Nancy stood still again, transfixed—turned to stone.
Another long silence, ludicrous, untenable. Then in the next room the First Words were spoken. He spoke them in a calm and well-bred voice.
"Our dinner will be cold."
Nancy laughed suddenly, softly, convulsively. Her voice was treble and sweet as she replied:
"What have you ordered?"
The man in the next room said: "Fillet of sole."
"Fried?" asked Nancy earnestly; and, knowing that unless she slid in on that fillet of sole she would never do so, she passed quickly under the draped portière and entered the room.
They looked each other in the face. She saw a large and stalwart figure, a hard mouth, and a strong, curved nose in a sunburnt face, two chilly blue eyes under a powerful brow, and waving grey hair. He looked down at her, and was satisfied. His cool blue gaze took her in from the top of her large black feathered hat to the tips of her Louis XV. shoes.
"Come," he said, offering his arm. And they went out together.
The dinner was not cold. Nancy hardly spoke at all. She was nervous and charming. She sipped Liebfraunmilch, and dimpled and rippled while he told her that he had mines in Peru, and that he had been away from civilization for twenty years.
"I went down to the mines when I was twenty, and came back when I was forty. That is four years ago. I have been fighting my way ever since, trying to keep clear of the wrong woman. I am afraid of women."
"So am I," said Nancy, which was not true.
He laughed, and said: "And of what else?"
"Spiders," said Nancy, with her head on one side.
"And what else?"
"Lions," said Nancy.
"And what else?"
"Thunderstorms." And, as he seemed to be waiting, she added: "And of you, of course."
He did not believe it. But she was.
After dinner he took her to the Folies Bergères and then to the Boîte à Fursy; and he watched her narrowly, and was glad that she did not laugh. Then he took her back to the hotel. They went up together in the lift, and along the red-carpeted, boot-adorned corridor to her green and grey salon. He did not ask permission, but walked in and sat down—large and long—in the small brocaded armchair.
"Are you tired?" he said.
Nancy said, "No," and remained standing.
He said, "Sit down," and she obeyed him.
He sat staring before him for a while, with his underlip pushed up under his upper-lip, making his straight, short-cut moustache stand out. He was a strong, large, ugly man. Nancy suddenly remembered that she had called him "toi," and said, "adieu, mes amours" to him in her letters, and she felt faint with shame. He made a little noise, something between a cough and a growl, and looked up at her.
"What are you thinking?" he said.
She laughed. "I am thinking that I called you Prince Charming, whereas you really are the Ogre."
"Yes," he said, and stared at her a long time. Then he got up suddenly and put out his large hand. "Good-night, Miss Brown," he said. He took his hat and stick, and went out, shutting the door decidedly behind him.
The next morning at half-past eleven he came; he had a small bunch of lilies of the valley in his hand.
"Will you invite me to lunch?" he said.
Yes, Nancy would be very pleased. She thought of the twenty-two francs in her purse; but nothing mattered.
They lunched in the dining-room, and he was very silent. Nancy spoke of music, but he did not respond.
"Do you sing?" she asked at last.
He looked up at her like an offended wild beast. "Do I look as if I could sing?"
"No, you don't," she said. "You look as if you could growl."
He smiled slightly under his clipped moustache, and did not answer. Nancy gave up all attempt at conversation. Her heart beat fast. Things were going wrong. He was tired of her already. He looked bored—well, no, not bored, but utterly indifferent and hard, as if he were alone. After their coffee he got up—every time he rose Nancy wondered anew at his breadth and length—and led the way out. Nancy trotted after him with short steps. He went into the lounge and took a seat near a table in the window, pushing a chair forward for Nancy.
"May I smoke?" he said, taking a large cigar-case from his pocket.
Nancy nodded. He chose his cigar carefully, clipped the end off, and lit it. Nancy could not think of a word to say. All her pretty, frivolous conversation, all the bright remarks and witty repartee, wavered away from her mind. She had not prepared herself for monologues.
After the first puff he said: "You don't smoke, do you?"
"Oh no!" said Nancy.
As soon as she had said it a wave of crimson flooded her face. She remembered writing that she smoked Russian cigarettes perfumed with heliotrope. He had not believed her. How could she have written such an idiotic thing? And suddenly she realized that she was not the Girl in her Letters at all, and that he must be bored and disappointed. But no more was he the Man of his Letters; at least, she had imagined him quite different, with fair hair and droopy grey eyes, and a poet's soul. Then she remembered that he had never spoken about himself in his letters at all.
At this point he looked up and said: "I like a woman who can keep quiet. You have not spoken for half an hour." And she laughed, and was glad.
When he had finished his cigar, he said: "I hope you have not left any valuables in your room. It is not safe."
"Oh no," said Nancy; "I haven't."
"Have you given them to the office?"
"No," said Nancy—"no;" and suddenly she remembered that she had told him in her letters that she wore jewels all over her.
Without looking up, he said: "Will you give me your purse? I will take care of it."
Nancy felt that if she went on flushing any more her hair would catch fire. She drew out her purse and handed it to him. He opened it slowly and deliberately. He took out the three sous and the two francs, and put them into his pocket. Then he opened the middle division, and looked at the twenty-franc piece. He took it out and placed it on the table. Then he went through all the other compartments, gazing pensively at an unused tramway ticket and at a medal of the Madonna del Monte. He put those back again, and handed Nancy the purse. The twenty-franc piece he put into a purse of his own, and into his pocket.
"Now let us go for a drive," he said.
Nancy, feeling dazed, rustled away, and took the lift to her room. She pinned on her hat, took her coat and gloves, and just caught the lift again as it was passing down. When he saw her, he said "That was quick," and they went out together. A victoria was waiting for them. The porter was profusely polite, and the horses started off at a loose trot down the Boulevards and towards the Étoile. He asked her many questions during the drive, and in her answers she was as much as possible the Girl of the Letters.
He sounded her about Monte Carlo, and she was glad that she was quite au courant, and could mention systems and the Café de Paris.
"Would you like to go there again?" he asked.
"Yes—oh yes!" she said, clasping her mauve kid gloves. Then she fell into a reverie, and she kept her hands clasped in her lap, for she was saying an Ave and a Pater for Anne-Marie.
The carriage was turning into the Bois when her companion said:
"Where do you want to go?"
Nancy said: "This is very nice. The Bois is lovely."
"I mean where do you want to go to to-morrow, or the day after, or next week. You do not want to stay in Paris for ever, do you?"
She drew a little quick breath, and said, "Oh!" and then again, "Oh, really?" and looked up at him with uncertain eyes.
"Do not look at me as if I were the spider, or the lion, or the thunderstorm. Tell me if there is any place on earth that you have longed to go to. And when. And with whom."
Nancy's eyes filled quickly with glowing tears. "I should like to go to Italy," she said, "to a little village tip-tilted over the sea, called Porto Venere."