The Little French Girl
PART II
CHAPTER IV
A table had been laid in a corner of the verandah, and
a stout woman, bareheaded and in savates, was carrying
out tea and coffee.
Madame Vervier rearranged the tray, setting the
tongs on the sugar, the strainer on a cup, placing the
plate of madeleines here, the brioches there; all mildly,
with no savour of criticism for Albertine’s haphazard
methods. In England such a ministrant at the tea-table
would have been felt as a flaw on the prevailing
perfection; yet Albertine, Giles divined, was also the
cook; and a bevy of trim, capped English maids could
hardly have evolved the lustre of cleanliness that
reigned throughout the lovely little house. It was difficult
to think of madame Vervier as poor; and more
difficult to think of her doing things for herself. Yet all
the loveliness had, he felt, been gathered together with
something of the same mild dexterity that now brought
order and comeliness to the tea-table. Madame Vervier
was the sort of person who would pick up lovely
things for a song; the Louis Quinze bedstead, the voile
de Gênes, the tall cream-white cafetière, like one he had
seen in a picture by—Chardin, wasn’t it?—and the
teapot with a delicate spray of grey flowers, just
touched with gilt, on its side—had all, he could imagine,
been brought to her nest by the unerring instinct
that leads the bird to select the white feather or the
lichen. Alix had said, he remembered, that part of
their revenue was derived from the rent of the fairy-tale
house; he was sure that it was an investment
that paid well. And she had probably herself made the
dresses she and Alix wore. She could be extravagant if
the money were there; if it were not, she was careful.
One felt in her the essential freedom from material
bondage.
Monsieur de Maubert was still in his shady corner
with the Nouvelle Revue Française on his knee. The
young artist had reappeared and was sitting on the
steps, his chin on his hands, looking out at the sea.
Madame Vervier took her place at the tea-table, monsieur
de Maubert drew his chair beside her, and Giles’s
friend strolled up from the cliff-path accompanied by
yet another noticeable personage.
This was a youngish woman, though younger in form
than in face, bareheaded and wearing a very short
white skirt and a flame-coloured silk jacket. It was almost
like seeing a tongue of electric fire, brilliant, supple,
cold, run in among them, so different was she from
the sunlight which seemed so completely madame Vervier’s
element. It did not surprise Giles to gather,
presently, that mademoiselle Blanche Fontaine was an
actress, and a distinguished one. She was charming; he
had seen that at once; but he had seen as soon that it
was a charm with which he had nothing at all to do;
the sort of charm one expected to pay ten-and-six for
the sight and sound of and to feel, while it operated
upon you, safely barred away from by a row of footlights.
A presence so brilliant could not be said to cast
a chill, but for Giles it certainly cast a discomfort.
Who was she? What did she mean? Where had she
come from, this young woman so lean, so white, so
sickly-looking, yet so tough? Her smile, as she bit into
her madeleine, brought a long dimple that was almost
a wrinkle into her cheek and her long, pale eyes scintillated
under darkened lashes. He realized how noticeably
independent of artificial aids to significance was
madame Vervier from noting how frankly mademoiselle
Fontaine had made use of them. She might even,
by nature, he surmised, be a swarthy woman; but art
had transformed her to a dazzling whiteness and her
crinkled hair, that might be really black, repeated the
lustrous flame of her jacket. Something in the fervour
of her thin, gay lip, in the vigour of her thin,
questing nose, even suggested to Giles a Semitic strain;
but upon the racial edifice she had laid a pattern of
strange, chiming colour that seemed in its vehemence
and oddity to alter the very contour of her face. She
had made of herself what she would; what she was,
was unfathomable by any plummet in Giles’s possession.
They were all talking and laughing, all except Alix,
who sat silent beside her mother, and the young artist
with the dark, suffering head. He drank coffee; three
cups of it, and black. Monsieur de Maubert’s sonorous
tones were lifted by a note of drollery.
“He has lost himself in the clouds of mysticism.”
They were talking of the book of a friend. “To stumble
among rocks is less disconcerting than to stumble
among clouds. Il erre—il erre— One sees him wandering
away into the fog of his own imaginations.”
“Did you enjoy yourself in England, mademoiselle
Alix?” mademoiselle Fontaine asked. “Did you make
good studies there?”
“Yes. I went to a Lycée with the sisters of monsieur
Bradley,” said Alix.
She looked more of a child, seen in this setting, than
Giles had ever seen her look. Her silence was childlike;
and her attitude, leaning slightly against her mother,
her chair placed a little behind her. Yet, at the same
time, Giles had never felt her manner more mature.
She was familiar with mademoiselle Fontaine. She
knew her of old. Yet what a sense of distance there
was between them. Giles could not tell whether it was
kept there, so unerringly, more by her manner or by
mademoiselle Fontaine’s. They knew their place; both
of them. Giles suddenly perceived that people in England
did not know their places with anything like the
same accuracy as people in France. Mademoiselle
Fontaine was the distinguished actress. Alix was the
toute jeune fille; under her mother’s wing. They might
meet for years and never advance by a hair’s-breadth
to greater intimacy.
“Ah. Yes. You were with the family of monsieur.”
The dimple came for Giles. The brilliant eyes circled
round him; pierced him; cogitated; deduced; summed
him up probably, Giles felt—(so much more shrewd
was he than mademoiselle Fontaine could guess, for all
her brilliancy)—as “Jeune homme respectable et tant
soit peu lourd.”
“You must bring monsieur to tea with Grand’mère,
Maman, and me, one day mademoiselle Alix,” she said.
It was surprising to find that mademoiselle Fontaine
was so immersed in family ties. “I have un petit
‘foaks’.” So she pronounced the French term for fox
terrier. “Tout-à-fait charmant. He will delight you.”
“There is a charming ‘fox’ in the family of monsieur,”
said Alix.
“Some admirable work is being done in England,”
said Giles’s friend, whose name, he now gathered, was
monsieur le vicomte de Valenbois. “Your school of
Bloomsbury. They are remarkable writers. They have
invented a new method; oh, deep, crafty; though it
seems to blow as easily as a flower. But then a flower
has always its roots; its soil.—Tchekov, do you think?
Dostoievsky?—They are much inspired, one feels, for
all their sincerity, by the Russians. Or is it truly indigenous?
Do the pavements of Bloomsbury really
grow it quite spontaneously? That delicious Bloomsbury,”
monsieur de Valenbois mused, his happy eyes
on Giles, “of the Museum, the squares where Thackeray
walks, the smell of fogs and jam.”
Giles was much bewildered. He did not remember
ever having heard of a school of Bloomsbury.
Monsieur de Valenbois enlightened him and went on,
putting Giles’s best foot forward for him, since it was
evident that he did not know how to put it forward for
himself. “And then your extraordinary Joyce. Ireland
is his soil, indubitably, and no alien pollen has
visited him. What a talent! Solitary; morose; erudite.
He will found a school here among nos jeunes. That is
already evident. You have writers to be proud of.
It is true we have our Proust to put beside them. You
admire our Proust?”
“I’m sorry to say I don’t know him; or the morose
Irishman either,” said Giles, with a genial grin for his
own discomfiture.
“Monsieur Giles is a philosopher,” Alix now suddenly
and surprisingly contributed. Though so withdrawn
she had been listening, watching, and it was
evident that she had a different conception of Giles’s
best foot. “He is going to found a school, too. At
Oxford.”
“I say! Draw it mild!” cried Giles, casting a glance
of delighted amusement at his young friend.
“But is it not true, Giles, that the old philosopher,
with the beard, thinks that you will found a school?”
said Alix.
“I’m afraid he only hopes I’ll follow his,” said Giles.
“Philosophy is, indeed, a magnificent subject,”
smiled monsieur de Valenbois, all gentle respect. “To
follow a school adequately is often to find that one has
founded a new one.—Does our Bergson interest you?”
Giles said that he did, very much, and found that
Alix had succeeded in putting his best foot forward, for
they now all talked about philosophy. Monsieur de
Maubert, he gathered, was a disciple of Croce’s; monsieur
de Valenbois had read William James and the
Pragmatists; and madame Vervier had attended Bergson’s
pre-war lectures at the Sorbonne. She found the
élan vital in too much of a hurry.
“We gallop, we gallop,” she remarked;—“but if I
may not see my goal, let me linger by the way.”
“As for me,” cried mademoiselle Fontaine, “give
me le bon vieux Papa de bon Dieu of my childhood!
With him, at all events, one knows what to expect
and where one is.”
The young artist had made no attempt to join the
conversation and, now that he had finished his coffee,
he got up, taking an easel, a camp-stool, and a box of
paints, and went away out on to the cliffs. His morose
profile passed along against the frieze of floating sea-gulls
and madame Vervier, sadly shaking her head,
said that Jules was in one of his humeurs noires.
“Pauvre cher!” sighed monsieur de Valenbois.
It seemed that the young artist had an adored wife
who was in a madhouse.
“I saw her before leaving Paris,” said madame Vervier.
“She is quite gentle. She allowed me to hold her
hand.—But lost; altogether lost; she was like a tame
bird that has strayed from its cage and cannot find
its way in the forest. There it sits, on a branch, and
stares into the darkness. It is pitiful.”
A silence fell for a while after that, and Giles heard
in it the echoes of the compassionate voice beating
softly against each heart.
“He will do great things,” said monsieur de Maubert
presently. It was as if he turned away from the gloomy
fact and displayed for their comfort the golden coin it
had minted. “It is an authentic genius.”
“Yes. If we can keep him alive to give it to us,” said
madame Vervier.
“If anyone can keep him alive it is you, Hélène,”
said monsieur de Maubert.
Charming people they were, and compassionate and
wise, thought Giles, sitting there among them in the
pellucid shadow while the gulls floated past in the
golden light. Strains of Gluck’s “Orpheus” floated
with the gulls through his mind. The thought of the
young painter’s wife, lost in the shades, suggested that
music, perhaps. But it was an Elysian scene.
When they were dispersed, all driving in monsieur de
Valenbois’ car to Allongeville for tennis, all except
monsieur de Maubert who withdrew to his room—to
sleep, Giles imagined—Giles himself did not write
letters. He wandered along the cliff-path and saw the
lovely shore curving, far away, in azure bays beneath
the gold-white cliffs. He looked at the scene and was
not consciously absorbed in thought; but a process of
testing, of reëstablishing, went on within him as if he
felt about his roots to see that they were firm. He
would have need of firmness, and the figure of Toppie
went with him as an exorcising presence.
It was late when the party returned and assembled
for a supper of consommé, chicken salad and a cream
for which Albertine, saturnine yet complacent, was
warmly praised. Alix looked drugged with happiness
and fatigue and madame Vervier soon sent her to
bed. Mademoiselle Blanche Fontaine, in the drawing-room
with madame Vervier and monsieur de
Maubert, read aloud the manuscript of a new play;
the young artist went away to his hotel on the place,
and monsieur de Valenbois sat for a little while with
Giles on the steps of the verandah to look at the
fading dyes of the sunset and to talk of Scriabin,
Stravinsky, and the Russian ballet. Giles had to own
that he did not care much about the Russian ballet.
He was always having to own things to monsieur de
Valenbois who showed the happiest interest in his
lapses, giving utterance, now and then, to a gentle long-drawn
“Tiens!” Giles himself was very tired, however,
and felt that he could not adequately defend his
theories which rested upon an objection to the use of
the body as a means of primitive expressionism. He
soon said good-night and went up to his wonderful little
room.
After he had gone to bed he lay for a long time
awake, a fold of the coarse cool linen that smelt of orris
root against his cheek. He heard mademoiselle Fontaine
go away to her own villa, escorted by the other
three. Then, when they returned, the Sacre du Printemps
came softly humming up the stairs, showing him
that monsieur de Valenbois was also going to bed.
After that the only voices left below were those of monsieur
de Maubert and his hostess, sitting in quiet converse
on the verandah.
They talked meditatively with pauses of appreciation
for the beauty of the night, and madame Vervier
must once have risen to advance and look out into
the starry vastness, for Giles heard her say “Tiens;—qu’elle
est grande, notre étoile, ce soir!”
It was late before the final words were vaguely
wafted up to him: “Bonsoir, mon ami.” “Bonne nuit,
ma chère Hélène.”