The Old Wives' Tale
Book III
SOPHIA
Chapter IV
A CRISIS FOR GERALD
I
For a time there existed in the minds of
both Gerald and Sophia the remarkable notion that twelve thousand pounds
represented the infinity of wealth, that this sum possessed special magical
properties which rendered it insensible to the process of subtraction. It seemed
impossible that twelve thousand pounds, while continually getting less, could
ultimately quite disappear. The notion lived longer in the mind of Gerald than
in that of Sophia; for Gerald would never look at a disturbing fact, whereas
Sophia's gaze was morbidly fascinated by such phenomena. In a life devoted to
travel and pleasure Gerald meant not to spend more than six hundred a year, the
interest on his fortune. Six hundred a year is less than two pounds a day, yet
Gerald never paid less than two pounds a day in hotel bills alone. He hoped that
he was living on a thousand a year, had a secret fear that he might be spending
fifteen hundred, and was really spending about two thousand five hundred. Still,
the remarkable notion of the inexhaustibility of twelve thousand pounds always
reassured him. The faster the money went, the more vigorously this notion
flourished in Gerald's mind. When twelve had unaccountably dwindled to three,
Gerald suddenly decided that he must act, and in a few months he lost two
thousand on the Paris Bourse. The adventure frightened him, and in his panic he
scattered a couple of hundred in a frenzy of high living.
But even with only twenty thousand francs left out of three
hundred thousand, he held closely to the belief that natural laws would in his
case somehow be suspended. He had heard of men who were once rich begging bread
and sweeping crossings, but he felt quite secure against such risks, by simple
virtue of the axiom that he was he. However, he meant to assist the axiom by
efforts to earn money. When these continued to fail, he tried to assist the
axiom by borrowing money; but he found that his uncle had definitely done with
him. He would have assisted the axiom by stealing money, but he had neither the
nerve nor the knowledge to be a swindler; he was not even sufficiently expert to
cheat at cards.
He had thought in thousands. Now he began to think in hundreds, in
tens, daily and hourly. He paid two hundred francs in railway fares in order to
live economically in a village, and shortly afterwards another two hundred
francs in railway fares in order to live economically in Paris. And to celebrate
the arrival in Paris and the definite commencement of an era of strict economy
and serious search for a livelihood, he spent a hundred francs on a dinner at
the Maison Doree and two balcony stalls at the Gymnase. In brief, he omitted
nothing—no act, no resolve, no self-deception—of the typical fool in his
situation; always convinced that his difficulties and his wisdom were quite
exceptional.
In May, 1870, on an afternoon, he was ranging nervously to and fro
in a three-cornered bedroom of a little hotel at the angle of the Rue Fontaine
and the Rue Laval (now the Rue Victor Masse), within half a minute of the
Boulevard de Clichy. It had come to that—an exchange of the 'grand boulevard'
for the 'boulevard exterieur'! Sophia sat on a chair at the grimy window,
glancing down in idle disgust of life at the Clichy-Odeon omnibus which was
casting off its tip-horse at the corner of the Rue Chaptal. The noise of petty,
hurried traffic over the bossy paving stones was deafening. The locality was not
one to correspond with an ideal. There was too much humanity crowded into those
narrow hilly streets; humanity seemed to be bulging out at the windows of the
high houses. Gerald healed his pride by saying that this was, after all, the
real Paris, and that the cookery was as good as could be got anywhere, pay what
you would. He seldom ate a meal in the little salons on the first floor without
becoming ecstatic upon the cookery. To hear him, he might have chosen the hotel
on its superlative merits, without regard to expense. And with his air of use
and custom, he did indeed look like a connoisseur of Paris who knew better than
to herd with vulgar tourists in the pens of the Madeleine quarter. He was
dressed with some distinction; good clothes, when put to the test, survive a
change of fortune, as a Roman arch survives the luxury of departed empire. Only
his collar, large V-shaped front, and wristbands, which bore the ineffaceable
signs of cheap laundering, reflected the shadow of impending disaster.
He glanced sideways, stealthily, at Sophia. She, too, was still
dressed with distinction; in the robe of black faille, the cashmere shawl, and
the little black hat with its falling veil, there was no apparent symptom of
beggary. She would have been judged as one of those women who content themselves
with few clothes but good, and, greatly aided by nature, make a little go a long
way. Good black will last for eternity; it discloses no secrets of modification
and mending, and it is not transparent.
At last Gerald, resuming a suspended conversation, said as it were
doggedly:
"I tell you I haven't got five francs altogether! and you can feel
my pockets if you like," added the habitual liar in him, fearing
incredulity.
"Well, and what do you expect me to do?" Sophia inquired.
The accent, at once ironic and listless, in which she put this
question, showed that strange and vital things had happened to Sophia in the
four years which had elapsed since her marriage. It did really seem to her,
indeed, that the Sophia whom Gerald had espoused was dead and gone, and that
another Sophia had come into her body: so intensely conscious was she of a
fundamental change in herself under the stress of continuous experience. And
though this was but a seeming, though she was still the same Sophia more fully
disclosed, it was a true seeming. Indisputably more beautiful than when Gerald
had unwillingly made her his legal wife, she was now nearly twenty-four, and
looked perhaps somewhat older than her age. Her frame was firmly set, her waist
thicker, neither slim nor stout. The lips were rather hard, and she had a habit
of tightening her mouth, on the same provocation as sends a snail into its
shell. No trace was left of immature gawkiness in her gestures or of simplicity
in her intonations. She was a woman of commanding and slightly arrogant charm,
not in the least degree the charm of innocence and ingenuousness. Her eyes were
the eyes of one who has lost her illusions too violently and too completely. Her
gaze, coldly comprehending, implied familiarity with the abjectness of human
nature. Gerald had begun and had finished her education. He had not ruined her,
as a bad professor may ruin a fine voice, because her moral force immeasurably
exceeded his; he had unwittingly produced a masterpiece, but it was a tragic
masterpiece. Sophia was such a woman as, by a mere glance as she utters an
opinion, will make a man say to himself, half in desire and half in alarm lest
she reads him too: "By Jove! she must have been through a thing or two. She
knows what people are!"
The marriage was, of course, a calamitous folly. From the very
first, from the moment when the commercial traveller had with incomparable rash
fatuity thrown the paper pellet over the counter, Sophia's awakening commonsense
had told her that in yielding to her instinct she was sowing misery and shame
for herself; but she had gone on, as if under a spell. It had needed the
irretrievableness of flight from home to begin the breaking of the trance. Once
fully awakened out of the trance, she had recognized her marriage for what it
was. She had made neither the best nor the worst of it. She had accepted Gerald
as one accepts a climate. She saw again and again that he was irreclaimably a
fool and a prodigy of irresponsibleness. She tolerated him, now with sweetness,
now bitterly; accepting always his caprices, and not permitting herself to have
wishes of her own. She was ready to pay the price of pride and of a moment's
imbecility with a lifetime of self-repression. It was high, but it was the
price. She had acquired nothing but an exceptionally good knowledge of the
French language (she soon learnt to scorn Gerald's glib maltreatment of the
tongue), and she had conserved nothing but her dignity. She knew that Gerald was
sick of her, that he would have danced for joy to be rid of her; that he was
constantly unfaithful; that he had long since ceased to be excited by her
beauty. She knew also that at bottom he was a little afraid of her; here was her
sole moral consolation. The thing that sometimes struck her as surprising was
that he had not abandoned her, simply and crudely walked off one day and
forgotten to take her with him.
They hated each other, but in different ways. She loathed him, and
he resented her.
"What do I expect you to do?" he repeated after her. "Why don't
you write home to your people and get some money out of them?"
Now that he had said what was in his mind, he faced her with a
bullying swagger. Had he been a bigger man he might have tried the effect of
physical bullying on her. One of his numerous reasons for resenting her was that
she was the taller of the two.
She made no reply.
"Now you needn't turn pale and begin all that fuss over again.
What I'm suggesting is a perfectly reasonable thing. If I haven't got money I
haven't got it. I can't invent it."
She perceived that he was ready for one of their periodical
tempestuous quarrels. But that day she felt too tired and unwell to quarrel. His
warning against a repetition of 'fuss' had reference to the gastric dizziness
from which she had been suffering for two years. It would take her usually after
a meal. She did not swoon, but her head swam and she could not stand. She would
sink down wherever she happened to be, and, her face alarmingly white, murmur
faintly: "My salts." Within five minutes the attack had gone and left no trace.
She had been through one just after lunch. He resented this affection. He
detested being compelled to hand the smelling-bottle to her, and he would have
avoided doing so if her pallor did not always alarm him. Nothing but this pallor
convinced him that the attacks were not a deep ruse to impress him. His attitude
invariably implied that she could cure the malady if she chose, but that through
obstinacy she did not choose.
"Are you going to have the decency to answer my question, or
aren't you?"
"What question?" Her vibrating voice was low and restrained.
"Will you write to your people?"
"For money?"
The sarcasm of her tone was diabolic. She could not have kept the
sarcasm out of her tone; she did not attempt to keep it out. She cared little if
it whipped him to fury. Did he imagine, seriously, that she would be capable of
going on her knees to her family? She? Was he unaware that his wife was the
proudest and the most obstinate woman on earth; that all her behaviour to him
was the expression of her pride and her obstinacy? Ill and weak though she felt,
she marshalled together all the forces of her character to defend her resolve
never, never to eat the bread of humiliation. She was absolutely determined to
be dead to her family. Certainly, one December, several years previously, she
had seen English Christmas cards in an English shop in the Rue de Rivoli, and in
a sudden gush of tenderness towards Constance, she had despatched a coloured
greeting to Constance and her mother. And having initiated the custom, she had
continued it. That was not like asking a kindness; it was bestowing a kindness.
But except for the annual card, she was dead to St. Luke's Square. She was one
of those daughters who disappear and are not discussed in the family circle. The
thought of her immense foolishness, the little tender thoughts of Constance,
some flitting souvenir, full of unwilling admiration, of a regal gesture of her
mother,—these things only steeled her against any sort of resurrection after
death.
And he was urging her to write home for money! Why, she would not
even have paid a visit in splendour to St. Luke's Square. Never should they know
what she had suffered! And especially her Aunt Harriet, from whom she had
stolen!
"Will you write to your people?" he demanded yet again,
emphasizing and separating each word.
"No," she said shortly, with terrible disdain.
"Why not?"
"Because I won't." The curling line of her lips, as they closed on
each other, said all the rest; all the cruel truths about his unspeakable,
inane, coarse follies, his laziness, his excesses, his lies, his deceptions, his
bad faith, his truculence, his improvidence, his shameful waste and ruin of his
life and hers. She doubted whether he realized his baseness and her wrongs, but
if he could not read them in her silent contumely, she was too proud to recite
them to him. She had never complained, save in uncontrolled moments of
anger.
"If that's the way you're going to talk—all right!" he snapped,
furious. Evidently he was baffled.
She kept silence. She was determined to see what he would do in
the face of her inaction.
"You know, I'm not joking," he pursued. "We shall starve."
"Very well," she agreed. "We shall starve."
She watched him surreptitiously, and she was almost sure that he
really had come to the end of his tether. His voice, which never alone
convinced, carried a sort of conviction now. He was penniless. In four years he
had squandered twelve thousand pounds, and had nothing to show for it except an
enfeebled digestion and a tragic figure of a wife. One small point of
satisfaction there was—and all the Baines in her clutched at it and tried to
suck satisfaction from it—their manner of travelling about from hotel to hotel
had made it impossible for Gerald to run up debts. A few debts he might have,
unknown to her, but they could not be serious.
So they looked at one another, in hatred and despair. The
inevitable had arrived. For months she had fronted it in bravado, not concealing
from herself that it lay in waiting. For years he had been sure that though the
inevitable might happen to others it could not happen to him. There it was! He
was conscious of a heavy weight in his stomach, and she of a general numbness,
enwrapping her fatigue. Even then he could not believe that it was true, this
disaster. As for Sophia she was reconciling herself with bitter philosophy to
the eccentricities of fate. Who would have dreamed that she, a young girl
brought up, etc? Her mother could not have improved the occasion more
uncompromisingly than Sophia did—behind that disdainful mask.
"Well—if that's it…!" Gerald exploded at length, puffing. And he
puffed out of the room and was gone in a second.
II
She languidly picked up a book, the moment Gerald had departed,
and tried to prove to herself that she was sufficiently in command of her nerves
to read. For a long time reading had been her chief solace. But she could not
read. She glanced round the inhospitable chamber, and thought of the hundreds of
rooms—some splendid and some vile, but all arid in their unwelcoming
aspect—through which she had passed in her progress from mad exultation to calm
and cold disgust. The ceaseless din of the street annoyed her jaded ears. And a
great wave of desire for peace, peace of no matter what kind, swept through her.
And then her deep distrust of Gerald reawakened; in spite of his seriously
desperate air, which had a quality of sincerity quite new in her experience of
him, she could not be entirely sure that, in asserting utter penury, he was not
after all merely using a trick to get rid of her.
She sprang up, threw the book on the bed, and seized her gloves.
She would follow him, if she could. She would do what she had never done
before—she would spy on him. Fighting against her lassitude, she descended the
long winding stairs, and peeped forth from the doorway into the street. The
ground floor of the hotel was a wine-shop; the stout landlord was lightly
flicking one of the three little yellow tables that stood on the pavement. He
smiled with his customary benevolence, and silently pointed in the direction of
the Rue Notre Dame de Lorette. She saw Gerald down there in the distance. He was
smoking a cigar.
He seemed to be a little man without a care. The smoke of the
cigar came first round his left cheek and then round his right, sailing away
into nothing. He walked with a gay spring, but not quickly, flourishing his cane
as freely as the traffic of the pavement would permit, glancing into all the
shop windows and into the eyes of all the women under forty. This was not at all
the same man as had a moment ago been spitting angry menaces at her in the
bedroom of the hotel. It was a fellow of blithe charm, ripe for any adventurous
joys that destiny had to offer.
Supposing he turned round and saw her?
If he turned round and saw her and asked her what she was doing
there in the street, she would tell him plainly: "I'm following you, to find out
what you do."
But he did not turn. He went straight forward, deviating at the
church, where the crowd became thicker, into the Rue du Faubourg Montmartre, and
so to the boulevard, which he crossed. The whole city seemed excited and
vivacious. Cannons boomed in slow succession, and flags were flying. Sophia had
no conception of the significance of those guns, for, though she read a great
deal, she never read a newspaper; the idea of opening a newspaper never occurred
to her. But she was accustomed to the feverish atmosphere of Paris. She had
lately seen regiments of cavalry flashing and prancing in the Luxembourg
Gardens, and had much admired the fine picture. She accepted the booming as
another expression of the high spirits that had to find vent somehow in this
feverish empire. She so accepted it and forgot it, using all the panorama of the
capital as a dim background for her exacerbated egoism.
She was obliged to walk slowly, because Gerald walked slowly. A
beautiful woman, or any woman not positively hag-like or venerable, who walks
slowly in the streets of Paris becomes at once the cause of inconvenient
desires, as representing the main objective on earth, always transcending in
importance politics and affairs. Just as a true patriotic Englishman cannot be
too busy to run after a fox, so a Frenchman is always ready to forsake all in
order to follow a woman whom he has never before set eyes on. Many men thought
twice about her, with her romantic Saxon mystery of temperament, and her
Parisian clothes; but all refrained from affronting her, not in the least out of
respect for the gloom in her face, but from an expert conviction that those rapt
eyes were fixed immovably on another male. She walked unscathed amid the
frothing hounds as though protected by a spell.
On the south side of the boulevard, Gerald proceeded down the Rue
Montmartre, and then turned suddenly into the Rue Croissant. Sophia stopped and
asked the price of some combs which were exposed outside a little shop. Then she
went on, boldly passing the end of the Rue Croissant. No shadow of Gerald! She
saw the signs of newspapers all along the street, Le Bien Public, La Presse
Libre, La Patrie. There was a creamery at the corner. She entered it, asked for
a cup of chocolate and sat down. She wanted to drink coffee, but every doctor
had forbidden coffee to her, on account of her attacks of dizziness. Then,
having ordered chocolate, she felt that, on this occasion, when she had need of
strength in her great fatigue, only coffee could suffice her, and she changed
the order. She was close to the door, and Gerald could not escape her vigilance
if he emerged at that end of the street. She drank the coffee with greedy
satisfaction, and waited in the creamery till she began to feel conspicuous
there. And then Gerald went by the door, within six feet of her. He turned the
corner and continued his descent of the Rue Montmartre. She paid for her coffee
and followed the chase. Her blood seemed to be up. Her lips were tightened, and
her thought was: "Wherever he goes, I'll go, and I don't care what happens." She
despised him. She felt herself above him. She felt that somehow, since quitting
the hotel, he had been gradually growing more and more vile and meet to be
exterminated. She imagined infamies as to the Rue Croissant. There was no
obvious ground for this intensifying of her attitude towards him; it was merely
the result of the chase. All that could be definitely charged against him was
the smoking of a cigar.
He stepped into a tobacco-shop, and came out with a longer cigar
than the first one, a more expensive article, stripped off its collar and
lighted it as a millionaire might have lighted it. This was the man who swore
that he did not possess five francs.
She tracked him as far as the Rue de Rivoli, and then lost him.
There were vast surging crowds in the Rue de Rivoli, and much bunting, and
soldiers and gesticulatory policemen. The general effect of the street was that
all things were brightly waving in the breeze. She was caught in the crowd as in
the current of a stream, and when she tried to sidle out of it into a square, a
row of smiling policemen barred her passage; she was a part of the traffic that
they had to regulate. She drifted till the Louvre came into view. After all,
Gerald had only strolled forth to see the sight of the day, whatever it might
be! She knew not what it was. She had no curiosity about it. In the middle of
all that thickening mass of humanity, staring with one accord at the vast
monument of royal and imperial vanities, she thought, with her characteristic
grimness, of the sacrifice of her whole career as a school-teacher for the
chance of seeing Gerald once a quarter in the shop. She gloated over that, as a
sick appetite will gloat over tainted food. And she saw the shop, and the curve
of the stairs up to the showroom, and the pier-glass in the showroom.
Then the guns began to boom again, and splendid carriages swept
one after another from under a majestic archway and glittered westward down a
lane of spotless splendid uniforms. The carriages were laden with still more
splendid uniforms, and with enchanting toilets. Sophia, in her modestly stylish
black, mechanically noticed how much easier it was for attired women to sit in a
carriage now that crinolines had gone. That was the sole impression made upon
her by this glimpse of the last fete of the Napoleonic Empire. She knew not that
the supreme pillars of imperialism were exhibiting themselves before her; and
that the eyes of those uniforms and those toilettes were full of the legendary
beauty of Eugenie, and their ears echoing to the long phrases of Napoleon the
Third about his gratitude to his people for their confidence in him as shown by
the plebiscite, and about the ratification of constitutional reforms
guaranteeing order, and about the empire having been strengthened at its base,
and about showing force by moderation and envisaging the future without fear,
and about the bosom of peace and liberty, and the eternal continuance of his
dynasty.
She just wondered vaguely what was afoot.
When the last carriage had rolled away, and the guns and
acclamations had ceased, the crowd at length began to scatter. She was carried
by it into the Place du Palais Royal, and in a few moments she managed to
withdraw into the Rue des Bons Enfants and was free.
The coins in her purse amounted to three sous, and therefore,
though she felt exhausted to the point of illness, she had to return to the
hotel on foot. Very slowly she crawled upwards in the direction of the
Boulevard, through the expiring gaiety of the city. Near the Bourse a fiacre
overtook her, and in the fiacre were Gerald and a woman. Gerald had not seen
her; he was talking eagerly to his ornate companion. All his body was alive. The
fiacre was out of sight in a moment, but Sophia judged instantly the grade of
the woman, who was evidently of the discreet class that frequented the big shops
of an afternoon with something of their own to sell.
Sophia's grimness increased. The pace of the fiacre, her fatigued
body, Gerald's delightful, careless vivacity, the attractive streaming veil of
the nice, modest courtesan—everything conspired to increase it.
III
Gerald returned to the bedroom which contained his wife and all
else that he owned in the world at about nine o'clock that evening. Sophia was
in bed. She had been driven to bed by weariness. She would have preferred to sit
up to receive her husband, even if it had meant sitting up all night, but her
body was too heavy for her spirit. She lay in the dark. She had eaten nothing.
Gerald came straight into the room. He struck a match, which burned blue, with a
stench, for several seconds, and then gave a clear, yellow flame. He lit a
candle; and saw his wife.
"Oh!" he said; "you're there, are you?"
She offered no reply.
"Won't speak, eh?" he said. "Agreeable sort of wife! Well, have
you made up your mind to do what I told you? I've come back especially to
know."
She still did not speak.
He sat down, with his hat on, and stuck out his feet, wagging them
to and fro on the heels.
"I'm quite without money," he went on. "And I'm sure your people
will be glad to lend us a bit till I get some. Especially as it's a question of
you starving as well as me. If I had enough to pay your fares to Bursley I'd
pack you off. But I haven't."
She could only hear his exasperating voice. The end of the bed was
between her eyes and his.
"Liar!" she said, with uncompromising distinctness. The word
reached him barbed with all the poison of her contempt and disgust.
There was a pause.
"Oh! I'm a liar, am I? Thanks. I lied enough to get you, I'll
admit. But you never complained of that. I remember be-ginning the New Year well
with a thumping lie just to have a sight of you, my vixen. But you didn't
complain then. I took you with only the clothes on your back. And I've spent
every cent I had on you. And now I'm spun, you call me a liar."
She said nothing.
"However," he went on, "this is going to come to an end, this
is!"
He rose, changed the position of the candle, putting it on a chest
of drawers, and then drew his trunk from the wall, and knelt in front of it.
She gathered that he was packing his clothes. At first she did not
comprehend his reference to beginning the New Year. Then his meaning revealed
itself. That story to her mother about having been attacked by ruffians at the
bottom of King Street had been an invention, a ruse to account plausibly for his
presence on her mother's doorstep! And she had never suspected that the story
was not true. In spite of her experience of his lying, she had never suspected
that that particular statement was a lie. What a simpleton she was!
There was a continual movement in the room for about a quarter of
an hour. Then a key turned in the lock of the trunk.
His head popped up over the foot of the bed. "This isn't a joke,
you know," he said.
She kept silence.
"I give you one more chance. Will you write to your
mother—or
Constance if you like—or won't you?"
She scorned to reply in any way.
"I'm your husband," he said. "And it's your duty to obey me,
particularly in an affair like this. I order you to write to your mother."
The corners of her lips turned downwards.
Angered by her mute obstinacy, he broke away from the bed with a
sudden gesture.
"You do as you like," he cried, putting on his overcoat, "and I
shall do as I like. You can't say I haven't warned you. It's your own deliberate
choice, mind you! Whatever happens to you you've brought on yourself." He lifted
and shrugged his shoulders to get the overcoat exactly into place on his
shoulders.
She would not speak a word, not even to insist that she was
indisposed.
He pushed his trunk outside the door, and returned to the bed.
"You understand," he said menacingly; "I'm off."
She looked up at the foul ceiling.
"Hm!" he sniffed, bringing his reserves of pride to combat the
persistent silence that was damaging his dignity. And he went off, sticking his
head forward like a pugilist.
"Here!" she muttered. "You're forgetting this."
He turned.
She stretched her hand to the night-table and held up a red
circlet.
"What is it?"
"It's the bit of paper off the cigar you bought in the Rue
Montmartre this afternoon," she answered, in a significant tone.
He hesitated, then swore violently, and bounced out of the room.
He had made her suffer, but she was almost repaid for everything by that moment
of cruel triumph. She exulted in it, and never forgot it.
Five minutes later, the gloomy menial in felt slippers and alpaca
jacket, who seemed to pass the whole of his life flitting in and out of bedrooms
like a rabbit in a warren, carried Gerald's trunk downstairs. She recognized the
peculiar tread of his slippers.
Then there was a knock at the door. The landlady entered, actuated
by a legitimate curiosity.
"Madame is suffering?" the landlady began.
Sophia refused offers of food and nursing.
"Madame knows without doubt that monsieur has gone away?"
"Has he paid the bill?" Sophia asked bluntly.
"But yes, madame, till to-morrow. Then madame has want of
nothing?"
"If you will extinguish the candle," said Sophia.
He had deserted her, then!
"All this," she reflected, listening in the dark to the ceaseless
rattle of the street, "because mother and Constance wanted to see the elephant,
and I had to go into father's room! I should never have caught sight of him from
the drawing-room window!"
IV
She passed a night of physical misery, exasperated by the tireless
rattling vitality of the street. She kept saying to herself: "I'm all alone now,
and I'm going to be ill. I am ill." She saw herself dying in Paris, and heard
the expressions of facile sympathy and idle curiosity drawn forth by the sight
of the dead body of this foreign woman in a little Paris hotel. She reached the
stage, in the gradual excruciation of her nerves, when she was obliged to
concentrate her agonized mind on an intense and painful expectancy of the next
new noise, which when it came increased her torture and decreased her strength
to support it. She went through all the interminable dilatoriness of the dawn,
from the moment when she could scarcely discern the window to the moment when
she could read the word 'Bock' on the red circlet of paper which had tossed all
night on the sea of the counterpane. She knew she would never sleep again. She
could not imagine herself asleep; and then she was startled by a sound that
seemed to clash with the rest of her impressions. It was a knocking at the door.
With a start she perceived that she must have been asleep.
"Enter," she murmured.
There entered the menial in alpaca. His waxen face showed a morose
commiseration. He noiselessly approached the bed—he seemed to have none of the
characteristics of a man, but to be a creature infinitely mysterious and aloof
from humanity—and held out to Sophia a visiting card in his grey hand.
It was Chirac's card.
"Monsieur asked for monsieur," said the waiter. "And then, as
monsieur had gone away he demanded to see madame. He says it is very
important."
Her heart jumped, partly in vague alarm, and partly with a sense
of relief at this chance of speaking to some one whom she knew. She tried to
reflect rationally.
"What time is it?" she inquired.
"Eleven o'clock, madame."
This was surprising. The fact that it was eleven o'clock destroyed
the remains of her self-confidence. How could it be eleven o'clock, with the
dawn scarcely finished?
"He says it is very important," repeated the waiter, imperturbably
and solemnly. "Will madame see him an instant?"
Between resignation and anticipation she said: "Yes."
"It is well, madame," said the waiter, disappearing without a
sound.
She sat up and managed to drag her matinee from a chair and put it
around her shoulders. Then she sank back from weakness, physical and spiritual.
She hated to receive Chirac in a bedroom, and particularly in that bedroom. But
the hotel had no public room except the dining-room, which began to be occupied
after eleven o'clock. Moreover, she could not possibly get up. Yes, on the whole
she was pleased to see Chirac. He was almost her only acquaintance, assuredly
the only being whom she could by any stretch of meaning call a friend, in the
whole of Europe. Gerald and she had wandered to and fro, skimming always over
the real life of nations, and never penetrating into it. There was no place for
them, because they had made none. With the exception of Chirac, whom an accident
of business had thrown, into Gerald's company years before, they had no social
relations. Gerald was not a man to make friends; he did not seem to need
friends, or at any rate to feel the want of them. But, as chance had given him
Chirac, he maintained the connection whenever they came to Paris. Sophia, of
course, had not been able to escape from the solitude imposed by existence in
hotels. Since her marriage she had never spoken to a woman in the way of
intimacy. But once or twice she had approached intimacy with Chirac, whose
wistful admiration for her always aroused into activity her desire to charm.
Preceded by the menial, he came into the room hurriedly,
apologetically, with an air of acute anxiety. And as he saw her lying on her
back, with flushed features, her hair disarranged, and only the grace of the
silk ribbons of her matinee to mitigate the melancholy repulsiveness of her
surroundings, that anxiety seemed to deepen.
"Dear madame," he stammered, "all my excuses!" He hastened to the
bedside and kissed her hand—a little peek according to his custom. "You are
ill?"
"I have my migraine," she said. "You want Gerald?"
"Yes," he said diffidently. "He had promised——"
"He has left me," Sophia interrupted him in her weak and fatigued
voice. She closed her eyes as she uttered the words.
"Left you?" He glanced round to be sure that the waiter had
retired.
"Quitted me! Abandoned me! Last night!"
"Not possible!" he breathed.
She nodded. She felt intimate with him. Like all secretive
persons, she could be suddenly expansive at times.
"It is serious?" he questioned.
"All that is most serious," she replied.
"And you ill! Ah, the wretch! Ah, the wretch! That, for example!"
He waved his hat about.
"What is it you want, Chirac?" she demanded, in a confidential
tone.
"Eh, well," said Chirac. "You do not know where he has gone?"
"No. What do you want?" she insisted.
He was nervous. He fidgetted. She guessed that, though warm with
sympathy for her plight, he was preoccupied by interests and apprehensions of
his own. He did not refuse her request temporarily to leave the astonishing
matter of her situation in order to discuss the matter of his visit.
"Eh, well! He came to me yesterday afternoon in the Rue Croissant
to borrow some money."
She understood then the object of Gerald's stroll on the previous
afternoon.
"I hope you didn't lend him any," she said.
"Eh, well! It was like this. He said he ought to have received
five thousand francs yesterday morning, but that he had had a telegram that it
would not arrive till to-day. And he had need of five hundred francs at once. I
had not five hundred francs"—he smiled sadly, as if to insinuate that he did not
handle such sums—"but I borrowed it from the cashbox of the journal. It is
necessary, absolutely, that I should return it this morning." He spoke with
increased seriousness. "Your husband said he would take a cab and bring me the
money immediately on the arrival of the post this morning—about nine o'clock.
Pardon me for deranging you with such a——"
He stopped. She could see that he really was grieved to 'derange'
her, but that circumstances pressed.
"At my paper," he murmured, "it is not so easy as that to—in
fine——!"
Gerald had genuinely been at his last francs. He had not lied when
she thought he had lied. The nakedness of his character showed now. Instantly
upon the final and definite cessation of the lawful supply of money, he had set
his wits to obtain money unlawfully. He had, in fact, simply stolen it from
Chirac, with the ornamental addition of endangering Chirac's reputation and
situation—as a sort of reward to Chirac for the kindness! And, further, no
sooner had he got hold of the money than it had intoxicated him, and he had
yielded to the first fatuous temptation. He had no sense of responsibility, no
scruple. And as for common prudence—had he not risked permanent disgrace and
even prison for a paltry sum which he would certainly squander in two or three
days? Yes, it was indubitable that he would stop at nothing, at nothing
whatever.
"You did not know that he was coming to me?" asked Chirac, pulling
his short, silky brown beard.
"No," Sophia answered.
"But he said that you had charged him with your friendlinesses to
me!" He nodded his head once or twice, sadly but candidly accepting, in his
quality of a Latin, the plain facts of human nature—reconciling himself to them
at once.
Sophia revolted at this crowning detail of the structure of
Gerald's rascality.
"It is fortunate that I can pay you," she said.
"But——" he tried to protest.
"I have quite enough money."
She did not say this to screen Gerald, but merely from
amour-propre. She would not let Chirac think that she was the wife of a man
bereft of all honour. And so she clothed Gerald with the rag of having, at any
rate, not left her in destitution as well as in sickness. Her assertion seemed a
strange one, in view of the fact that he had abandoned her on the previous
evening—that is to say, immediately after the borrowing from Chirac. But Chirac
did not examine the statement.
"Perhaps he has the intention to send me the money. Perhaps, after
all, he is now at the offices——"
"No," said Sophia. "He is gone. Will you go downstairs and wait
for me.
We will go together to Cook's office. It is English money I
have."
"Cook's?" he repeated. The word now so potent had then little
significance. "But you are ill. You cannot——"
"I feel better."
She did. Or rather, she felt nothing except the power of her
resolve to remove the painful anxiety from that wistful brow. The shame of the
trick played on Chirac awakened new forces in her. She dressed in a physical
torment which, however, had no more reality than a nightmare. She searched in a
place where even an inquisitive husband would not think of looking, and then,
painfully, she descended the long stairs, holding to the rail, which swam round
and round her, carrying the whole staircase with it. "After all," she thought,
"I can't be seriously ill, or I shouldn't have been able to get up and go out
like this. I never guessed early this morning that I could do it! I can't
possibly be as ill as I thought I was!"
And in the vestibule she encountered Chirac's face, lightening at
the sight of her, which proved to him that his deliverance was really to be
accomplished.
"Permit me——"
"I'm all right," she smiled, tottering. "Get a cab." It suddenly
occurred to her that she might quite as easily have given him the money in
English notes; he could have changed them. But she had not thought. Her brain
would not operate. She was dreaming and waking together.
He helped her into the cab.
V
In the bureau de change there was a little knot of English,
people, with naive, romantic, and honest faces, quite different from the faces
outside in the street. No corruption in those faces, but a sort of wondering and
infantile sincerity, rather out of its element and lost in a land too
unsophisticated, seeming to belong to an earlier age! Sophia liked their tourist
stare, and their plain and ugly clothes. She longed to be back in England,
longed for a moment with violence, drowning in that desire.
The English clerk behind his brass bars took her notes, and
carefully examined them one by one. She watched him, not entirely convinced of
his reality, and thought vaguely of the detestable morning when she had
abstracted the notes from Gerald's pocket. She was filled with pity for the
simple, ignorant Sophia of those days, the Sophia who still had a few ridiculous
illusions concerning Gerald's character. Often, since, she had been tempted to
break into the money, but she had always withstood the temptation, saying to
herself that an hour of more urgent need would come. It had come. She was proud
of her firmness, of the force of will which had enabled her to reserve the fund
intact. The clerk gave her a keen look, and then asked her how she would take
the French money. And she saw the notes falling down one after another on to the
counter as the clerk separated them with a snapping sound of the paper.
Chirac was beside her.
"Does that make the count?" she said, having pushed towards him
five hundred-franc notes.
"I should not know how to thank you," he said, accepting the
notes.
"Truly—"
His joy was unmistakably eager. He had had a shock and a fright,
and he now saw the danger past. He could return to the cashier of his newspaper,
and fling down the money with a lordly and careless air, as if to say: "When it
is a question of these English, one can always be sure!" But first he would
escort her to the hotel. She declined—she did not know why, for he was her sole
point of moral support in all France. He insisted. She yielded. So she turned
her back, with regret, on that little English oasis in the Sahara of Paris, and
staggered to the fiacre.
And now that she had done what she had to do, she lost control of
her body, and reclined flaccid and inert. Chirac was evidently alarmed. He did
not speak, but glanced at her from time to time with eyes full of fear. The
carriage appeared to her to be swimming amid waves over great depths. Then she
was aware of a heavy weight against her shoulder; she had slipped down upon
Chirac, unconscious.