The
following morning Mr. Pontellier, upon leaving for his office, asked Edna if she
would not meet him in town in order to look at some new fixtures for the
library.
"I hardly think we need new
fixtures, Léonce. Don't let us get anything new; you are too extravagant. I
don't believe you ever think of saving or putting by."
"The way to become rich is to
make money, my dear Edna, not to save it," he said. He regretted that she did
not feel inclined to go with him and select new fixtures. He kissed her good-by,
and told her she was not looking well and must take care of herself. She was
unusually pale and very quiet.
She stood on the front
veranda as he quitted the house, and absently picked a few sprays of jessamine
that grew upon a trellis near by. She inhaled the odor of the blossoms and
thrust them into the bosom of her
white morning gown. The boys were dragging along the banquette a small
"express wagon," which they had filled with blocks and sticks. The quadroon was
following them with little quick steps, having assumed a fictitious animation
and alacrity for the occasion. A fruit vender was crying his wares in the
street.
Edna looked straight before
her with a self-absorbed expression upon her face. She felt no interest in
anything about her. The street, the children, the fruit vender, the flowers
growing there under her eyes, were all part and parcel of an alien world which
had suddenly become antagonistic.
She went back into the house.
She had thought of speaking to the cook concerning her blunders of the previous
night; but Mr. Pontellier had saved her that disagreeable mission, for which she
was so poorly fitted. Mr. Pontellier's arguments were usually convincing with
those whom he employed. He left home feeling quite sure that he and Edna would
sit down that evening, and possibly a few subsequent evenings, to a dinner
deserving of the name.
Edna spent an hour or two in
looking over some of her old sketches. She could see their shortcomings and
defects, which were glaring in her eyes. She tried to work a little, but found
she was not in the humor. Finally she gathered together a few of the sketches -
those which she considered the least discreditable; and she carried them with
her when, a little later, she dressed and left the house. She looked handsome
and distinguished in her street gown. The tan of the seashore had left her face,
and her forehead was smooth, white, and polished beneath her heavy, yellow-brown
hair. There were a few freckles on her face, and a small, dark mole near the
under lip and one on the temple, half-hidden in her hair.
As Edna walked along the
street she was thinking of Robert. She was still under the spell of her
infatuation. She had tried to forget him, realizing the inutility of
remembering. But the thought of him was like an obsession, ever pressing itself
upon her. It was not that she dwelt upon details of their acquaintance, or
recalled in any special or peculiar way his personality; it
was his being, his existence, which dominated her thought, fading sometimes
as if it would melt into the mist of the forgotten, reviving again with an
intensity which filled her with an incomprehensible longing.
Edna was on her way to Madame
Ratignolle's. Their intimacy, begun at Grand Isle, had not declined, and they
had seen each other with some frequency since their return to the city. The
Ratignolles lived at no great distance from Edna's home, on the corner of a side
street, where Monsieur Ratignolle owned and conducted a drug store which enjoyed
a steady and prosperous trade. His father had been in the business before him,
and Monsieur Ratignolle stood well in the community and bore an enviable
reputation for integrity and clear-headedness. His family lived in commodious
apartments over the store, having an entrance on the side within the
porte cochère. There was something which Edna thought very
French, very foreign, about their whole manner of living. In the large and
pleasant salon which extended across the width of the house, the Ratignolles
entertained their
friends once a fortnight with a soirée musicale, sometimes
diversified by card-playing. There was a friend who played upon the 'cello. One
brought his flute and another his violin, while there were some who sang and a
number who performed upon the piano with various degrees of taste and agility.
The Ratignolles' soirées musicales were widely known, and it was
considered a privilege to be invited to them
Edna found her friend engaged
in assorting the clothes which had returned that morning from the laundry. She
at once abandoned her occupation upon seeing Edna, who had been ushered without
ceremony into her presence.
" 'Cité can do it as well as
I; it is really her business," she explained to Edna, who apologized for
interrupting her. And she summoned a young black woman, whom she instructed, in
French, to be very careful in checking off the list which she handed her. She
told her to notice particularly if a fine linen handkerchief of Monsieur
Ratignolle's, which was missing last week, had been returned; and to be sure to
set to one side such pieces as required mending and darning.
Then placing an arm around
Edna's waist, she led her to the front of the house, to the salon, where it was
cool and sweet with the odor of great roses that stood upon the hearth in jars.
Madame Ratignolle looked more
beautiful than ever there at home, in a negligé which left her arms almost
wholly bare and exposed the rich, melting curves of her white throat.
"Perhaps I shall be able to
paint your picture some day," said Edna with a smile when they were seated. She
produced the roll of sketches and started to unfold them. "I believe I ought to
work again. I feel as if I wanted to be doing something. What do you think of
them? Do you think it worth while to take it up again and study some more? I
might study for a while with Laidpore. "
She knew that Madame
Ratignolle's opinion in such a matter would be next to valueless, that she
herself had not alone decided, but determined; but she sought
the words of praise and encouragement that would help her to put heart into
her venture.
"Your talent is immense,
dear!"
"Nonsense!" protested Edna,
well pleased.
"Immense, I tell you,"
persisted Madame Ratignolle, surveying the sketches one by one, at close range,
then holding them at arm's length, narrowing her eyes, and dropping her head on
one side. "Surely, this Bavarian peasant is worthy of framing; and this basket
of apples! never have I seen anything more lifelike. One might almost be tempted
to reach out a hand and take one."
Edna could not control a
feeling which bordered upon complacency at her friend's praise, even realizing,
as she did, its true worth. She retained a few of the sketches, and gave all the
rest to Madame Ratignolle, who appreciated the gift far beyond its value and
proudly exhibited the pictures to her husband when he came up from the store a
little later for his midday dinner.
Mr. Ratignolle was one of
those men who are called the salt of the earth. His cheerfulness
was unbounded, and it was matched by his goodness of heart, his broad
charity, and common sense. He and his wife spoke English with an accent which
was only discernible through its un-English emphasis and a certain carefulness
and deliberation. Edna's husband spoke English with no accent whatever. The
Ratignolles understood each other perfectly. If ever the fusion of two human
beings into one has been accomplished on this sphere it was surely in their
union.
As Edna seated herself at
table with them she thought, "Better a dinner of herbs," though it did not take
her long to discover that it was no dinner of herbs, but a delicious repast,
simple, choice, and in every way satisfying.
Monsieur Ratignolle was
delighted to see her, though he found her looking not so well as at Grand Isle,
and he advised a tonic. He talked a good deal on various topics, a little
politics, some city news and neighborhood gossip. He spoke with an animation and
earnestness that gave an exaggerated importance to every syllable he
uttered. His wife was keenly interested in everything he said, laying down
her fork the better to listen, chiming in, taking the words out of his mouth.
Edna felt depressed rather
than soothed after leaving them. The little glimpse of domestic harmony which
had been offered her, gave her no regret, no longing. It was not a condition of
life which fitted her, and she could see in it but an appalling and hopeless
ennui. She was moved by a kind of commiseration for Madame Ratignolle, - a pity
for that colorless existence which never uplifted its possessor beyond the
region of blind contentment, in which no moment of anguish ever visited her
soul, in which she would never have the taste of life's delirium. Edna vaguely
wondered what she meant by "life's delirium." It had crossed her thought like
some unsought, extraneous impression.