. It made
no difference whatever to him. To think about it seemed to him as pointless as
to think about what he would do after his own death: nothing, of course.
Nothing that he could know at this point.
Forty-nine
T HE EXECUTION was scheduled for five in the
afternoon. The first spectators had arrived by morning and secured themselves places. They brought chairs and
footstools with them, pillows, food, wine, and their children. Around noon,
masses of country people streamed in from all directions, and the parade
grounds were soon so packed that new arrivals had to camp along the road to
Grenoble and on the terracelike gardens and fields that rose at the far end of
the area. Vendors were already doing a brisk business-people ate, people drank,
everything hummed and simmered as at a country fair. Soon there were a good ten
thousand people gathered, more than for the crowning of the Queen of the
Jasmine, more than for the largest guild procession, more than Grasse had ever
seen before. They stood far up on the slopes. They hung in the trees, they
squatted atop walls and on the roofs, they pressed together ten or twelve to a
window. Only in the center of the grounds, protected by the fence barricade, as
if stamped and cut from the dough of the crowd, was there still an open space
for the grandstand and the scaffold, which suddenly appeared very small, like a
toy or the stage of a puppet
theater. And one pathway was left open, leading from the place of execution to the Porte du Cours and into the rue Droite.
Shortly after three, Monsieur
Papon and his henchmen appeared. The applause swept forward like thunder. They
carried two wooden beams forming a St. Andrew’s cross to the scaffold and set
it at a good working height by propping it up on four carpenter’s horses. A
journeyman carpenter nailed it down. Every move, every gesture of the deputy
executioners and the carpenter was greeted by the crowd’s applause. And when
Papon stepped forward with his iron rod, walked around the cross, measuring his
steps, striking an imaginary blow now on one side, now on the other, there was
an eruption of downright jubilation.
At four, the grandstand began
to fill. There were many fine folk to admire, rich gentlemen with lackeys and
fine manners, beautiful women, big hats, shimmering clothes. The whole of the
nobility from both town and country was on hand. The gentlemen of the council
appeared in closed rank, the two consuls at their head. Richis was dressed in
black, with black stockings and a black hat. Behind the council the magistrates
marched in, led by the presiding judge of the court. Last of all, in an open
sedan chair came the bishop, wearing gleaming purple vestments and a little
green hat. Whoever still had his cap on doffed it now to be sure. This was
awe-inspiring.
Then nothing happened for
about ten minutes. The lords and ladies had taken their places, the common folk
waited impassively; no one was eating now, they all waited. Papon and his
henchmen stood on the scaffold platform as if they too had been nailed down.
The sun hung large and yellow over the Esterel. From the valley of Grasse a
warm wind came up, bearing with it the scent of orange blossoms. It was very
warm and almost implausibly still.
Finally, when it seemed the
tension could last no longer without its bursting into a thousand-voiced
scream, into a tumult, a frenzy, or some other mob scene, above the stillness
they heard the clatter of horses and the creaking of wheels.
Down the rue Droite came a
carriage drawn by a pair of horses, the police lieutenant’s carriage. It drove
through the city gate and reappeared for all to see in the narrow path leading
to the scaffold. The police lieutenant had insisted on this manner of arrival,
since otherwise he could not guarantee the safety of the convicted man. It was
certainly not the customary practice. The prison was hardly five minutes away
from the place of execution, and if a condemned man, for whatever reason, could
not have managed the short distance on foot, then he would have traveled it in
an open donkey cart. That a man should be driven to his own execution in a
coach, with a driver, liveried footmen, and a mounted guard-no one had ever
seen anything like that.
And nevertheless, there was
no sign of unrest or displeasure among the crowd-on the contrary. People were
satisfied that at least something was happening, considered the idea of the
coach a clever stroke, just as at the theater people enjoy a familiar play when
it is presented in some surprisingly new fashion. Many even thought the grand
entrance appropriate. Such an extraordinarily abominable criminal deserved
extraordinary treatment. You couldn’t drag him to the scaffold in chains like a
common thief and kill him. There would have been nothing sensational about
that. But to lead him from his upholstered equipage to the St. Andrew’s
cross-that was an incomparably imaginative bit of cruelty.
The carriage stopped midway
between the scaffold and the grandstand. The footmen jumped down, opened the
carriage door, and folded down the steps. The police lieutenant climbed out,
behind him an officer of the guard, and finally Grenouille. He was wearing a
blue frock coat, a white shirt, white silk stockings, and buckled black shoes.
He was not bound. No one led him by the arm. He got out of the carriage as if
he were a free man.
And then a miracle occurred.
Or something very like a miracle, or at least something so incomprehensible, so
unprecedented, and so unbelievable that everyone who witnessed it would have called
it a miracle afterwards if they had taken the notion to speak of it at
all-which was not the case, since afterwards every single one of them was
ashamed to have had any part in it whatever.
What
happened was that from one moment to the next, the ten thousand people on the
parade grounds and on the slopes surrounding it felt themselves infused with
the unshakable belief that the man in the blue frock coat who had just climbed
out of the carriage could not possibly be a murderer. Not that they doubted his
identity! The man standing there was the same one whom they had seen just a few
days before at the window of the provost court on the church square and whom,
had they been
able to get their hands on him, they would have
lynched with savage hatred. The same one who only two days before had been
lawfully condemned on the basis of overwhelming evidence and his own
confession. The same one whose slaughter at the hands of the executioner they
had eagerly awaited only a few minutes before. It was he-no doubt of it!
And
yet-it was not he either, it could not be he, he could not be a murderer. The
man who stood at the scaffold was innocence personified. All of them-from the
bishop to the lemonade vendor, from the marquis to the little washerwoman, from
the presiding judge to the street urchin-knew it in a flash.
Papon knew it too. And his
great hands, still clutching the iron rod, trembled. All at once his strong
arms were as weak, his knees as wobbly, his heart as anxious as a child’s. He
would not be able to lift that rod, would never in his life have the strength
to lift it against this little, innocent man-oh, he dreaded the moment when
they would lead him forward; he tottered, had to prop himself up with his
death-dealing rod to keep from sinking feebly to his knees, the great, the
mighty Papon!
The ten thousand men and
women, children and patriarchs assembled there felt no different-they grew weak
as young maidens who have succumbed to the charms of a lover. They were
overcome by a powerful sense of goodwill, of tenderness, of crazy, childish
infatuation, yes, God help them, of love for this little homicidal man, and
they were unable, unwilling to do anything about it. It was like a fit of
weeping you cannot fight down, like tears that have been held back too long and
rise up from deep within you, dissolving whatever resists them, liquefying it,
and flushing it away. These people were now pure liquid, their spirits and
minds were melted; nothing was left but an amorphous fluid, and all they could
feel was their hearts floating and sloshing about within them, and they laid
those hearts, each man, each woman, in the hands of the little man in the blue
frock coat, for better or worse. They loved him.
Grenouille had been standing
at the open carriage door for several minutes now, not moving at all. The
footman next to him had sunk to his knees, and sank farther still until achieving
the fully prostrate position customary in the Orient before a sultan or Allah.
And even in this posture, he still quivered and swayed, trying to sink even
farther, to lie flat upon the earth, to lie within it, under it. He wanted to
sink to the opposite side of the world out of pure subservience. The officer of
the guard and the police lieutenant, doughty fellows both, whose duty it was
now to lead the condemned man to the scaffold and hand him over to his
executioner, could no longer manage anything like a coordinated action. They
wept and removed their hats, put them back on, cast themselves to the ground,
fell into each other’s arms, withdrew again, flapped their arms absurdly in the
air, wrung their hands, twitched and grimaced like victims of St. Vitus’s
dance.
The noble personages, being
somewhat farther away, abandoned themselves to their emotions with hardly more
discretion. Each gave free rein to the urges of his or her heart. There were
women who with one look at Grenouille thrust their fists into their laps and
sighed with bliss; and others who, in their burning desire for this splendid
young man-for so he appeared to them-fainted dead away without further ado.
There were gentlemen who kept springing up and sitting down and leaping up
again, snorting vigorously and grasping the hilts of their swords as if to draw
them, and then when they did, each thrusting his blade back in so that it
rattled and clattered; and others who cast their eyes mutely to heaven and
clenched their hands in prayer; and there was Monsei-gneur the Bishop, who, as
if he had been taken ill, slumped forward and banged his forehead against his
knees, sending his little green hat rolling-when in fact he was not ill at all,
but rather for the first time in his life basking in religious rapture, for a
miracle had occurred before their very eyes, the Lord God had personally stayed
the executioner’s hand by disclosing as an angel the very man who had for all
the world appeared a murderer. Oh, that such a thing had happened, here in the
eighteenth century. How great was the Lord! And how small and petty was he
himself, who had spoken his anathema, without himself believing it, merely to
pacify the populace! Oh, what presumption! Oh, what lack of faith! And now the
Lord had performed a miracle! Oh, what splendid humiliation, what sweet
abasement, what grace to be a bishop thus chastised by God.
Meanwhile
the masses on the other side of the barricade were giving themselves over ever
more shamelessly to the uncanny rush of emotion that Grenouille’s appearance
had unleashed. Those who at the start had merely felt sympathy and compassion
were now filled with naked, insatiable desire, and those who had at first
admired and desired were now driven to ecstasy. They all regarded the man in the
blue frock coat as the most handsome, attractive, and perfect creature they
could imagine: to the
nuns he appeared to be the Savior in person, to
the satanists as the shining Lord of Darkness, to those who were citizens of
the Enlightenment as the Highest Principle, to young maidens as a fairy-tale
prince, to men as their ideal image of themselves. And they all felt as if he
had seen through them at their most vulnerable point, grasped them, touched
their erotic core. It was as if the man had ten thousand invisible hands and
had laid a hand on the genitals of the ten thousand people surrounding him and
fondled them in just the way that each of them, whether man or woman, desired
in his or her most secret fantasies.
The result was that the
scheduled execution of one of the most abominable criminals of the age
degenerated into the largest orgy the world had seen since the second century
before Christ. Respectable women ripped open their blouses, bared their
breasts, cried out hysterically, threw themselves on the ground with skirts
hitched high. The men’s gazes stumbled madly over this landscape of straddling
flesh; with quivering fingers they tugged to pull from their trousers their
members frozen stiff by some invisible frost; they fell down anywhere with a
groan and copulated in the most impossible positions and combinations:
grandfather with virgin, odd-jobber with lawyer’s spouse, apprentice with nun,
Jesuit with Freemason’s wife— all topsy-turvy, just as opportunity presented.
The air was heavy with the sweet odor of sweating lust and filled with loud
cries, grunts, and moans from ten thousand human beasts. It was infernal.
Grenouille stood there and
smiled. Or rather, it seemed to the people who saw him that he was smiling, the
most innocent, loving, enchanting, and at the same time most seductive smile in
the world. But in fact it was not a smile, but an ugly, cynical smirk that lay
upon his lips, reflecting both his total triumph and his total contempt. He,
Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, born with no odor of his own on the most stinking
spot in this world, amid garbage, dung, and putrefaction, raised without love,
with no warmth of a human soul, surviving solely on impudence and the power of
loathing, small, hunchbacked, lame, ugly, shunned, an abomination within and
without-he had managed to make the world admire him. To hell with admire! Love
him! Desire him! Idolize him! He had performed a Promethean feat. He had persevered
until, with infinite cunning, he had obtained for himself that divine spark,
something laid gratis in the cradle of every other human being but withheld
from him alone. And not merely that! He had himself actually struck that spark
upon himself. He was even greater than Prometheus. He had created an aura more
radiant and more effective than any human being had ever possessed before him.
And he owed it to no one-not to a father, nor a mother, and least of all to a
gracious God-but to himself alone. He was in very truth his own God, and a more
splendid God than the God that stank of incense and was quartered in churches.
A flesh-and-blood bishop was on his knees before him, whimpering with pleasure.
The rich and the mighty, proud ladies and gentlemen, were fawning in adoration,
while the common folk all around-among them the fathers, mothers, brothers, and
sisters of his victims-celebrated an oigy in his honor and in his name. A nod
of his head and they would all renounce their God and worship him, Grenouille
the Great.
Yes, he was Grenouille the
Great! Now it had become manifest. It was he, just as in his narcissistic
fantasies of old, but now in reality. And in that moment he experienced the
greatest triumph of his life. And he was terrified.
He was terrified because he
could not eajoy one second of it. In that moment as he stepped out of the
carriage into the bright sunlight of the parade grounds, clad in the perfume
that made people love him, the perfume on which he had worked for two years,
the perfume that he had thirsted to possess his whole life long… in that
moment, as he saw and smelted how irresistible its effect was and how with
lightning speed it spread and made captives of the people all around him-in
that moment his whole disgust for humankind rose up again within him and
completely soured his triumph, so that he felt not only no joy, but not even
the least bit of satisfaction. What he had always longed for-that other people
should love him-became at the moment of its achievement unbearable, because he
did not love them himself, he hated them. And suddenly he knew that he had
never found gratification in love, but always only in hatred -in hating and in
being hated.
But the hate he felt for
people remained without an echo. The more he hated them at this moment, the
more they worshiped him, for they perceived only his counterfeit aura, his
fragrant disguise, his stolen perfume, and it was indeed a scent to be
worshiped.
He would have loved right now
to have exterminated these people from the earth, every stupid, stinking,
eroticized one of them, just as he had once exterminated alien odors from the
world of his
raven-black soul. And he wanted them to realize
how much he hated them and for them, realizing that it was the only emotion
that he had ever truly felt, to return that hate and exterminate him just as
they had originally intended. For once in his life, he wanted to empty himself.
For once in his life, he wanted to be like other people and empty himself of
what was inside him— what they did with their love and their stupid adoration,
he would do with his hate. For once, just for once, he wanted to be apprehended
in his true being, for other human beings to respond with an answer to his only
true emotion, hatred.
But
nothing came of that. Nothing could ever come of it. And most certainly not on
this day. For after all, he was masked with the best perfume in the world, and
beneath his mask there was no face, but only his total odorlessness. Suddenly
he was sick to his stomach, for he felt the fog rising again.
Just as it had back then in
his cave, in his dream, in his sleep, in his heart, in his fantasy, all at once
fog was rising, the dreadful fog from his own odor, which he could not smell,
because he was odorless. And just as then, he was filled with boundless fear
and terror, felt as if he were going to suffocate. But this time it was
different, this was no dream, no sleep, but naked reality. And different, too,
because he was not lying alone in a cave, but standing in a public place before
ten thousand people. And different because here no scream would help to wake
and free him, no flight would rescue him and bring him into the good, warm
world. For here and now, this was the world, and this, here and now, was his
dream come true. And he had wanted it thus.
The horrible, suffocating fog
rose up from the morass of his soul, while all around him people moaned in orgiastic
and orgasmic rapture. A man came running up to him. He had leapt up out of the
first row of the notables’ grandstand so violently that his black hat toppled
from his head, and now with his black frock coat billowing, he fluttered across
the parade grounds like a raven or an avenging angel. It was Richis.
He is going to kill me,
thought Grenouille. He is the only one who has not let himself be deceived by
my mask. He won’t let himself be deceived. The scent of his daughter is
clinging to me, betraying me as surely as blood. He has got to recognize me and
kill me. He has got to do it.
And he
spread his arms wide to receive the angel storming down upon him. He already
could feel the thrust of the dagger or sword tickling so wonderfully at his breast,
and the blade passing through his armor of scent and the suffocating fog, right
to the middle of his cold heart-finally, finally, something in his heart,
something other than himself! And he sensed his deliverance already at hand.
And then, suddenly, there was
Richis at his breast, no avenging angel, but a shaken, pitiably sobbing Richis,
who threw his arms around him, clutching him very tight, as if he could find no
other footing in a sea of bliss. No liberating thrust of the dagger, no prick
to the heart, not even a curse or a cry of hatred. Instead, Richis’s cheek wet
with tears glued to his, and quivering lips that whimpered to him: “Forgive me,
my son, my dear son, forgive me!”
With that, everything within
him went white before his eyes, while the world outside turned raven black.
The trapped fog condensed to
a raging liquid, like frothy, boiling milk. It inundated him, pressed its
unbearable weight against the inner shell of his body, could find no way out.
He wanted to flee, for God’s sake, to flee, but where… He wanted to burst, to
explode, to keep from suffocating on himself. Finally he sank down and lost
consciousness.
Fifty
W HEN HE again came to, he was lying in Laure Richis’s bed. The
reliquary of clothes and hair had
been removed. A candle was burning on the night table. The window was ajar, and
he could hear the exultation of the town’s revels in the distance. An-toine
Richis was sitting on a footstool beside the bed watching him. He had placed
Grenouille’s hand in his own and was stroking it.
Even before he opened his
eyes, Grenouille had checked the atmosphere. Everything was quiet within him.
There was no more boiling or bursting. His soul was again dominated as usual by
cold night, just what he needed for a frosty and clear conscious mind to be
directed to the outside world: there he smelled his perfume. It had changed.
Its peaks had leveled off so that the core of Laure’s scent emerged more
splendidly than ever-a mild, dark, glowing fire. He felt secure. He knew that
he was unassailable for a few hours yet, and he opened his eyes.
Richis’s gaze rested on him.
An infinite benevolence lay in that gaze: tenderness, compassion, the empty,
fatuous profundity of a lover.
He smiled, pressed
Grenouille’s hand more tightly, and said, “It will all turn out all right. The
magistrate has overturned the verdict. All the witnesses have recanted. You are
free. You can do whatever you want. But I would like you to stay here with me.
I have lost a daughter, but I want to gain you as my son. You’re very much like
her. You are beautiful like her, your hair, your mouth, your hand… I have been
holding your hand all this time, your hand is like hers. And when I look into
your eyes, it’s as if she were looking at me. You are her brother, and I want
you to become my son, my friend, my pride and joy, my heir. Are your parents
still alive?”
Grenouille shook his head,
and Richis’s face turned beet red for joy. “Then will you be my son?” he
stammered, jumping up from his stool to sit on the edge of the bed and clasp
Grenouille’s other hand as well. “Will you? Will you? Will you have me for a father?-Don’t
say anything! Don’t speak! You are still too weak to talk. Just nod”
Grenouille nodded. And joy
erupted from Richis’s every pore like scarlet sweat, and he bent down to
Grenouille and kissed him on the mouth.
“Sleep now, my dear son!” he said,
standing back up again. “I will keep watch over you until you have fallen
asleep.” And after he had observed him in mute bliss for a long time: “You have
made me very, very happy.”
Grenouille pulled the corners
of his mouth apart, the way he had noticed people do when they smile. Then he
closed his eyes. He waited a while before letting his respiration grow easy and
deep like a sleeper’s. He could feel Richis’s loving gaze on his face. At one
point he felt Richis bending forward again to kiss him, but then refraining for
fear of waking him. Finally the candle was blown out, and Richis slipped on
tiptoe from the room.
Grenouille lay there until he
could no longer hear a sound in the house or the town. When he got up, it was
already dawn. He dressed and stole away, softly down the hall, softly down the
stairs, and through the salon out onto the terrace.
From there you could see over
the city wall, out across the valley surrounding Grasse-in clear weather
probably as far as the sea. A light fog, or better a haze, hung now over the
fields, and the odors that came from them-grass, broom, and rose-seemed washed
clean, comfortably plain and simple. Grenouille crossed the garden and climbed
over the wall.
Out on the parade grounds he
had to fight his way through human effluvia before he reached open country. The
whole area and the slopes looked like a gigantic, debauched army camp. Drunken
forms by the thousands lay all about, exhausted by the dissipations of their
nocturnal festivities, many of them naked, many half exposed, half covered by
their clothes, which they had used as a sort of blanket to creep under. It
stank of sour wine, of brandy, of sweat and piss, of baby shit and charred
meat. The camp-fires where they had roasted, drunk, and danced were still
smoking here and there. Now and then a murmur or a snigger would gurgle up from
the thousands of snores. It was possible that a few people were still awake,
guzzling away the last scraps of consciousness from their brains. But no one
saw Grenouille, who carefully but quickly climbed over the scattered bodies as
if moving across a swamp. And those who saw him did not recognize him. He no
longer had any scent. The miracle was over.
Once he had crossed the
grounds, he did not take the road toward Grenoble, nor the one to Cabris, but
walked straight across the fields toward the west, never once turning to look
back. When the sun rose, fat and yellow and scorching hot, he had long since
vanished.
The people of Grasse awoke
with a terrible hangover. Even those who had not drunk had heads heavy as lead
and were wretchedly sick to their stomachs and wretchedly sick at heart. Out on
the parade grounds, by bright sunlight, simple peasants searched for the
clothes they had flung off in the excesses of their orgy; respectable women
searched for their husbands and children; total strangers unwound themselves in
horror from intimate embraces; acquaintances, neighbors, spouses were suddenly
standing opposite each other painfully embarrassed by their public nakedness.
For many of them the
experience was so ghastly, so completely inexplicable and incompatible with
their genuine moral precepts that they had literally erased it from their
memories the moment it happened and as a result truly could not recall any of
it later. Others, who were not in such sovereign control of their faculties of
perception, tried to shut their eyes, their ears, their minds to it-which was
not all that easy, for the shame of it was too
obvious and too universal. As soon as someone had found his effects and his
kin, he beat as hasty and inconspicuous a retreat as possible. By noon the
grounds were as good as swept clean.
The townspeople did not
emerge from their houses until evening, if at all, to pursue their most
pressing errands. Their greetings when they met were of the most cursory sort;
they made nothing but small talk. Not a word was said about the events of the
morning and the previous night. They were as modest now as they had been
uninhibited and brash yesterday. And they were all like that, for they were all
guilty. Never was there greater harmony among the citizens of Grasse than on
that day-people lived packed in cotton.
Of course, many of them,
because of the offices they held, were forced to deal directly with what had
happened. The continuity of public life, the inviolability of law and order
demanded that swift measures be taken. The town council was in session by
afternoon. The gentlemen-the second consul among them-embraced one another
mutely as if by this conspiratorial gesture the body were newly constituted.
Then without so much as mentioning the events themselves or even the name Grenouille,
they unanimously resolved “immediately to have the scaffold and grandstand on
the parade grounds dismantled and to have the trampled fields surrounding them
restored to their former orderly state.” For this purpose, 160 livres were
appropriated.
At the same time the judges
met at the provost court. The magistrates agreed without debate to regard the
“case of G.” as settled, to close the files, to place them in the archives
without registry, and to open new proceedings against the thus-far unidentified
murderer of twenty-five maidens in the region around Grasse. The order was
passed to the police lieutenant to begin his investigation immediately.
By the
next day, he had already made new discoveries. On the basis of incontrovertible
evidence, he arrested Dominique Druot, maitre parfumeur in the rue de la Louve,
since, after all, it was in his cabin that the clothes and hair of all the
victims had been found. The judges were not deceived by the lies he told at
first. After fourteen hours of torture, he confessed everything and even begged
to be executed as soon as possible-which wish was granted and the execution set
for the following day. They strung him up by the gray light of dawn, without
any fuss, without scaffold or grandstand, with only the hangman, a magistrate
of the court, a doctor, and a priest in attendance. Once death had occurred,
had been verified and duly recorded, the body was promptly buried. With that
the case was closed.
The town had forgotten it in
any event, forgotten it so totally that travelers who passed through in the
days that followed and casually inquired about Grasse’s infamous murderer of
young maidens found not a single sane person who could give them any
information. Only a few fools from the Charite, notorious lunatics, babbled
something or other about a great feast on the place du Cours, on account of
which they had been forced to vacate their rooms.
And soon life had returned
completely to normal. People worked hard and slept well and went about their
business and behaved decently. Water gushed as it always had from the fountains
and wells, sending muck floating down the streets. Once again the town clung
shabbily but proudly to its slopes above the fertile basin. The sun shone
warmly. Soon it was May. They harvested roses.
PART
IV
Fifty-one
G RENOULLE TRAVELED by night. As he had done at the beginning of his
journeys, he steered clear of
cities, avoided highways, lay down to sleep at daybreak, arose in the evening,
and walked on. He fed on whatever he found on the way: grasses, mushrooms,
flowers, dead birds, worms. He marched through the Provence; south of Orange he
crossed the Rhone in a stolen boat, followed the Ardeche deep into the Cevennes
and then the Allier northwards.
In the Auvergne he drew close
to the Plomb du Cantal. He saw it lying to the west, huge and silver gray in
the moonlight, and he smelled the cool wind that came from it. But he felt no
urge to visit it. He no longer yearned for his life in the cave. He had
experienced that life once and it had
proved unlivable. Just as had his other
experience-life among human beings. He was suffocated by both worlds. He no
longer wanted to live at all. He wanted to go to Paris and die. That was what
he wanted.
From time to time he reached
in his pocket and closed his hand around the little glass flacon of his
perfume. The bottle was still almost full. He had used only a drop of it for
his performance in Grasse. There was enough left to enslave the whole world. If
he wanted, he could be feted in Paris, not by tens of thousands, but by
hundreds of thousands of people; or could walk out to Versailles and have the
king kiss his feet; write the pope a perfumed letter and reveal himself as the
new Messiah; be anointed in Notre-Dame as Supreme Emperor before kings and
emperors, or even as God come to earth-if there was such a thing as God having
Himself anointed…
He could do all that, if only
he wanted to. He possessed the power. He held it in his hand. A power stronger
than the power of money or the power of terror or the power of death: the
invincible power to command the love of mankind. There was only one thing that
power could not do: it could not make him able to smell himself. And though his
perfume might allow him to appear before the world as a god-if he could not
smell himself and thus never know who he was, to hell with it, with the world,
with himself, with his perfume.
The hand that had grasped the
flacon was fragrant with a faint scent, and when he put it to his nose and
sniffed, he grew wistful and forgot to walk on and stood there smelling. No one
knows how good this perfume really is, he thought. No one knows how well made
it is. Other people are merely conquered by its effect, don’t even know that
it’s a perfume that’s working on them, enslaving them. The only one who has
ever recognized it for its true beauty is me, because I created it myself. And
at the same time, I’m the only one that it cannot enslave. I am the only person
for whom it is meaningless.
And on another occasion-he
was already in Burgundy: When I was standing there at the wall below the garden
where the redheaded girl was playing and her scent came floating down to me…
or, better, the promise of her scent, for the scent she would carry later did
not even exist yet-maybe what I felt that day is like what the people on the
parade grounds felt when I flooded them with my perfume…? But then he cast the
thought aside: No, it was something else. Because I knew that I desired the
scent, not the girl. But those people believed that they desired me, and what
they really desired remained a mystery to them.
Then he thought no more, for
thinking was not his strong point, and then, too, he was already in the
Orleanais.
He crossed the Loire at
Sully. The next day he had the odor of Paris in his nose. On June 25, 1766, at
six in the morning, he entered the city via the rue Saint-Jacques.
It turned out to be a hot
day, the hottest of the year thus far. The thousands of odors and stenches
oozed out as if from thousands of festering boils. Not a breeze stirred. The
vegetables in the market stalls shriveled up. Meat and fish rotted. Tainted air
hung in the narrow streets. Even the river seemed to have stopped flowing, to
have stagnated. It stank. It was a day like the one on which Grenouille was
born.
He walked across the
Pont-Neuf to the right bank, and then down to Les Halles and the Cimetiere des
Innocents. He sat down in the arcades of the charnel house bordering the rue
aux Fers. Before him lay the cemetery grounds like a cratered battlefield,
burrowed and ditched and trenched with graves, sown with skulls and bones, not
a tree, bush, or blade of grass, a garbage dump of death.
Not a soul was to be seen.
The stench of corpses was so heavy that even the gravediggers had retreated.
Only after the sun had gone down did they come out again to scoop out holes for
the dead by torchlight until late into the night.
But then after midnight-the
gravediggers had left by then-the place came alive with all sorts of riffraff:
thieves, murderers, cutthroats, whores, deserters, young desperadoes. A small
campfire was lit for cooking and in the hope of masking the stench.
When Grenouille came out of
the arcades and mixed in with these people, they at first took no notice of
him. He was able to walk up to the fire unchallenged, as if he were one of
them. That later helped confirm the view that they must have been dealing with
a ghost or an angel or some other supernatural being. Because normally they
were very touchy about the approach of any stranger.
The little man in the blue
frock coat, however, had suddenly simply been there, as if he had
sprouted out of the ground, and he had had a
little bottle in his hand that he unstoppered. That was the first thing that
any of them could recall: that he had stood there and unstoppered a bottle. And
then he had sprinkled himself all over with the contents of the bottle and all
at once he had been bathed in beauty like blazing fire.
For a moment they fell back
in awe and pure amazement. But in the same instant they sensed their falling
back was more like preparing for a running start, that their awe was turning to
desire, their amazement to rapture. They felt themselves drawn to this angel of
a man. A frenzied, alluring force came from him, a riptide no human could have
resisted, all the less because no human would have wanted to resist it, for
what that tide was pulling under and dragging away was the human will itself:
straight to him.
They had formed a circle
around him, twenty, thirty people, and their circle grew smaller and smaller.
Soon the circle could not contain them all, they began to push, to shove, and to
elbow, each of them trying to be closest to the center.
And then all at once the last
inhibition collapsed within them, and the circle collapsed with it. They lunged
at the angel, pounced on him, threw him to the ground. Each of them wanted to
touch him, wanted to have a piece of him, a feather, a bit of plumage, a spark
from that wonderful fire. They tore away his clothes, his hair, his skin from
his body, they plucked him, they drove their claws and teeth into his flesh,
they attacked him like hyenas.
But the human body is tough
and not easily dismembered, even horses have great difficulty accomplishing it.
And so the flash of knives soon followed, thrusting and slicing, and then the
swish of axes and cleavers aimed at the joints, hacking and crushing the bones.
In very short order, the angel was divided into thirty pieces, and every animal
in the pack snatched a piece for itself, and then, driven by voluptuous lust,
dropped back to devour it. A half hour later, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille had
disappeared utterly from the earth.
When the cannibals found
their way back together after disposing of their meal, no one said a word.
Someone would belch a bit, or spit out a fragment of bone, or softly smack with
his tongue, or kick a leftover shred of blue frock coat into the flames. They
were all a little embarrassed and afraid to look at one another. They had all,
whether man or woman, committed a murder or some other despicable crime at one
time or another. But to eat a human being? They would never, so they thought,
have been capable of anything that horrible. And they were amazed that it had
been so very easy for them and that, embarrassed as they were, they did not
feel the tiniest bite of conscience. On the contrary! Though the meal lay
rather heavy on their stomachs, their hearts were definitely light. All of a
sudden there were delightful, bright flutterings in their dark souls. And on
their faces was a delicate, virginal glow of happiness. Perhaps that was why
they were shy about looking up and gazing into one another’s eyes.
When they finally did dare
it, at first with stolen glances and then candid ones, they had to smile. They
were uncommonly proud. For the first time they had done something out of love.
About
the Author
PATRICK SUSKIND was born in
Ambach, near Munich, in 1949. After a problem with his hands made it impossible
for him to pursue his ambitions as a concert pianist, Siiskind enrolled in the
University of Munich, where he studied medieval and modern history. His first
play, The Double Bass, written in 1980, became an international success,
performed in Germany, Switzerland, at the Edinburgh Festival, in London, and
most recently at the New Theatre in Brooklyn. Mr. Suskind lives and writes in Munich.