<div><span class='pageno' title='158' id='Page_158'></span><h1>CHAPTER XI</h1></div>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>M</span><span class='sc'>ADAME ROBINEAU</span> was tall, angular, thin-lipped
and devout, and so far as she indulged
in social intercourse, loved to mingle with
other angular, thin-lipped and devout ladies who belonged
to the same lay sisterhood. She dressed in
unrelieved black and always wore on her bosom a
bronze cross of threatening magnitude. She prayed
in the Cathedral at inconvenient hours, and fasted as
rigorously as her Confessor, Monsieur l’Abbé Duloup,
himself. Monsieur l’Abbé regarded her as one of the
most pious women in Chartres. No doubt she was.</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Félise, although a good Catholic in her very
simple way, and anxious to win favour by observance
of the rules of the solitary household, was wicked
enough to wish that her aunt were not quite so pious.
In religious matters a wide latitudinarianism prevailed
at the Hôtel des Grottes. There, with a serene conscience,
one could eat meat on Fridays and crack a
mild joke at the expense of the good Saint Peter. But
neither forbidden flesh nor jocularity on any subject,
let alone on a saint’s minor foibles, mitigated the austerities
of the perky, wind-swept little house at Chartres.
No wonder, thought Félise, Aunt Clothilde had
married off a regiment of daughters—four to be exact;
it had been an easy matter; she herself would have
married any caricature of a man rather than spend her
life in an atmosphere so rarefied and so depressing.
She pitied her cousins, although, according to her
Aunt Clothilde’s pragmatical account, they were all
doing splendidly and had innumerable babies. By the
end of the first week of her visit, she consolidated an
intense dislike to Chartres and everything in it, especially
the Cathedral. Now, it may be thought that
any one who can shake the fist of disapprobation at
the Cathedral of Chartres, is beyond the pale of human
sympathy. But when you are dragged relentlessly
thither in the icy dark of every winter morning, and
the bitter gloom of every winter evening, to say nothing
of sporadic attendances during the daytime, you
may be pardoned if your æsthetic perceptions are obscured
by the sense of outrage inflicted on your personal
comfort. To many generations of men the
Cathedral has been a symbol of glories, revelations and
eternities. In such slanting shafts of light, mystically
hued, the Grail might have been made manifest, the
Sacred Dove might have glided down to the Head of
the Holy One. . . . But what need to tell of its spiritual
wonders and of its mystery, the heart of which
it is given to every suffering man to pluck out according
to his own soul’s needs? It was a little tragedy
that to poor Félise the Cathedral symbolised nothing
but an overwhelming tyranny. She hated every stone
of it, as much as she hated every shiny plank and every
polished chair in her aunt’s frigid salon. Even the
streets of Chartres repelled her by their bleakness.
They lacked the smiling homeliness of Brantôme;
and the whole place was flatter than the Sahara. She
sighed for the rocks and hills of Périgord.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She also ate the unaccustomed bread of idleness.
Had her aunt permitted, she would delightedly have
helped with the house-work. But Madame Robineau,
widow of a dealer in grain who, before his death, had
retired on a comfortable fortune, lived, according to
her lights, at her ease, her wants being scrupulously
administered to by a cook and a maid. There was no
place in the domestic machine for Félise. Her aunt
passed long chilly hours over ecclesiastical embroidery,
sitting bolt upright in her chair with a <span class='it'>chaufferette</span>
beneath her feet. Félise, unaccustomed needlewoman,
passed longer and chillier hours (having no <span class='it'>chaufferette</span>)
either playing with a grey ascetic cat or reading
aloud <span class='it'>La Croix</span>, the only newspaper allowed to cross
the threshold of the house. Now and again, Madame
Robineau would drop her thin hands into her lap and
regard her disapprovingly. One day she said, interrupting
the reading,</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My poor child, how your education has been
neglected. You scarcely know how to hold a needle,
you can’t read aloud without making faults, and you
are ignorant of the elements of our holy religion.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My Aunt,” Félise replied, “I know how to manage
an hotel.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That would be of little use to your husband.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Félise winced at the unhappy word.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I am never going to marry, <span class='it'>ma tante</span>,” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You surely do not expect to be admitted into a convent?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Heaven forbid!” cried Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Heaven would forbid,” said Madame Robineau
severely, “seeing that you have not the vocation. But
the <span class='it'>jeune fille bien élevée</span>”—in the mouth of her Aunt
Clothilde the familiar phrase assumed a detestable significance,
implying, to Félise’s mind, a pallid young
creature from whom all blood and laughter had been
driven by undesirable virtues—“the <span class='it'>jeune fille bien
élevée</span> has only two careers offered to her—the convent
or marriage. For you, my dear child, it is marriage.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well,” said Félise, with a smile, preparing, to resume
the article in the newspaper over which she had
stumbled, “perhaps the beautiful prince will come along
one of these days.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Madame Robineau rebuked her for vain imaginings.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It is true, what I said, that your education has been
neglected. A young girl’s duty is not to look for
princes, but to accept the husband chosen by the wisdom
of her family.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Ma tante</span>,” said Félise demurely, after a pause
during which her aunt took up her work again. “If
you would teach me how to embroider, perhaps I might
learn to be useful in my future home.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>From this and many other conversations, Félise
began to be aware of the subtle strategy of Bigourdin.
On the plea of providing her with pro-maternal consolation,
he had delivered her into the hands of the
enemy. This became abundantly clear as the days
went on. Aunt Clothilde, incited thereto by her uncle,
was opening a deadly campaign in favour of Lucien
Viriot. Now, the cathedral, though paralysing, could
be borne for a season, and so could the blight that
pervaded the house; but the campaign was intolerable.
If she could have resented the action of one so beloved
as Bigourdin, she would have resented his sending her
to her Aunt Clothilde. Under the chaperonage of
the respectable Madame Chauvet she had fallen into a
pretty trap. She had found none of the promised
sympathy. Aunt Clothilde, although receiving her
with the affectionate hospitality due to a sister’s child,
had from the first interview frozen the genial current
of her little soul. The great bronze cross in itself repelled
her. If it had been a nice, gentle little cross,
rising and falling on a motherly bosom, it would have
worked its all-human, adorable influence. But this
was a harsh, aggressive, come-and-be-crucified sort of
cross, with no suggestion of pity or understanding.
The sallow, austere face above it might have easily
been twisted into such a cross. It conveyed no invitation
to the sufferer to pour out her troubles. Uncle
Bigourdin was wrong again. Rather would Félise
have poured out her troubles into the portentous ear
of the Suisse at the Cathedral.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her aunt and herself met nowhere on common
ground. They were for ever at variance. Madame
Robineau spoke disparagingly of the English, because
they were Protestants and therefore heretics.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But I am English, and I am not a heretic,” cried
Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You are not English,” replied her aunt, “because
you have a French mother and have been brought
up in France. And as for not being a heretic, I am
not so sure. Monsieur l’Abbé Duloup thinks you must
have been brought up among Freemasons.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Ah non, par exemple!</span>” exclaimed Félise indignantly.
For, in the eyes of the Church, French Freemasons
are dreadful folk, capable of anything sacrilegious,
from denying the miracle of Saint Januarius
to slitting the Pope’s weasand. So—“<span class='it'>Ah! non par
exemple!</span>” cried Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Freemasons, indeed! Her Uncle Gaspard, it is true,
did not attend church regularly—but yes, he did attend
regularly—he went once a year, every Easter Sunday,
and he was the best of friends with Monsieur le
Curé of their Paroisse. And as for herself, Monsieur
le Curé, who looked like a venerable saint in the holy
pictures, had always a smile and a <span class='it'>ma chère enfant</span> for
her whenever they met. She was on excellent terms
with Monsieur le Curé; he would no more have
dreamed of associating her with Freemasons than of
accusing her of being in league with devils.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He was a good, common-sensical old curé, like thousands
of the secular clergy in France, and knew how
to leave well alone. Questioned by the ecclesiastically
environed Abbé Duloup as to the spiritual state of
Félise, he would indubitably have answered with serene
conviction:—</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If a soul so pure and so candid, which I have
watched from childhood, is not acceptable to the
<span class='it'>bon Dieu</span>, then I know no more about the <span class='it'>bon Dieu</span>
than I know about the Emperor of Patagonia.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Félise, disliking the Abbé Duloup and many
of his works, felt a delicacy in dragging her own curé
into the argument and contented herself with protesting
against the charge of heresy. As a matter of fact,
she proclaimed her Uncle Gaspard was not a Freemason.
He held in abhorrence all secret political societies
as being subversive of the State. No one should
attack her Uncle Gaspard, although he had betrayed
her so shabbily.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In vain she sought some link with her aunt. Even
Mimi, the lean old cat, did not form a bond of union.
As a vagrant kitten it had been welcomed years ago
by the late good-natured Robineau, and the widow
tolerated its continued presence with Christian resignation.
Félise took the unloved beast to her heart. From
Aunt Clothilde’s caustic remarks she gathered that
her four cousins, of whose exemplary acceptance of
husbands she had heard so much, had eyed Mimi with
the coldness of their mother. She began to thank
Providence that she did not resemble her cousins,
which was reprehensible; and now and then manifested
a lack of interest in their impeccable doings, which was
more reprehensible still, and thus stirred up against
her the maternal instincts of Madame Robineau.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Relations grew strained. Aunt Clothilde spoke to
her with sharp impatience. From her recalcitrance in
the matter of Lucien she deduced every fault conceivable.
For the first time in her life Félise dwelt in
an atmosphere where love was not. She longed for
home. She longed especially for her father and his
wise tenderness. Because she longed so greatly she
could not write to him as a father should be written
to; and the many-paged letters into which, at night,
she put all her aching little heart, in the morning she
blushed at the thought of sending. In spite of his lapse
from grace she could not be so disloyal to the beloved
Uncle Gaspard. Nor could she distress her suffering
angel mother by her incoherent account of things. If
only she could see her!</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last, one dreary afternoon, Madame Robineau
opened an attack in force.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Put down that cat. I have to talk to you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Félise obeyed and Aunt Clothilde talked. The more
she talked, the more stubborn front did Félise oppose.
Madame Robineau lost her temper. Her thin lips
twitched.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I order you,” she said, “to marry Lucien Viriot.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I am sorry to say anything to vex you, <span class='it'>ma tante</span>,”
replied Félise valiantly; “but you have not the power.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And I suppose your uncle has not the power to
command you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“In matters like that, no, <span class='it'>ma tante</span>,” said Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Aunt Clothilde rose from her straight-backed chair
and shook a long, threatening finger. The nail at the
end was also long and not very clean. Félise often
wondered whether her aunt abhorred a nail-brush by
way of mortification.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“When one considers all the benefits my brother
has heaped on your head,” she cried in a rasping voice,
“you are nothing else than a little monster of ingratitude!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Félise flared up. She did not lack spirit.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It is false,” she cried. “I adore my Uncle Gaspard.
I would give him my life. I am not ungrateful.
It is worse than false.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It is true,” retorted Madame Robineau. “Otherwise
you would not refuse him the desire of his heart.
Without him you would have not a rag to your back,
or a shoe to your foot, and no more religion than a
heathen. It is to him you owe everything—everything.
Without him you would be in the gutter where
he fished you from.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She ended on a shrill note. Félise, very pale, faced
her passionately, with a new light in her mild eyes.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What do you mean? The gutter? My father——?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Bah! Your father! Your vagabond, ne’er-do-weel
scamp of a father! He’s a scandal to the family,
your father. He should never have been born.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The girl reeled. It was a foul bludgeon blow.
Madame Robineau, with quick realisation of folly,
checked further utterance and allowed Félise, white,
quivering and vanquished, but carrying her little head
fiercely in the air, to retire from the scene with all
the honours of war.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Madame Robineau was sorry. She had lost both
temper and dignity. Her next confession would be an
unpleasant matter. Possibly, however, the Abbé Duloup
would understand and guess the provocation. She
shrugged her lean shoulders. It was good sometimes
for hoity-toity damsels to learn humility. So she sat
down again, pursing her lips, and continued her embroidered
stole until it was the hour of vespers. Contrary
to custom, she did not summon Félise to accompany
her to the Cathedral. An hour or two of solitude,
she thought, not unkindly, would bring her to a more
reasonable frame of mind. She went out alone.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When she returned she found that Félise had left the
house.</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>It was a very scared young person that presented
herself at the <span class='it'>guichet</span> at the railway station and asked
for a second class ticket to Paris. She had never
travelled alone in her life before. Even on her rare
visits to the metropolis of Périgueux, in whose vast
emporium of fashion she clothed herself, she was attended
by Euphémie or the chambermaid. She felt
lost, a tiny, helpless creature, in the great, high station
in which an engine letting off steam produced a bewildering
uproar. How much she paid for her ticket,
thrifty and practised housekeeper that she was, she
did not know. She clutched the change from a hundred
franc note which, a present from her uncle before
leaving Brantôme, she had preserved intact, and
scuttled like a little brown rabbit to the door of the
<span class='it'>salle d’attente</span>.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Le train de Paris? A quatre heures cinquante</span>,”
said the official at the door, as though this palpitating
adventure were the commonplace of every minute.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And that will be?” she gasped.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He cocked an eye at the clock. “In half an hour.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A train was on the point of starting. There was a
scuttle for seats. She felt sure it was the Paris train.
From it emanated the magic influence of the great
city whither she was bound. A questioned porter informed
her it was going in the opposite direction. The
Paris express left at four-fifty. The train steamed
out. It seemed to Félise as though she had lost a
friend. She looked round helplessly, and seeing a fat
peasant woman sitting on a bench, surrounded by bundles
and children, she ran to her side for protection.
It is the unknown that frightens. In the Hôtel des
Grottes she commanded men with the serenity of a
Queen Elizabeth, and as for commercial travellers
and other male visitors, she took no more account of
them than of the geese that she plucked. And the
terrifying Aunt Clothilde had terrified in vain. But
here, in this cold, glass-roofed, steel-strutted, screeching,
ghostly inferno of a place, with men prowling
about like roaring lions seeking probably whom
they might devour, conditions were terrifyingly unfamiliar.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Yet she did not care. Under the blasphemous roof
of her Aunt Clothilde she could not have remained.
For, in verity, blasphemy had been spoken. Her
father was loved and honoured by all the world; by her
mother, by Uncle Gaspard, by Corinna, by Martin.
And she herself—did she not know her father? Was
there ever a man like him? The insulting words rang
through her brain. She would have confronted terrors
a million fold more grisly than these in order to escape
from the blasphemer, whom she could never forgive—no,
not for all the curés and abbés in Christendom.
An intense little soul was that of Félise Fortinbras.
It swept her irresistibly out of the unhallowed villa,
with a handbag containing a nightgown, a toothbrush
and a faded little photograph of her father and mother
standing side by side in wedding garb, on the way to
the dread, fascinating whirlpool of Paris, where dwelt
the worshipped gods of her idolatry. And, as she sat
in the comforting lee of the fat and unafraid peasant
woman and her bundles and her children, she took herself
to task for cowardice.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The journey, under two hours, was but a trifle.
Had it been to Brantôme, an all-night affair, she might
have had reason for quailing. But to Paris it was
practically but a step. . . . The Abbé Duloup spoke
of going to Paris as her uncle spoke of going to
Périgueux. Yet her heart thudded violently during
the interminable half hour. And there was the grim
possibility of the appearance of a pursuing Aunt Clothilde.
She kept a fearful eye upon the doorway of
the <span class='it'>salle d’attente</span>.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last the train rushed in, and there was clangour
of luggage trucks and clamour of raucous voices announcing
the train for Paris; and a flow of waiting
people, among whom was her neighbour with her
varied impedimenta, swept across the lines and scaled
the heights of the carriages. By luck, in front of
Félise loomed a compartment showing second class
on the door panel and “<span class='it'>Dames seules</span>” on the window.
She clambered in and sank into a seat. Who her
lonely lady fellow-travellers were she could not afterwards
remember; for she kept her eyes closed, absorbed
in the adventure that still lay before her. Yet
it was comforting to feel that as long as the train went
on she was safe in this feminine sanctuary, free from
depredations of marauding males.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Paris. One of the ladies, seeing that she was about
to remain in the carriage, jerked the information over
a descending shoulder. Félise followed and stood for
a moment more confused than ever in the blue glare
and ant-hill hurry of the Gare de Montparnasse. A
whole town seemed to have emerged from the train
and to stream like a rout of refugees flying from disaster,
men, women and children, laden with luggage,
towards the barrier. Carried along, she arrived there
at length, gave up her ticket, and, issuing from the
station, found herself in a narrow street, at the end
of which, still following the throng, she came to a
thundering thoroughfare. Never, in all her imaginings
of Paris, had she pictured such a soul-stunning phantasmagoria
of flashing light and flashing movement.
There were millions of faces passing her by on the
pavement, in the illuminated interiors of omnibuses,
in the dimmed recesses of taxi-autos, on waggons, on
carts, on bicycles; millions in gaily lit cafés; before her
dazzled eyes millions seemed to be reflected even in
the quivering, lucent air. She stood at the corner of
the Place de Rennes and the Boulevard de Montparnasse
paralysed with fear, clutching her handbag tight
to her side. In that perilous street thousands of thieves
must jostle her. She could not move a step, overwhelmed
by the immensity of Paris. A good-natured
sergent de ville, possibly the father of pretty daughters,
noticed her agonised distress. It was not his
business to perform unsolicited deeds of knight errantry;
but having nothing else to do for the moment,
he caught her eye and beamed paternal encouragement.
Now a sergent de ville is a <span class='it'>sergent de ville</span> (recognisable
by his uniform) all France over. Félise held
Père Chavrol, who exercised that function at Brantôme,
in high esteem. This policeman had a fat, dark,
grinning, scrubbily-moustached face which resembled
that of Père Chavrol. She took her courage and her
handbag in both hands.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Monsieur,” she said, “can you direct me to the
Rue Maugrabine?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He couldn’t. He did not know that street. In what
<span class='it'>quartier</span> was it? Félise was ignorant.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>C’est là où demeure mon père</span>,” she added. “<span class='it'>C’est
Monsieur Fortinbras. Tout le monde le connaît à
Paris.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But alas! the sergent de ville had never heard of the
illustrious Fortinbras: which was strange, seeing that
all Brantôme knew him, although he did not live
there.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What then shall I do, Monsieur,” asked Félise, “to
get to my father?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The sergent de ville pushed his képi to the back of
his head and cogitated. Then, with uplifted hand, he
halted a crawling fiacre. Rue de Maugrabine? Of
course the glazed-hatted, muffled-up driver knew it.
Somewhere between the Rue de la Roquette and the
Avenue de la République. The sergent de ville smiled
vaingloriously. It was only <span class='it'>ces vieux collignons</span>, old
drivers of fiacres, that knew their Paris, he explained.
The chauffeur of a taxi-auto would have been ignorant
of the whereabouts of the Arc de Triomphe. He advised
her to engage the omniscient cabman. The Rue
Maugrabine was infinitely distant, on the other side
of the river. Félise suggested that a cab would cost
enormously. In Brantôme legends were still current
of scandalous exactions levied by Paris cabmen on provincials.
The driver twisted his head affably and
hoarsely murmured that it would not cost a fortune.
Perhaps two francs, two francs fifty, with a little
<span class='it'>pourboire</span>. He did not know. The amount would be
registered. The sergent de ville pointed out the taximeter.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Be not afraid, Mademoiselle. Enter. What number?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Number 29.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He opened the door of the stuffy little brougham.
Félise held out her hand as she would have held it out
to Père Chavrol, and thanked him as though he had
preserved her from legions of dragons. The last she
saw of him as she drove off was in the act of majestically
sweeping back a group of idlers who had halted
to witness the touching farewell.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The old cab jolted and swerved through blazing
vistas of unimagined thoroughfares; over bridges spanning
mysterious stretches of dark waters and connecting
looming masses of gigantic buildings; and through
more streets garish with light and apparent revelry.
Realisation of its glory came with a little sob of joy.
She was in Paris, the Wonderland of Paris transcending
all her dreams. Brantôme and Chartres seemed
afar off. She had the sensation of a butterfly escaping
from the chrysalis. She had been a butterfly for ages.
What unremembered kind of state had been her grub
condition? Thrills of excitement swept her little body.
She was throbbingly happy. And at the end of the
magic journey she would meet her father, marvel
among men, and her mother, the strange, sweet, mystical
being, the enchanted princess of her childish
visions, the warm, spiritual, all understanding, all
embracing woman of her maiden longings.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The streets grew narrower, less important. They
were passing through the poor neighbourhood east
of the Place de la Bastille. Fairyland suffered a sinister
touch. Slight fears again assailed her. Some
of the streets appeared dark and suspect. Evil-looking
folk haunted the pavements. She wondered, with a
catch of the breath, whither she was being driven.
At last the cab swung into a street, darker, more suspect,
more ill-odoured than any, and stopped before a
large open doorway. She peered through the window.
Above the door she could just discern the white figures
“29” on the blue plaque. Her rosy dreams melted
into night, her heart sank. She alighted.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“This is really 29 Rue Maugrabine?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Bien sûr, mademoiselle.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She had forgotten to look at the taximeter, but taking
three francs from her purse, she asked the driver
if that was enough. He thanked her with raised hat
for munificence, and, whipping up his old horse, drove
off.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Félise entered a smelly little paved courtyard and
gazed about her helplessly. She had imagined such
another decent little house as her aunt’s, at which a
ring at the front door would ensure immediate admittance.
In this extraordinary dank well she felt more
lost than ever. Paris was a bewildering mystery. A
child emerged from some dark cavern.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Can you tell me where Monsieur Fortinbras
lives?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The child advised her to ask the concierge, and
pointed to the iron bell-pull. Félise rang. The frowsy
concierge gave the directions.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Au quatrième au coin, à gauche.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Félise entered the corner cavern and came on an
evil-smelling stone staircase, lit here and there by naked
gas-jets which blackened the walls at intervals. The
cold gathered round her heart. On the second landing
some noisy, ill-dressed men clattered past her and
caused her to shrink back with fear. She mounted the
interminable stairs. Here and there an open door
revealed a squalid interior. The rosy dream became
a nightmare. She had made some horrible blunder.
It was impossible that her father should live here.
But the concierge had confirmed the address. On the
fourth floor she paused; then, as directed, turned down
a small, ill-lit passage to the left. On a door facing her
at the end, she noticed the gleam of a card. She approached.
It bore the printed legend,</p>
<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:4em;'>“<span class='sc'>Daniel Fortinbras</span>,</p>
<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:6em;'><span class='it'>Ancien Avoué de Londres,</span></p>
<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:8em;'><span class='it'>Agent de Famille, &c, &c.</span>”</p>
<p class='noindent'>And written in pencil was the direction: “<span class='it'>Sonnez,
S. V. P.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The sight reassured and comforted her. Behind
this thin barrier dwelt those dearest to her on earth,
the dimly remembered saintly mother, the wise and
tender father. She forgot the squalor of the environment.
It was merely a feature of Paris mighty and
inscrutable, so different from Brantôme. She felt a
little throb of pride in her daring, in her achievement.
Without guidance—ungenerously she took no account
of the sergent de ville, the cabman and the concierge—she
had travelled from Chartres to this inmost heart
of Paris. She had accomplished her stupendous adventure.
. . . The card invited her to ring. Above it
hung a bit of wood attached in the middle to a length
of twine. She pulled and an answering clang was
heard from within the apartment. Her whole being
vibrated.</p>
<p class='pindent'>After a moment’s waiting, the door was flung open
by a coarse, red-faced, slatternly woman standing in a
poverty-stricken little vestibule. She looked at the
girl with curiously glazed eyes and slightly swayed
as she put up a hand to dishevelled hair.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Vous désirez?</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Monsieur Fortinbras,” gasped Félise, scared by the
abominable apparition.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Monsieur Fortinbras?” She mimicked the girl’s
clear accent.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Oui, madame</span>,” replied Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Whereupon the woman withered her with a sudden
volley of drunken abuse. She knew how Fortinbras
occupied himself all day long. She did not complain.
But when the <span class='it'>gonzesses</span> of the <span class='it'>rive gauche</span> had the indecency
to come to his house, she would very soon put
them across her knee and teach them manners. This
is but a paraphrase of what fell upon Félise’s terror-stricken
ears. It fell like an avalanche; but it did not
last long, for suddenly came a voice well known but
pitched in an unfamiliar key of anger:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Qu’est-ce qu’il y a?</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>And Fortinbras appeared.</p>
<p class='pindent'>As he caught sight of his daughter’s white face, he
clapped his hands to his head and reeled back, horror
in his eyes. Then:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Tais-toi!</span>” he thundered, and seizing the woman
masterfully by the arms, he pushed her into some inner
room, leaving Félise shaking on the threshold. In a
moment or two he re-appeared, caught overcoat and
old silk hat from a peg, and motioning Félise back,
marched out of his home and slammed the door behind
him. Father and daughter were now in the neutral
ground at the end of the dim, malodorous passage.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What in the name of God are you doing here,
Félise?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I came to see my mother.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The fleshy, benign face of the man fell into the sags
of old age. His lower lip hung loose. His mild blue
eyes, lamping out from beneath noble brows, stared
agony.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Your mother?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Where is she?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He drew a deep breath. “Your mother—well—she
is in a nursing home, dear. No one, not even I, can see
her.” He took her by the arm and hurried her to the
staircase. “Come, come, dear, we must get away from
this. You understand. I did not tell you your mother
was so ill, for fear of making you unhappy.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But that dreadful woman, father?” she cried. And
the Alpine flower from which honey is made looked
like a poor little frost-bitten lily of the valley. She
faced him on the landing.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That woman—that——” he waved an arm.
“That,” said he, quoting bitterly, “is a woman of no
importance.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ah!” cried Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>With some of the elemental grossnesses of life she
was acquainted. You cannot manage a hotel in France
which is a free, non-Puritanical country, and remain
in imbecile ignorance. She was shocked to the depths
of her being.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Come,” said Fortinbras with outstretched hand.
But she shrank from him. “Come!” he commanded.
“There’s no time to lose. We must get out of
this.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Where are we going?” she asked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“To the Gare de Montparnasse. You must return
at once to Chartres.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I will never enter the house of Aunt Clothilde
again,” said Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But what has happened? My God! what has happened?”
he asked, as they hurried down the stairs.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Breathlessly, brokenly, she told him. In the courtyard
he paused, put his hand to his head.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But what can I do with you? My God! what can
I do with you in this dreadful city?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Isn’t there a hotel in Paris?” she asked, coldly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He laughed in a mirthless way. “There are many.
There are the Ritz and the Meurice and the Elysée Palace.
Yes—there are hotels enough!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I have plenty of money,” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No, no, my child,” said he. “Not an hotel. I
should go mad. I have an idea. Come.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They had just reached the evil pavement of the Rue
Maugrabine, when Cécile Fortinbras, sister of the excellent
Gaspard Bigourdin and the pious Clothilde Robineau,
and mother of Félise, recovered from the stupor
to which the unprecedented fury of her husband had
reduced her, and reeled drunkenly to the flat door.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Je vais arracher les yeux à cette putain-là!</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She started to tear the hussy’s eyes out; but by the
time she had accomplished the difficult descent and
had expounded her grievances to an unsympathetic
concierge, a motor omnibus was conveying father and
daughter silent and anguished to the other side of the
River Seine.</p>
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