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His hands wavered in the air, then fell down again.
"Time is pa.s.sing," said the priest and began all over again.
"Tell me the circ.u.mstances of your sin. Tell me. When you were alone with this person, when you two were close together, did you talk to each other, or did you keep quiet?"
"I do not believe in you," said the man.
The priest frowned.
"Repent, and tell me that you believe in the Catholic religion, which will save you."
But the other man shook his head in utter anguish and denied all his happiness.
"Religion--" he began.
The priest interrupted brutally.
"You are not going to start over again! Keep quiet. All your arguments are worthless. Begin by /believing/ in religion and then you will see what it means. I have come to force you to believe."
It was a duel to the end. The two men at the edge of the grave glared at each other like enemies.
"You must believe."
"I do not believe."
"You must."
"You would make truth different from what it is by threats."
"Yes." He stressed the clear, elementary command. "Whether you are convinced or not, believe. Evidence does not count. The one important thing is faith. G.o.d does not deign to convince the incredulous. These are no longer the days of miracles. The only miracle is in our hearts, and it is faith. Believe!" He hurled the same word ceaselessly, like stones.
"My son," he continued, more solemnly, standing up, with his large fat hand uplifted, "I exact of you an act of faith."
"Get out!" said the man, with hatred.
But the priest did not stir. Goaded by the urgence of the case, impelled by the necessity of saving this soul in spite of itself, he became implacable.
"You are going to die," he said, "you are going to die. You have only a few more minutes to live. Submit."
"No," said the man.
The black-robed priest caught hold of both his hands.
"Submit. No discussion. You are losing precious time. All your reasoning is of no account. We are alone, you and I before G.o.d."
He shook his head with the low bulging forehead, the prominent fleshy nose, wide moist nostrils dark with snuff, thin yellow lips like twine tight across two projecting teeth that showed by themselves in the darkness. There were lines on his forehead and between his eyebrows and around his mouth. His cheeks and chin were covered with a grey layer.
"I represent G.o.d," he said. "You are in my presence as if you were in the presence of G.o.d. Simply say 'I believe,' and I will absolve you.
'I believe,' that is all. The rest makes no difference to me."
He bent lower and lower, almost gluing his face to that of the dying man, trying to plant his absolution like a blow.
"Simply say with me, 'Our Father, who art in heaven.' I do not ask you to do anything else."
The sick man's face contracted.
"No--no!"
Suddenly the priest rose with a triumphant air.
"At last! You have said it."
"No."
"Ah!" muttered the priest between his teeth.
He twisted the man's hands in his. You felt he would have put his arms around him to stifle him, a.s.sa.s.sinate him if his death rattle would have brought a confession--so possessed was he with the desire to persuade him, to s.n.a.t.c.h from him the words he had come to seek on his lips.
He let the withered hands go, paced the room like a wild beast, then came back and stationed himself in front of the bed again.
"Remember--you are going to die," he stammered to the miserable man.
"You will soon be in the earth. Say, 'Our Father,' just these two words, nothing else."
He hung over him with his eyes on his mouth, his dark, crouching figure like a demon lying in wait for a soul, like the whole Church over dying humanity.
"Say it! Say it! Say it!"
The sick man tried to wrest himself free. There was a rattle of fury in his throat. With the remnant of his voice, in a low tone, he gasped:
"No!"
"Scoundrel!" cried the priest.
And he struck him in the face. After that neither man made a move for a while. Then the priest went at it again.
"At least you will die holding a crucifix," he snarled.
He drew a crucifix from his pocket, and put it down hard on his breast.
The other man shook himself in a dull horror, as if religion were contagious, and threw the crucifix on the floor.
The priest stooped, mumbling insults. "Carrion, you want to die like a dog, but I am here!" He picked up the crucifix, and with a gleam in his eyes, sure of crus.h.i.+ng him, waited for his final chance.
The dying man panted, completely at the end of his strength. The priest, seeing him in his power, laid the crucifix on his breast again.
This time the other man let it stay there, unable to do anything but look at it with eyes of hatred. But his eyes did not make it fall.
When the black man had gone out into the night, and the patient little by little recovered from the struggle and felt free once more, it occurred to me that the priest in his violence and coa.r.s.eness was horribly right. A bad priest? No, a good priest, who spoke strictly according to his conscience and belief, and tried to apply his religion simply, such as it was, without hypocritical concessions. Ignorant, clumsy, gross--yes, but honest and logical even in his fearful attempt.