As their motor-cab, on the way from
the Gare du Nord, turned into the central glitter
of the Boulevard, Darrow had bent over to point out
an incandescent threshold.
“There!”
Above the doorway, an arch of flame
flashed out the name of a great actress, whose closing
performances in a play of unusual originality had
been the theme of long articles in the Paris papers
which Darrow had tossed into their compartment at
Calais.
“That’s what you must
see before you’re twenty-four hours older!”
The girl followed his gesture eagerly.
She was all awake and alive now, as if the heady
rumours of the streets, with their long effervescences
of light, had passed into her veins like wine.
“Cerdine? Is that where
she acts?” She put her head out of the window,
straining back for a glimpse of the sacred threshold.
As they flew past it she sank into her seat with
a satisfied sigh.
“It’s delicious enough
just to know she’s there! I’ve
never seen her, you know. When I was here with
Mamie Hoke we never went anywhere but to the music
halls, because she couldn’t understand any French;
and when I came back afterward to the Farlows’
I was dead broke, and couldn’t afford the play,
and neither could they; so the only chance we had
was when friends of theirs invited us—and
once it was to see a tragedy by a Roumanian lady,
and the other time it was for ‘L’Ami Fritz’
at the Francais.”
Darrow laughed. “You must
do better than that now. ’Le Vertige’
is a fine thing, and Cerdine gets some wonderful effects
out of it. You must come with me tomorrow evening
to see it—with your friends, of course.—That
is,” he added, “if there’s any sort
of chance of getting seats.”
The flash of a street lamp lit up
her radiant face. “Oh, will you really
take us? What fun to think that it’s tomorrow
already!”
It was wonderfully pleasant to be
able to give such pleasure. Darrow was not rich,
but it was almost impossible for him to picture the
state of persons with tastes and perceptions like
his own, to whom an evening at the theatre was an
unattainable indulgence. There floated through
his mind an answer of Mrs. Leath’s to his enquiry
whether she had seen the play in question. “No.
I meant to, of course, but one is so overwhelmed
with things in Paris. And then I’m rather
sick of Cerdine—one is always being dragged
to see her.”
That, among the people he frequented,
was the usual attitude toward such opportunities.
There were too many, they were a nuisance, one had
to defend one’s self! He even remembered
wondering, at the moment, whether to a really fine
taste the exceptional thing could ever become indifferent
through habit; whether the appetite for beauty was
so soon dulled that it could be kept alive only by
privation. Here, at any rate, was a fine chance
to experiment with such a hunger: he almost wished
he might stay on in Paris long enough to take the
measure of Miss Viner’s receptivity.
She was still dwelling on his promise,
“It’s too beautiful of you! Oh,
don’t you think you’ll be able to
get seats?” And then, after a pause of brimming
appreciation: “I wonder if you’ll
think me horrid?—but it may be my only
chance; and if you can’t get places for us all,
wouldn’t you perhaps just take me?
After all, the Farlows may have seen it!”
He had not, of course, thought her
horrid, but only the more engaging, for being so natural,
and so unashamed of showing the frank greed of her
famished youth. “Oh, you shall go somehow!”
he had gaily promised her; and she had dropped back
with a sigh of pleasure as their cab passed into the
dimly-lit streets of the Farlows’ quarter beyond
the Seine…
This little passage came back to him
the next morning, as he opened his hotel window on
the early roar of the Northern Terminus.
The girl was there, in the room next
to him. That had been the first point in his
waking consciousness. The second was a sense
of relief at the obligation imposed on him by this
unexpected turn of everts. To wake to the necessity
of action, to postpone perforce the fruitless contemplation
of his private grievance, was cause enough for gratitude,
even if the small adventure in which he found himself
involved had not, on its own merits, roused an instinctive
curiosity to see it through.
When he and his companion, the night
before, had reached the Farlows’ door in the
rue de la Chaise, it was only to find, after repeated
assaults on its panels, that the Farlows were no longer
there. They had moved away the week before, not
only from their apartment but from Paris; and Miss
Viner’s breach with Mrs. Murrett had been too
sudden to permit her letter and telegram to overtake
them. Both communications, no doubt, still reposed
in a pigeon-hole of the loge; but its custodian, when
drawn from his lair, sulkily declined to let Miss
Viner verify the fact, and only flung out, in return
for Darrow’s bribe, the statement that the Americans
had gone to Joigny.
To pursue them there at that hour
was manifestly impossible, and Miss Viner, disturbed
but not disconcerted by this new obstacle, had quite
simply acceded to Darrow’s suggestion that she
should return for what remained of the night to the
hotel where he had sent his luggage.
The drive back through the dark hush
before dawn, with the nocturnal blaze of the Boulevard
fading around them like the false lights of a magician’s
palace, had so played on her impressionability that
she seemed to give no farther thought to her own predicament.
Darrow noticed that she did not feel the beauty and
mystery of the spectacle as much as its pressure of
human significance, all its hidden implications of
emotion and adventure. As they passed the shadowy
colonnade of the Francais, remote and temple-like in
the paling lights, he felt a clutch on his arm, and
heard the cry: “There are things there
that I want so desperately to see!” and all
the way back to the hotel she continued to question
him, with shrewd precision and an artless thirst for
detail, about the theatrical life of Paris. He
was struck afresh, as he listened, by the way in which
her naturalness eased the situation of constraint,
leaving to it only a pleasant savour of good fellowship.
It was the kind of episode that one might, in advance,
have characterized as “awkward”, yet that
was proving, in the event, as much outside such definitions
as a sunrise stroll with a dryad in a dew-drenched
forest; and Darrow reflected that mankind would never
have needed to invent tact if it had not first invented
social complications.
It had been understood, with his good-night
to Miss Viner, that the next morning he was to look
up the Joigny trains, and see her safely to the station;
but, while he breakfasted and waited for a time-table,
he recalled again her cry of joy at the prospect of
seeing Cerdine. It was certainly a pity, since
that most elusive and incalculable of artists was
leaving the next week for South America, to miss what
might be a last sight of her in her greatest part;
and Darrow, having dressed and made the requisite
excerpts from the time-table, decided to carry the
result of his deliberations to his neighbour’s
door.
It instantly opened at his knock,
and she came forth looking as if she had been plunged
into some sparkling element which had curled up all
her drooping tendrils and wrapped her in a shimmer
of fresh leaves.
“Well, what do you think of
me?” she cried; and with a hand at her waist
she spun about as if to show off some miracle of Parisian
dress-making.
“I think the missing trunk has
come—and that it was worth waiting for!”
“You do like my dress?”
“I adore it! I always
adore new dresses—why, you don’t mean
to say it’s not a new one?”
She laughed out her triumph.
“No, no, no! My trunk
hasn’t come, and this is only my old rag of
yesterday—but I never knew the trick to
fail!” And, as he stared: “You see,”
she joyously explained, “I’ve always had
to dress in all kinds of dreary left-overs, and sometimes,
when everybody else was smart and new, it used to
make me awfully miserable. So one day, when Mrs.
Murrett dragged me down unexpectedly to fill a place
at dinner, I suddenly thought I’d try spinning
around like that, and say to every one: ‘Well,
what do you think of me?’
And, do you know, they were all taken in, including
Mrs. Murrett, who didn’t recognize my old turned
and dyed rags, and told me afterward it was awfully
bad form to dress as if I were somebody that people
would expect to know! And ever since, whenever
I’ve particularly wanted to look nice, I’ve
just asked people what they thought of my new frock;
and they’re always, always taken in!”
She dramatized her explanation so
vividly that Darrow felt as if his point were gained.
“Ah, but this confirms your
vocation—of course,” he cried, “you
must see Cerdine!” and, seeing her face fall
at this reminder of the change in her prospects, he
hastened to set forth his plan. As he did so,
he saw how easy it was to explain things to her.
She would either accept his suggestion, or she would
not: but at least she would waste no time in
protestations and objections, or any vain sacrifice
to the idols of conformity. The conviction that
one could, on any given point, almost predicate this
of her, gave him the sense of having advanced far
enough in her intimacy to urge his arguments against
a hasty pursuit of her friends.
Yes, it would certainly be foolish—she
at once agreed—in the case of such dear
indefinite angels as the Farlows, to dash off after
them without more positive proof that they were established
at Joigny, and so established that they could take
her in. She owned it was but too probable that
they had gone there to “cut down”, and
might be doing so in quarters too contracted to receive
her; and it would be unfair, on that chance, to impose
herself on them unannounced. The simplest way
of getting farther light on the question would be
to go back to the rue de la Chaise, where, at that
more conversable hour, the concierge might be less
chary of detail; and she could decide on her next
step in the light of such facts as he imparted.
Point by point, she fell in with the
suggestion, recognizing, in the light of their unexplained
flight, that the Farlows might indeed be in a situation
on which one could not too rashly intrude. Her
concern for her friends seemed to have effaced all
thought of herself, and this little indication of
character gave Darrow a quite disproportionate pleasure.
She agreed that it would be well to go at once to
the rue de la Chaise, but met his proposal that they
should drive by the declaration that it was a “waste”
not to walk in Paris; so they set off on foot through
the cheerful tumult of the streets.
The walk was long enough for him to
learn many things about her. The storm of the
previous night had cleared the air, and Paris shone
in morning beauty under a sky that was all broad wet
washes of white and blue; but Darrow again noticed
that her visual sensitiveness was less keen than her
feeling for what he was sure the good Farlows—whom
he already seemed to know—would have called
“the human interest.” She seemed
hardly conscious of sensations of form and colour,
or of any imaginative suggestion, and the spectacle
before them—always, in its scenic splendour,
so moving to her companion—broke up, under
her scrutiny, into a thousand minor points: the
things in the shops, the types of character and manner
of occupation shown in the passing faces, the street
signs, the names of the hotels they passed, the motley
brightness of the flower-carts, the identity of the
churches and public buildings that caught her eye.
But what she liked best, he divined, was the mere
fact of being free to walk abroad in the bright air,
her tongue rattling on as it pleased, while her feet
kept time to the mighty orchestration of the city’s
sounds. Her delight in the fresh air, in the
freedom, light and sparkle of the morning, gave him
a sudden insight into her stifled past; nor was it
indifferent to him to perceive how much his presence
evidently added to her enjoyment. If only as
a sympathetic ear, he guessed what he must be worth
to her. The girl had been dying for some one
to talk to, some one before whom she could unfold
and shake out to the light her poor little shut-away
emotions. Years of repression were revealed
in her sudden burst of confidence; and the pity she
inspired made Darrow long to fill her few free hours
to the brim.
She had the gift of rapid definition,
and his questions as to the life she had led with
the Farlows, during the interregnum between the Hoke
and Murrett eras, called up before him a queer little
corner of Parisian existence. The Farlows themselves—he
a painter, she a “magazine writer”—
rose before him in all their incorruptible simplicity:
an elderly New England couple, with vague yearnings
for enfranchisement, who lived in Paris as if it were
a Massachusetts suburb, and dwelt hopefully on the
“higher side” of the Gallic nature.
With equal vividness she set before him the component
figures of the circle from which Mrs. Farlow drew
the “Inner Glimpses of French Life” appearing
over her name in a leading New England journal:
the Roumanian lady who had sent them tickets for her
tragedy, an elderly French gentleman who, on the strength
of a week’s stay at Folkestone, translated English
fiction for the provincial press, a lady from Wichita,
Kansas, who advocated free love and the abolition
of the corset, a clergyman’s widow from Torquay
who had written an “English Ladies’ Guide
to Foreign Galleries” and a Russian sculptor
who lived on nuts and was “almost certainly”
an anarchist. It was this nucleus, and its outer
ring of musical, architectural and other American
students, which posed successively to Mrs. Farlow’s
versatile fancy as a centre of “University Life”,
a “Salon of the Faubourg St. Germain”,
a group of Parisian “Intellectuals” or
a “Cross-section of Montmartre”; but even
her faculty for extracting from it the most varied
literary effects had not sufficed to create a permanent
demand for the “Inner Glimpses”, and there
were days when—Mr. Farlow’s landscapes
being equally unmarketable—a temporary
withdrawal to the country (subsequently utilized as
“Peeps into Chateau Life”) became necessary
to the courageous couple.
Five years of Mrs. Murrett’s
world, while increasing Sophy’s tenderness for
the Farlows, had left her with few illusions as to
their power of advancing her fortunes; and she did
not conceal from Darrow that her theatrical projects
were of the vaguest. They hung mainly on the
problematical good-will of an ancient comedienne,
with whom Mrs. Farlow had a slight acquaintance (extensively
utilized in “Stars of the French Footlights”
and “Behind the Scenes at the Francais”), and
who had once, with signs of approval, heard Miss Viner
recite the Nuit de Mai.
“But of course I know how much
that’s worth,” the girl broke off, with
one of her flashes of shrewdness. “And
besides, it isn’t likely that a poor old fossil
like Mme. Dolle could get anybody to listen to
her now, even if she really thought I had talent.
But she might introduce me to people; or at least
give me a few tips. If I could manage to earn
enough to pay for lessons I’d go straight to
some of the big people and work with them. I’m
rather hoping the Farlows may find me a chance of
that kind—an engagement with some American
family in Paris who would want to be ‘gone round’
with like the Hokes, and who’d leave me time
enough to study.”
In the rue de la Chaise they learned
little except the exact address of the Farlows, and
the fact that they had sub-let their flat before leaving.
This information obtained, Darrow proposed to Miss
Viner that they should stroll along the quays to a
little restaurant looking out on the Seine, and there,
over the plat du jour, consider the next step to be
taken. The long walk had given her cheeks a glow
indicative of wholesome hunger, and she made no difficulty
about satisfying it in Darrow’s company.
Regaining the river they walked on in the direction
of Notre Dame, delayed now and again by the young
man’s irresistible tendency to linger over the
bookstalls, and by his ever-fresh response to the
shifting beauties of the scene. For two years
his eyes had been subdued to the atmospheric effects
of London, to the mysterious fusion of darkly-piled
city and low-lying bituminous sky; and the transparency
of the French air, which left the green gardens and
silvery stones so classically clear yet so softly
harmonized, struck him as having a kind of conscious
intelligence. Every line of the architecture,
every arch of the bridges, the very sweep of the strong
bright river between them, while contributing to this
effect, sent forth each a separate appeal to some
sensitive memory; so that, for Darrow, a walk through
the Paris streets was always like the unrolling of
a vast tapestry from which countless stored fragrances
were shaken out.
It was a proof of the richness and
multiplicity of the spectacle that it served, without
incongruity, for so different a purpose as the background
of Miss Viner’s enjoyment. As a mere drop-scene
for her personal adventure it was just as much in
its place as in the evocation of great perspectives
of feeling. For her, as he again perceived when
they were seated at their table in a low window above
the Seine, Paris was “Paris” by virtue
of all its entertaining details, its endless ingenuities
of pleasantness. Where else, for instance, could
one find the dear little dishes of hors d’oeuvre,
the symmetrically-laid anchovies and radishes, the
thin golden shells of butter, or the wood strawberries
and brown jars of cream that gave to their repast
the last refinement of rusticity? Hadn’t
he noticed, she asked, that cooking always expressed
the national character, and that French food was clever
and amusing just because the people were? And
in private houses, everywhere, how the dishes always
resembled the talk—how the very same platitudes
seemed to go into people’s mouths and come out
of them? Couldn’t he see just what kind
of menu it would make, if a fairy waved a wand and
suddenly turned the conversation at a London dinner
into joints and puddings? She always thought
it a good sign when people liked Irish stew; it meant
that they enjoyed changes and surprises, and taking
life as it came; and such a beautiful Parisian version
of the dish as the navarin that was just being set
before them was like the very best kind of talk—the
kind when one could never tell before-hand just what
was going to be said!
Darrow, as he watched her enjoyment
of their innocent feast, wondered if her vividness
and vivacity were signs of her calling. She
was the kind of girl in whom certain people would
instantly have recognized the histrionic gift.
But experience had led him to think that, except
at the creative moment, the divine flame burns low
in its possessors. The one or two really intelligent
actresses he had known had struck him, in conversation,
as either bovine or primitively “jolly”.
He had a notion that, save in the mind of genius,
the creative process absorbs too much of the whole
stuff of being to leave much surplus for personal
expression; and the girl before him, with her changing
face and flexible fancies, seemed destined to work
in life itself rather than in any of its counterfeits.
The coffee and liqueurs were already
on the table when her mind suddenly sprang back to
the Farlows. She jumped up with one of her subversive
movements and declared that she must telegraph at
once. Darrow called for writing materials and
room was made at her elbow for the parched ink-bottle
and saturated blotter of the Parisian restaurant; but
the mere sight of these jaded implements seemed to
paralyze Miss Viner’s faculties. She hung
over the telegraph-form with anxiously-drawn brow,
the tip of the pen-handle pressed against her lip;
and at length she raised her troubled eyes to Darrow’s.
“I simply can’t think how to say it.”
“What—that you’re staying over
to see Cerdine?”
“But am I—am
I, really?” The joy of it flamed over her face.
Darrow looked at his watch.
“You could hardly get an answer to your telegram
in time to take a train to Joigny this afternoon,
even if you found your friends could have you.”
She mused for a moment, tapping her
lip with the pen. “But I must let them
know I’m here. I must find out as soon
as possible if they can, have me.”
She laid the pen down despairingly. “I
never could write a telegram!” she sighed.
“Try a letter, then and tell
them you’ll arrive tomorrow.”
This suggestion produced immediate
relief, and she gave an energetic dab at the ink-bottle;
but after another interval of uncertain scratching
she paused again.”Oh, it’s fearful! I don’t
know what on earth to say. I wouldn’t for
the world have them know how beastly Mrs. Murrett’s
been.”
Darrow did not think it necessary
to answer. It was no business of his, after
all. He lit a cigar and leaned back in his seat,
letting his eyes take their fill of indolent pleasure.
In the throes of invention she had pushed back her
hat, loosening the stray lock which had invited his
touch the night before. After looking at it for
a while he stood up and wandered to the window.
Behind him he heard her pen scrape on.
“I don’t want to worry
them—I’m so certain they’ve
got bothers of their own.” The faltering
scratches ceased again. “I wish I weren’t
such an idiot about writing: all the words get
frightened and scurry away when I try to catch them.”
He glanced back at her with a smile as she bent above
her task like a school-girl struggling with a “composition.”
Her flushed cheek and frowning brow showed that her
difficulty was genuine and not an artless device to
draw him to her side. She was really powerless
to put her thoughts in writing, and the inability
seemed characteristic of her quick impressionable
mind, and of the incessant come-and-go of her sensations.
He thought of Anna Leath’s letters, or rather
of the few he had received, years ago, from the girl
who had been Anna Summers. He saw the slender
firm strokes of the pen, recalled the clear structure
of the phrases, and, by an abrupt association of ideas,
remembered that, at that very hour, just such a document
might be awaiting him at the hotel.
What if it were there, indeed, and
had brought him a complete explanation of her telegram?
The revulsion of feeling produced by this thought
made him look at the girl with sudden impatience.
She struck him as positively stupid, and he wondered
how he could have wasted half his day with her, when
all the while Mrs. Leath’s letter might be lying
on his table. At that moment, if he could have
chosen, he would have left his companion on the spot;
but he had her on his hands, and must accept the consequences.
Some odd intuition seemed to make
her conscious of his change of mood, for she sprang
from her seat, crumpling the letter in her hand.
“I’m too stupid; but I
won’t keep you any longer. I’ll go
back to the hotel and write there.”
Her colour deepened, and for the first
time, as their eyes met, he noticed a faint embarrassment
in hers. Could it be that his nearness was, after
all, the cause of her confusion? The thought
turned his vague impatience with her into a definite
resentment toward himself. There was really
no excuse for his having blundered into such an adventure.
Why had he not shipped the girl off to Joigny by the
evening train, instead of urging her to delay, and
using Cerdine as a pretext? Paris was full of
people he knew, and his annoyance was increased by
the thought that some friend of Mrs. Leath’s
might see him at the play, and report his presence
there with a suspiciously good-looking companion.
The idea was distinctly disagreeable: he did not
want the woman he adored to think he could forget
her for a moment. And by this time he had fully
persuaded himself that a letter from her was awaiting
him, and had even gone so far as to imagine that its
contents might annul the writer’s telegraphed
injunction, and call him to her side at once…