Part 11 (1/2)
He feared some trouble.
”My poor friend!” Christine replied patronisingly. ”Thou art not up in these things. Marthe knows her affair--a woman very experienced in London. He will take it, thy policeman. And if I do not deceive myself no more chimneys will burn for about a year.... Ah! The police do not wipe their noses with broken bottles!” (She meant that the police knew their way about.) ”I no more than they, I do not wipe my nose with broken bottles.”
She was moved, indignant, stoutly defensive. G.J. grew self-conscious.
Moreover, her slang disturbed him. It was the first slang he had heard her use, and in using it her voice had roughened. But he remembered that Concepcion also used slang--and advanced slang--upon occasion.
The booming ceased; a door closed. Marthe returned once more.
”Well?”
”He is gone. He was very nice, madame. I told him about madame--that madame was very discreet.” Marthe finished in a murmur.
”So much the better. Now, help me to dress. Quick, quick! Monsieur will be impatient.”
G.J. was ashamed of the innocence he had displayed, and ashamed, too, of the whole Metropolitan Police Force, admirable though it was in stopping traffic for a perambulator to cross the road. Five pounds!
These ladies were bled. Five pounds wanted earning.... It was a good sign, though, that she had not so far asked him to contribute. And he felt sure that she would not.
”Come in, then, poltroon!” She cooed softly and encouragingly from the bedroom, where Marthe was busy with her.
The door between the bedroom and the drawing-room was open. G.J., humming, obeyed the invitation and sat down on the bed between two heaps of clothes. Christine was very gay; she was like a child. She had apparently quite forgotten her migraine and also the incident of the policeman. She s.n.a.t.c.hed the cigarette from G.J.'s mouth, took a puff, and put it back again. Then she sat in front of the large mirror and did her hair while Marthe b.u.t.toned her boots. Her corset fitted beautifully, and as she raised her arms above her head under the shaded lamp G.J. could study the marvellous articulation of the arms at the bare shoulders. The close atmosphere was drenched with femininity. The two women, one so stylish and the other by contrast piquantly a heavy slattern, hid nothing whatever from him, bestowing on him with perfect tranquillity the right to be there and to watch at his ease every mysterious transaction.... The most convincing proof that Christine was authentically young! And G.J. had the illusion again that he was in the Orient, and it was extraordinarily agreeable.
The recollection of the scene of the Lechford Committee amused him like a pantomime witnessed afar off through a gauze curtain. It had no more reality than that. But he thought better of the committee now. He perceived the wonderful goodness of it and of its work. It really was running those real hospitals; it had a real interest in them. He meant to do his very best in the accounts department. After all, he had been a lawyer and knew the routine of an office and the minutest phenomena of a ledger. He was eager to begin.
”How findest thou me?”
She stood for inspection.
She was ready, except the gloves. The angle of her hat, the provocation of her veil--these things would have quickened the pulse of a Patagonian. Perfume pervaded the room.
He gave the cla.s.sic response that nothing could render trite:
”_Tu es exquise_.”
She raised her veil just above her mouth....
In the drawing-room she hesitated, and then settled down on the piano-stool like a bird alighting and played a few bars from the _Rosenkavalier_ waltz. He was thunderstruck, for she had got not only the air but some of the accompaniment right.
”Go on! Go on!” he urged her, marvelling.
She turned, smiling, and shook her head.
”That is all that I can recall to myself.”
The obvious sincerity of his appreciation delighted her.
”She is really musical!” he thought, and was convinced that while looking for a bit of coloured gla.s.s he had picked up an emerald.
Marthe produced his overcoat, and when he was ready for the street Christine gazed at him and said:
”For the true _chic_, there are only Englishmen!”
In the taxi she proved to him by delicate effronteries the genuineness of her confessed ”fancy” for him. And she poured out slang. He began to be afraid, for this excursion was an experiment such as he had never tried before in London; in Paris, of course, the code was otherwise. But as soon as the commissionaire of the restaurant at Victoria approached the door of the taxi her manner changed. She walked up the long interior with the demureness of a stockbroker's young wife out for the evening from Putney Hill. He thought, relieved, ”She is the embodiment of common sense.” At the end of the vista of white tables the restaurant opened out to the left. In a far corner they were comfortably secure from observation. They sat down. A waiter beamed his flatteries upon them. G.J. was serenely aware of his own skilled faculty for ordering a dinner. He looked over the menu card at Christine. n.o.body could possibly tell that she was a professed enemy of society. ”These French women are astounding!” he thought. He intensely admired her. He was mad about her. His bliss was extreme. He could not keep it within bounds meet for the great world-catastrophe.