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“It was long for me, too,” Carol said. It was true that it was over. The spindly trees of the avenue were covered with green, like a wrapping of tissue. A few people sat out in front of shops, sunning themselves. It was, suddenly, like coming out of a tunnel.

Odile turned to Carol and smiled, a rare expression for her. “I’m sorry I was rude at Madame Germaine’s just now,” she said. “I don’t know what the matter is nowadays — I am dreadful to everyone. But I shouldn’t have been to you.”

“Never mind,” said Carol. She flushed a little, for Howard had taught her to be embarrassed over anything as direct as an apology. “I’d forgotten it. In fact, I didn’t even notice.”

“Now you are being nice,” said Odile unhappily. “Really, there is something wrong with me. I worry all the time, over money, over Martine, over Felix. I think it isn’t healthy.” Carol murmured something comforting but indistinct. Glancing at her, Odile said, “Where are you off to now?”

“Nowhere. Home, I suppose. There’s always something to do these days.”

“Why don’t you come along with me?” Odile stopped on the street and took her arm. “I’m going to see Felix. He lives near here. Oh, he would be so surprised!”

“Felix?” Automatically Carol glanced at her watch. Surely she had something to do, some appointment? But Odile was hurrying her along. Carol thought, Now, this is all wrong. But they had reached the Boulevard de Grenelle, where the Métro ran overhead, encased in a tube of red brick. Light fell in patterns underneath; the boulevard was lined with ugly shops and dark, buff-painted cafés. It was a far cry from the prim street a block or so away where the dressmaker’s flat was. “Is it far?” said Carol nervously. She did not like the look of the neighborhood. Odile shook her head. They crossed the boulevard and a few crooked, narrow streets filled with curbside barrows and marketing crowds. It was a section of Paris Carol had not seen; although it was on the Left Bank, it was not pretty, not picturesque. There were no little restaurants, no students’ hotels. It was simply down-and-out and dirty, and everyone looked ill-tempered. Arabs lounging in doorways looked at the two girls and called out, laughing.

“Look straight ahead,” said Odile. “If you look at them, they come up and take your arm. It’s worse when I come alone.”

How dreadful of Felix to let Odile walk alone through streets like this, Carol thought.

“Here,” said Odile. She stopped in front of a building on which the painted word “Hôtel” was almost effaced. They climbed a musty-smelling staircase, Carol taking care not to let her skirt brush the walls. She wondered nervously what Howard would say when he heard she had visited Felix in his hotel room. On a stair landing, Odile knocked at one of the doors. Felix let them in. It took a few moments, for he had been asleep. He did not look at all surprised but with a slight bow invited them in, as if he frequently entertained in his room.

The room was so cluttered, the bed so untidy, that Carol stood bewildered, wondering where one could sit. Odile at once flung herself down on the bed, dropping her handbag on the floor, which was cement and gritty with dirt.

“I’m tired,” she said. “We’ve been choosing Carol’s wedding dress. White, and very pretty.”

Felix’s shirt was unbuttoned, his face without any color. He glanced sidelong at Carol, smiling. On a table stood an alcohol stove, some gaudy plastic bowls, and a paper container of sugar. In the tiny washbasin, over which hung a cold-water faucet, were a plate and a spoon, and, here and there on the perimeter, Felix’s shaving things and a battered toothbrush.

“Do sit on that chair,” he said to Carol, but he made no move to take away the shirt and sweater and raincoat that were bundled on it. Everything else he owned appeared to be on the floor. The room faced a court and was quite dark. “I’ll heat up this coffee,” Felix said, as if casting about for something to do as a host. “Miss Frazier, sit down.” He put a match to the stove and a blue flame leaped along the wall. He stared into a saucepan of coffee, sniffed it, and added a quantity of cold water. “A new PX has just been opened,” he said to Odile. He put the saucepan over the flame, apparently satisfied. “I went around to see what was up,” he said. “Nothing much. It is really sad. Everything is organized on such a big scale now that there is no room for little people like me. I waited outside and finally picked up some cigarettes — only two cartons — from a soldier.”

He talked on, and Carol, who was not accustomed to his conversation, could not tell if he was joking or serious. She had finally decided to sit down on top of the raincoat. She frowned at her hands, wondering why Odile didn’t teach him to make coffee properly and why he talked like a criminal. For Carol, the idea that one might not be permitted to work was preposterous. She harbored a rigid belief that anyone could work who sincerely wanted to. Picking apples, she thought vaguely, or down in a mine, where people were always needed.

Odile looked at Carol, as if she knew what she was thinking. “Poor Felix doesn’t belong in this world,” she said. “He should have been killed at the end of the war. Instead of that, every year he gets older. In a month, he will be twenty-two.”

But Odile was over thirty. Carol found the gap between their ages distasteful, and thought it indelicate of Odile to stress it. Felix, who had been ineffectively rinsing the plastic bowls in cold water, now poured the coffee out. He pushed one of the bowls toward Odile; then he suddenly took her hand and, turning it over, kissed the palm. “Why should I have been killed?” he said.

Carol, breathless with embarrassment, looked at the brick wall of the court. She twisted her fingers together until they hurt. How can they act like this in front of me, she thought, and in such a dirty room? The thought that they might be in love entered her head for the first time, and it made her ill. Felix, smiling, gave her a bowl of coffee, and she took it without meeting his eyes. He sat down on the bed beside Odile and said happily, “I’m glad you came. You both look beautiful.”

Carol glanced at Odile, thinking, Not beautiful, not by any stretch of good manners. “French girls are all attractive,” she said politely.

“Most of them are frights,” said Felix. No one disputed it, and no one but Carol appeared distressed by the abrupt termination of the conversation. She cast about for something to say, but Odile put her bowl on the floor, said again that she was tired, lay back, and seemed all at once to fall asleep.

Felix looked at her. “She really can shut out the world whenever she wants to,” he said, suggesting to Carol’s startled ears that he was quite accustomed to seeing her fall asleep. Of course, she might have guessed, but why should Felix make it so obvious? She felt ashamed of the way she had worried about Felix, and the way she had run after Odile, wanting to know her family. This was all it had come to, this dirty room. Howard was right, she thought. It doesn’t pay.

At the same time, she was perplexed at the intimacy in which she and Felix now found themselves. She would have been more at ease alone in a room with him than with Odile beside him asleep on his bed.

“I must go,” she said nervously.

“Oh, yes,” said Felix, not stopping her.

“But I can’t find my way back alone.” She felt as if she might cry.

“There are taxis,” he said vaguely. “But I can take you to the Métro, if you like.” He buttoned his shirt and looked around for a jacket, making no move to waken Odile.

“Should we leave her here?” said Carol. “Shouldn’t I say good-bye?”

He looked surprised. “I wouldn’t think of disturbing her,” he said. “If she’s asleep, then she must be tired.” And to this Carol could think of nothing to say.