Mrs.
Pontellier's eyes were quick and bright; they were a yellowish brown, about the
color of her hair. She had a way of turning them swiftly upon an object and
holding them there as if lost in some inward maze of contemplation or thought.
Her eyebrows were a shade
darker than her hair. They were thick and almost horizontal, emphasizing the
depth of her eyes. She was rather handsome than beautiful. Her face was
captivating by reason of a certain frankness of expression and a contradictory
subtle play of features. Her manner was engaging.
Robert rolled a cigarette. He
smoked cigarettes because he could not afford cigars, he said. He had a cigar in
his pocket which Mr. Pontellier had presented him with, and he was saving it for
his after-dinner smoke.
This seemed quite proper and
natural on
his part. In coloring he was not unlike his companion. A clean-shaved face
made the resemblance more pronounced than it would otherwise have been. There
rested no shadow of care upon his open countenance. His eyes gathered in and
reflected the light and languor of the summer day.
Mrs. Pontellier reached over
for a palm-leaf fan that lay on the porch and began to fan herself, while Robert
sent between his lips light puffs from his cigarette. They chatted incessantly:
about the things around them; their amusing adventure out in the water - it had
again assumed its entertaining aspect; about the wind, the trees, the people who
had gone to the Chênière; about the children playing croquet
under the oaks, and the Farival twins, who were now performing the overture to
"The Poet and the Peasant."
Robert talked a good deal
about himself. He was very young, and did not know any better. Mrs. Pontellier
talked a little about herself for the same reason. Each was interested in what
the other said. Robert spoke of his intention to go to Mexico
in the autumn, where fortune awaited him. He was always intending to go to
Mexico, but some way never got there. Meanwhile he held on to his modest
position in a mercantile house in New Orleans, where an equal familiarity with
English, French and Spanish gave him no small value as a clerk and
correspondent.
He was spending his summer
vacation, as he always did, with his mother at Grand Isle. In former times,
before Robert could remember, "the house" had been a summer luxury of the
Lebruns. Now, flanked by its dozen or more cottages, which were always filled
with exclusive visitors from the "Quartier Français," it enabled
Madame Lebrun to maintain the easy and comfortable existence which appeared to
be her birthright.
Mrs. Pontellier talked about
her father's Mississippi plantation and her girlhood home in the old Kentucky
blue-grass country. She was an American woman, with a small infusion of French
which seemed to have been lost in dilution. She read a letter from her sister,
who was away in the East, and who had engaged herself to be married.
Robert was interested, and
wanted to know what manner of girls the sisters were, what the father was like,
and how long the mother had been dead.
When Mrs. Pontellier folded
the letter it was time for her to dress for the early dinner.
"I see Léonce isn't coming
back," she said, with a glance in the direction whence her husband had
disappeared. Robert supposed he was not, as there were a good many New Orleans
club men over at Klein's.
When Mrs. Pontellier left him
to enter her room, the young man descended the steps and strolled over toward
the croquet players, where, during the half-hour before dinner, he amused
himself with the little Pontellier children, who were very fond of him.