<div><span class='pageno' title='88' id='Page_88'></span><h1>CHAPTER VI</h1></div>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>A</span> <span class='sc'>WEEK</span> passed and Fortinbras did not come.
Corinna wrote to him. He replied:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Have patience, cultivate Martin’s sense of
humour and make Félise give you lessons in domestic
economy. The cook might instruct you in the various
processes whereby eggs are rendered edible and you
might also learn how to launder clothes without disaster
to flesh or linen. I am afraid you are wasting
your time. Remember you’re not like Martin who
needs this rest to get his soul into proper condition.
I will come whither my heart draws me—for I yearn
to see my little Félise—as soon as I am allowed to do
so by my manifold avocations and responsibilities.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Corinna, in a fury, handed the letter to Martin and
asked him what he thought of it. He replied that,
in his opinion, Fortinbras gave excellent advice. Corinna
declared Fortinbras to be an overbearing and sarcastic
pig and rated Martin for standing by and seeing
her insulted.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You gave him five francs for putting you on the
road to happiness,” he replied. “He has done his best,
and seems to keep on doing it—without extra charge.
I think you ought to be grateful. His suggestions are
full of sense.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Confound his suggestions,” cried Corinna.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I think our friend Bigourdin would be pleased if
you followed them.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t see what our friend Bigourdin has to do
with it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“He would give you all the help he could. A Frenchman
likes a woman to know how to do things.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I won’t wash clothes,” said Corinna defiantly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You might rise superior to a brand of soap,” retorted
Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She turned her back on him and went her way. His
gross sense of humour required no cultivation. It was
a poisonous weed. And what did he mean by dragging
in Bigourdin? She would never speak to Martin
again, after his disgraceful innuendo. It took the flavour
from the sympathetic relations that had been set
up between her host and herself during the past week.
A twinge of conscience exacerbated her anger against
Martin. She certainly had encouraged Bigourdin to
fuller professions of friendship than is usual between
landlord and guest. The fresh flowers he had laid by
her plate at every meal she wore in her dress. Only
the night before she had ever so delicately hinted that
Martin was capable of visiting the Café de l’Univers
without a bear-leader, and the huge and poetical man
had sat with her in the moonlight and in terms of
picturesque philosophy had exposed to her the barren
loneliness of his soul. She had enjoyed the evening
prodigiously, and was looking forward to other evenings
equally exhilarating. Now Martin had spoiled
it all. She called Martin names that would have
shocked Mrs. Hastings and caused her father to mention
her specially during family prayers.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Then she defended herself proudly. Who was there
to talk to in that Nowhere of a place? The conversation
of Félise stimulated as much as that of a ten-year-old
child. Martin she had sucked dry as a bone
during their seven weeks companionship. He of course
could hob-nob with men at the café. He also had
picked up a curious assortment of acquaintance, male
and female in the town, and had acquired a knack of
conversing with them. A day or two ago she had
come upon him in one of the rock dwellings discussing
politics with a desperate villain who worked in the
freestone quarries, while the frowsy mistress of the
house lavished on him smiles and the horrible grey
wine of the country which he drank out of a bowl.
She, Corinna, had no café; nor could she find anything
in common with desperadoes of quarrymen and
their frowsy wives; to enter their houses savoured of
district visiting, a philanthropic practice which she
abhorred with all the abhorrence of a parson’s rebellious
daughter. Where was she to look for
satisfying human intercourse? She knew enough
of the French middle-class manners and customs to be
aware that she might live in Brantôme a thousand
years before one lady would call on her—a mere question
of social code as to which she had no cause for
resentment. But she craved the stimulus, the give-and-take
of talk, such as had been her daily food in Paris
for the last three years. Huge, not at all commonplace,
but somewhat of an enigma, Bigourdin lumbered
on to her horizon. His first-hand knowledge of men
and things was confined to Brantôme and Lyons. But
with that knowledge he had pierced deep and wide.
He had read little but astonishingly. He had a grasp
of European, even of English internal affairs that
disconcerted Corinna, who airily set out to expound to
him the elements of world politics. Two phases of
French poetry formed an essential factor of his intellectual
life—the Fifteenth Century Amorists, and the
later romanticists. He could quote Victor Hugo, Alfred
de Musset, Théodore de Banville by the mile.
When stirred he had in his voice disquieting tones. He
recited the “<span class='it'>Chanson de Fortunio</span>” and the “<span class='it'>Chanson
de Barberine</span>” in the moonlight, and Corinna caught
her breath and felt a shiver down her spine. It was
a new sensation for Corinna to feel shivers down her
spine at the sound of a man’s voice.</p>
<div class='poetry-container' style=''>
<div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
<div class='stanza-outer'>
<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Mais j’aime trop pour que je die</span></p>
<p class='line0'>   <span class='it'>Qui j’ose aimer,</span></p>
<p class='line'> </p>
</div>
<div class='stanza-outer'>
<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Et je veux mourir pour ma mie</span></p>
<p class='line0'>   <span class='it'>Sans la nommer.</span></p>
</div>
</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
<p class='pindent'>She went to bed with the words singing in her ears
like music.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Altogether it was much more comforting to talk
to Bigourdin than to take lessons in household management
from Félise.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last the day came when she plucked up courage
and demanded of Martin an account of his stewardship.
He tried to evade the task by flourishing in her face
a bundle of notes. They had heaps, said he, to go on
with. But Corinna pressed her enquiry with feminine
insistence. Had he kept any memoranda of expenditure?
Of course methodical Martin had done so.
Where was it? Reluctantly he drew a soiled note book
from his pocket and side by side at a little table on
the verandah, her fair hair brushing his dark cheek,
they added up the figures and apportioned and divided
and eventually struck the balance. Corinna was
one franc seventy-five centimes in Martin’s debt. She
had not one penny in the world. She had one franc
seventy-five centimes less than nothing. She rose
white-lipped.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You ought to have told me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why?” asked Martin. “There’s plenty of money
in the common stock.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“There never was any such thing as a common
stock.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I thought there was,” said Martin. “I thought
we had arranged it with Fortinbras. Anyhow, there’s
one now.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“There isn’t,” she cried indignantly. “Do you suppose
I’m going to live on your money? What kind of
a girl do you take me for?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“An unconventional one,” said Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But not dishonourable. To assert my freedom and
live by myself in Paris and run about France alone
with you may be unconventional. But for a girl
to accept support from a man when—when she
gives him nothing in return—is a different thing altogether.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They argued for some time, and at the end of the
argument neither was convinced. She upbraided.
Martin ought to have struck a daily balance. He continued
to put forward the plea of the common stock
to which she had apparently given her tacit agreement.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, well,” said Martin at last, “there’s no dishonour
in a loan. You can give me an I.O.U. That’s
a legal document.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But how do you suppose I am ever going to pay
you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That, my dear Corinna,” said he, “is a matter
which doesn’t interest me in the least.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She turned on him furiously. “Do you know what
you are? Would you like me to tell you? You’re
the most utterly selfish man in the wide, wide world.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She flung away through the empty <span class='it'>salle-à-manger</span>,
and left Martin questioning the eternal hills of the
Limousin. “I offer,” said he, in effect, “to share my
last penny, in all honour and comradeship, with a
young person of the opposite sex whom I have always
treated with the utmost delicacy, who is absolutely
nothing to me, who would scoff at the idea of marrying
me and whom I would no more think of marrying
than a Fifth of November box of fireworks, who has
heaped on me all sorts of contumelious epithets—I
offer, I repeat, to divide my last crust with her, and
she calls me selfish. Eternal hills, resolve the problem.”
But the hills enfolded themselves majestically
in their autumn purple and deigned no answer to the
little questionings of man.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Unsuccessful he strolled through the dining-room
and vestibule and at the hotel entrance came upon the
ramshackle hotel omnibus and the grey, raw-boned
omnibus horse standing unattended and forlorn. To
pass the time the latter shivered occasionally in order
to jingle the bells on his collar and scatter the magenta
fly-whisk hung between his eyes. Martin went up and
patted his soft muzzle and put to him the riddle. But
the old horse, who naturally thought that these overtures
heralded a supply of bodily sustenance, and, in
good faith, had essayed an expectant nibble, at last
jerked his head indignantly and refused to concern
himself with such insane speculation. Martin
was struck by the indifferent attitude of hills and
horses towards the queer vagaries of the human female.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Then from the doorway sallied forth a flushed
Corinna booted and spurred for adventure. I need not
tell you that a woman’s boots and spurs are on her
head and not on her feet. Corinna wore the little hat
with the defiant pheasant feather which she had not
put on since her last night in Paris. A spot of red
burned angrily on each cheek. Martin accustomed to
ask: “Where are you going?” was on the point of
putting the mechanical question when he was checked
by one of her hard glances. Obviously she would have
nothing to do with him. She passed him by and
walked down the hill at a brisk pace. Martin watched
her retreating figure until a turn in the road hid it from
his view and then retiring into the house, went up to
his room and buried himself in Montaigne, to which
genial author, it may be remembered, he had been
recommended by Fortinbras.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They did not meet till dinner, when she greeted him,
all smiles. She apologised for wayward temper and
graciously offered, should she need money, to accept a
small loan for a short period. What her errand had
been when she set forth in her defiant hat she did not
inform him. He shrewdly surmised she had gone to
the <span class='it'>Postes et Télégraphes</span> in the town; but he was within
a million miles of guessing that she had despatched
a telegram to Bordeaux.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The meal begun under these fair auspices was enlivened
by a final act of depravity on the part of the
deboshed waiter, Polydore. He had of late given more
than usual dissatisfaction, to the point of being replaced
by the chambermaid and Félise when fashionable
motordom halted at the Hôtel des Grottes. Once
Martin himself, beholding through the <span class='it'>terrasse</span> doorway
Félise struggling around a large party of belated
and hungry Americans, came to her assistance
and lent an amused hand. The guests taking him for
a deputy landlord, explained their needs in bad French.
Félise thanked him in blushing confusion, while Bigourdin,
as he had done a hundred times before, gave
a week’s notice to Polydore, who, acting scullion, was
breaking plates and dishes with drunken persistency.
And now the truth is out as regards Polydore. With
the sins of sloth, ignorance, and uncleanliness he
combined the sin of drunkenness. Polydore was nearly
always fuddled. Yet because of the ties of blood, the
foster-sisterdom of respective grandmothers, Bigourdin
had submitted to his inefficiency. Once more he
revoked the edict of dismissal. Once more Polydore
kept sober for a few days. Then once more he backslided.
And he backslided irretrievably this night at
dinner.</p>
<p class='pindent'>All went fairly well at first. It was a slack night.
Only three <span class='it'>commis-voyageurs</span> sat at the long table, and
thus there were only seven persons on whom to attend.
It is true that his eye was somewhat glazed and
his hand somewhat unsteady; but under the awful
searchlight of Bigourdin’s glance, he nerved himself
to his task. Soup and fish had been served satisfactorily;
then came a long, long wait. Presently Polydore
reeled in. As he passed by Bigourdin’s table he
held up the finger of a dirty hand bound with a dripping
bloody rag.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Pardon, je me suis coupé le doigt</span>,” he announced
thickly and made a bee-line to Corinna, with the ostensible
purpose of removing her plate. But just as he
reached her, the extra dram that he must have taken
to fortify himself against the shock of his wound, took
full effect. He staggered, and in order to save himself
clutched wildly at Corinna, leaving on her bare
neck his disgusting sanguine imprint. She uttered a
sharp cry and simultaneously Bigourdin uttered a
roar and, rushing across the room, in a second had
picked up the unhappy varlet in his giant arms.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Ah, cochon!</span>”—he called him the most dreadful
names, shaking him as Alice shook the Red Queen.
“<span class='it'>En voilà la fin!</span> I will teach you to dare to spread
your infamous blood. I will break your bones. I
will crush your skull, so that you’ll never set foot
here again. <span class='it'>Ah! triple cochon!</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A flaming picture of gigantic wrath, he swept with
him to the door, whence he hurled him bodily forth.
There was a dull thud. And that, as far as the three
commercial travellers (standing agape with their napkins
at their throats), Corinna, Martin, Félise and
Bigourdin were concerned, was the end of Polydore.
Bigourdin, with an agility surprising in so huge a
man, was in an instant by Corinna’s side with finger
bowl full of water and a clean napkin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Mademoiselle, that such a bestial personage should
have dared to soil your purity with his uncleanness
makes me mad, makes me capable of assassinating
him. Permit me to remove his abominable contamination.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Let me do it, <span class='it'>mon oncle</span>,” said Félise, who had run
across.</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Bigourdin waved her aside, and with reverent
touch, as though she were a goddess, he cleansed Corinna.
She underwent the operation in her cool way
and when it was over smiled her thanks at Bigourdin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Mademoiselle Corinna,” he cried, “what can I
say to you? What can I do for you? How can I
repair such an outrage as you have suffered in my
house? You only have to command and everything
I have is yours. Command—insist—ordain.” He
spread his arms wide, an agony of appeal in his eyes.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Martin, who had started to his feet, in order to save
Corinna from the grip of the intoxicated Polydore,
but had been anticipated by the impetuous rush of
Bigourdin, gazed for a moment or two at his host and
then gasped, as his vision pierced into the huge man’s
soul. This perfervid declaration was not the good
innkeeper’s apology for a waiter’s disgusting behaviour.
It was the blazing indignation of a real man at
the desecration inflicted by another on the body of
the woman he loved. A shiver of comprehension of
things he had never comprehended before swept
through Martin from head to foot. He knew with
absolute knowledge that should she rise and, with a
nod of her head, invite Bigourdin to follow her to
the verandah, she could be mistress absolute of Bigourdin’s
destiny. He held his breath, for the first
time in his dull life conscious of the meaning of love
of women, conscious of eternal drama. He looked at
Corinna smiling with ironic curl of lip up at the impassioned
man. And he had an almost physical feeling
within him as though his heart sank like a stone.
But a week ago she had declared, with a vulgarity of
which he had not thought her capable, that she had
had the flirtation of her life with Bigourdin. She
must have known then, she must know now that the
man was in soul-strung earnest. What was her attitude
to the major things of Life? His brain worked
swiftly. If, in her middle-class English snobbery, she
despised the French innkeeper, why did she admit him
to her social plane on which alone flirtation—he had
a sensitive gentleman’s horror of the word—was possible?
If she accepted him as a social equal, recognising
in him, as he, Martin, recognised, all that was
vital in modern France—if she accepted him, woman
accepting man, why that infernal smile on her pretty
face? I must give you to understand that Martin
knew nothing whatever about women. His ignorance
placed him in this dilemma. He watched Corinna’s
lips eager to hear what words would issue from them.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She said coolly: “So long as this really is the end
of Polydore, honour is satisfied.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Bigourdin stiffened under her gaze, and collecting
himself, bowed formally.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“As to that, Mademoiselle,” said he, “I give you my
absolute assurance.” He turned to the commercial
travellers. “Messieurs, I ask your pardon. You will
not have to wait any longer. <span class='it'>Viens, Félise.</span>”</p>
<p class='pindent'>And landlord and niece took Polydore’s place for
the rest of the meal.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Bigourdin’s a splendid fellow,” said Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Elbow on table she held a morsel of bread to her
lips. “He waits so well, doesn’t he?” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He shrugged his shoulders. What was the use of
arguing with a being with totally different standards
and conception of values? Some little wisdom he was
beginning to acquire. He spent the evening at the
Café de Périgueux with Bigourdin, who, with an unwonted
cloud on his brow, abused the Government in
<span class='it'>atrabiliar</span> terms.</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>The next morning Corinna, attired in her daintiest,
wandered off to sketch lonely and demure. At <span class='it'>déjeuner</span>
she made a pretence of eating and entertained Martin
with uninteresting and (to him) unintelligible criticism
of Parisian actors. Bigourdin passed a moment
or two of professional commonplace at the table and
retired. An inexperienced young woman of the town,
with the chambermaid’s assistance, replaced the villain
of last night’s tragedy. Corinna continued her hectic
conversation and took little account of Martin’s casual
remarks. A mind even less subtle than her companion’s
would have assigned some nervous disturbance
as a reason for such feverish behaviour. But of what
nature the disturbance? Vaguely he associated it with
the Sundayfied raiment. Could it be that she intended,
without drum or trumpet, to fly from Brantôme?</p>
<p class='pindent'>“By the way, Martin,” she said suddenly, when the
last wizened grape had been eaten, “have you ever
taken those snapshots of the Château at Bourdeilles?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid I haven’t,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You promised to get them for me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll go over with my camera one of these days,”
said Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That means <span class='it'>aux Kalendes Grecques</span>. Why not this
beautiful afternoon?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If you’ll come with me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ve rather a headache—or I would,” said Corinna.
“As it is, I think I’ll have to lie down. But you
go. It would do you good.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Aha!” thought Martin astutely, “she wants to get
rid of me, so that she can escape by the afternoon train
to Paris.” Aloud he said, “I’ll go to-morrow.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why not to-day?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t feel like it,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Not for the first time she struck an obstinate seam
in Martin. He turned a deaf ear both to her cajolings
and her reproaches. To some degree he felt himself
responsible for Corinna, as a man must do who acts
as escort or what you will to an attractive and penniless
young woman. If she had decided to rush home to
England, it was certainly his duty to make commodious
arrangements for her journey.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m going to loaf about to-day,” he announced.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Like the selfish pig you always are,” said Corinna.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Comme tu veux</span>,” said Martin cheerfully.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Can’t you see I want you to go away for the afternoon?”
said Corinna angrily.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Any idiot could see that,” replied Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Then why don’t you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I want to keep an eye on you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She flushed scarlet and rose from the table. “All
right. Spy as much as you like. It doesn’t matter
to me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Once more she left him with a dramatic whirl of
skirts. The procedure having become monotonous impressed
Martin less than on previous occasions. He
even smiled at the conscious smile of sagacity. There
was something up, he reflected, with Corinna, or he
would eat his hat. She contemplated some idiotic
action. Of that there could be no doubt. It behoved
him, as the only protector she had in the world, to
mount guard. He mounted guard, therefore, over
cigarette and coffee in the vestibule of the hotel, and
for some time held entertaining converse with Bigourdin
on the decadence of Germanic culture, and while
Martin was expounding the futile vulgarity of the
spectacle of Sumurum which, on one of his rare visits
to places of amusement, he had witnessed in London,
the word of Corinna’s enigma was suddenly and dustily
flashed upon him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>From a dusty two-seater car that drew up noisily
at the door, sprang a dusty youth with a reddish face
and a little black moustache.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Is Mademoiselle Hastings in the hotel?” he asked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, monsieur,” said Bigourdin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Will you kindly let her know that I am here—Monsieur
Camille Fargot?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Monsieur Fargot,” repeated Bigourdin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Mademoiselle Hastings expects me,” said the
young man.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Bien, monsieur</span>,” said Bigourdin. He retired, his
duty as a good innkeeper compelling him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Martin, comfortable in his cane chair, lit another
cigarette and with dispassionate criticism inspected
Monsieur Camille Fargot, who stood in the doorway,
his back to the vestibule, frowning resentfully on the
little car.</p>
<p class='pindent'>This then was the word of Corinna’s enigma. To
summon him by telegraph had been the object of her
sortie in the hat with the pheasant’s plume. To welcome
him had been the reason of her festive garb.
In order to hold unembarrassed converse she had
tried to send Martin away to photograph Bourdeilles.
This then was the famous student in medicine who was
supposed to have won Corinna’s heart. Martin who
had of late added mightily to his collection of remarkable
men thought him as commonplace a young student
as he had encountered since the far off days of Margett’s
Universal College. He seemed an indeterminate,
fretful person, the kind of male over whom Corinna
in her domineering way would gallop and re-gallop
until she had trampled the breath out of him. Being
a kindly soul, he began to feel sorry for Camille
Fargot. He was tempted to go up to the young fellow,
lay a hand on his shoulder and say: “If you want to
lead a happy married life, my dear chap, drive straight
back to Bordeaux and marry somebody else.” By doing
so, he would indubitably contribute to the greatest
happiness of the greatest number of human beings and
would rank among the philanthropists of his generation.
But Martin still retained much of his timidity
and he also had a comradely feeling towards Corinna.
If she regarded this dusty and undistinguished young
gentleman as the rock of her salvation, who was he,
powerless himself to indicate any other rock of any
kind, to offer objection?</p>
<p class='pindent'>So realising the absurdity of standing on guard
against so insignificant a danger as Monsieur Camille
Fargot, student in medicine, and not desiring to disconcert
Corinna by his presence should she descend to
the vestibule to meet her lover, he courteously begged
pardon of the frowning young man who blocked the
doorway, and, passing by him, walked meditatively
down the road.</p>
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