Some
people contended that the reason Mademoiselle Reisz always chose apartments up
under the roof was to discourage the approach of beggars, peddlers and callers.
There were plenty of windows in her little front room. They were for the most
part dingy, but as they were nearly always open it did not make so much
difference. They often admitted into the room a good deal of smoke and soot; but
at the same time all the light and air that there was came through them. From
her windows could be seen the crescent of the river, the masts of ships and the
big chimneys of the Mississippi steamers. A magnificent piano crowded the
apartment. In the next room she slept, and in the third and last she harbored a
gasoline stove on which she cooked her meals when disinclined to descend to the
neighboring restaurant. It was there also that she ate, keeping her belongings
in a rare old buffet, dingy and battered from a hundred years of use.
When Edna knocked at
Mademoiselle Reisz's front room door and entered, she discovered that person
standing; beside the window, engaged in mending or patching an old prunella
gaiter. The little musician laughed all over when she saw Edna. Her laugh
consisted of a contortion of the face and all the muscles of the body. She
seemed strikingly homely, standing there in the afternoon light. She still wore
the shabby lace and the artificial bunch of violets on the side of her head.
"So you remembered me at
last," said Mademoiselle. "I had said to myself, 'Ah, bah! she will never
come.'"
"Did you want me to come?"
asked Edna with a smile.
"I had not thought much about
it," answered Mademoiselle. The two had seated themselves on a little bumpy sofa
which stood against the wall. "I am glad, however, that you came. I have the
water boiling back there, and was just about to make some coffee. You will drink
a cup
with me. And how is la belle dame? Always handsome! always
healthy! always contented!" She took Edna's hand between her strong wiry
fingers, holding it loosely without warmth, and executing a sort of double theme
upon the back and palm.
"Yes," she went on; "I
sometimes thought: 'She will never come. She promised as those women in society
always do, without meaning it. She will not come.' For I really don't believe
you like me, Mrs. Pontellier."
"I don't know whether I like
you or not," replied Edna, gazing down at the little woman with a quizzical
look.
The candor of Mrs.
Pontellier's admission greatly pleased Mademoiselle Reisz. She expressed her
gratification by repairing forthwith to the region of the gasoline stove and
rewarding her guest with the promised cup of coffee. The coffee and the biscuit
accompanying it proved very acceptable to Edna, who had declined refreshment at
Madame Lebrun's and was now beginning to feel hungry. Mademoiselle set the tray
which she brought in upon a small table near at hand, and seated herself once
again on the lumpy sofa.
"I have had a letter from
your friend," she remarked, as she poured a little cream into Edna's cup and
handed it to her.
"My friend?"
"Yes, your friend Robert. He
wrote to me from the City of Mexico."
"Wrote to you?"
repeated Edna in amazement, stirring her coffee absently.
"Yes, to me. Why not? Don't
stir all the warmth out of your coffee; drink it. Though the letter might as
well have been sent to you; it was nothing but Mrs. Pontellier from beginning to
end."
"Let me see it," requested
the young woman, entreatingly.
"No; a letter concerns no one
but the person who writes it and the one to whom it is written."
"Haven't you just said it
concerned me from beginning to end?"
"It was written about you,
not to you. 'Have you seen Mrs. Pontellier? How is she looking?' he asks 'As
Mrs. Pontellier
says,' or 'as Mrs. Pontellier once said.' 'If Mrs. Pontellier should call
upon you, play for her that Impromptu of Chopin's, my favorite. I heard it here
a day or two ago, but not as you play it. I should like to know how it affects
her,' and so on, as if he supposed we were constantly in each other's society."
"Let me see the letter."
"Oh, no."
"Have you answered it?"
"No."
"Let me see the letter."
"No, and again, no."
"Then play the Impromptu for
me."
"It is growing late; what
time do you have to be home?"
"Time doesn't concern me.
Your question seems a little rude. Play the Impromptu."
"But you have told me nothing
of yourself. What are you doing?"
"Painting!" laughed Edna. "I
am becoming an artist. Think of it!"
"Ah! an artist! You have
pretensions, Madame."
"Why pretensions? Do you
think I could not become an artist?"
"I do not know you well
enough to say. I do not know your talent or your temperament. To be an artist
includes much; one must possess many gifts - absolute gifts - which have not
been acquired by one's own effort. And, moreover, to succeed, the artist must
possess the courageous soul."
"What do you mean by the
courageous soul?"
"Courageous, ma
foi! The brave soul. The soul that dares and defies."
"Show me the letter and play
for me the Impromptu. You see that I have persistence. Does that quality count
for anything in art?"
"It counts with a foolish old
woman whom you have captivated," replied Mademoiselle, with her wriggling laugh.
The letter was right there at
hand in the drawer of the little table upon which Edna had just placed her
coffee cup. Mademoiselle opened the drawer and drew forth the letter, the
topmost one. She placed it in
Edna's hands, and without further comment arose and went to the piano.
Mademoiselle played a soft
interlude. It was an improvisation. She sat low at the instrument, and the lines
of her body settled into ungraceful curves and angles that gave it an appearance
of deformity. Gradually and imperceptibly the interlude melted into the soft
opening minor chords of the Chopin Impromptu.
Edna did not know when the
Impromptu began or ended. She sat in the sofa corner reading Robert's letter by
the fading light. Mademoiselle had glided from the Chopin into the quivering
love-notes of Isolde's song, and back again to the Impromptu with its soulful
and poignant longing.
The shadows deepened in the
little room. The music grew strange and fantastic - turbulent, insistent,
plaintive and soft with entreaty. The shadows grew deeper. The music filled the
room. It floated out upon the night, over the housetops, the crescent of the
river, losing itself in the silence upper air.
Edna was sobbing, just as she
had wept
one midnight at Grand Isle when strange, new voices awoke in her. She arose
in some agitation to take her departure. "May I come again, Mademoiselle?" she
asked at the threshold.
"Come whenever you feel like
it. Be careful; the stairs and landings are dark; don't stumble."
Mademoiselle reëntered and
lit a candle. Robert's letter was on the floor. She stooped and picked it up. It
was crumpled and damp with tears. Mademoiselle smoothed the letter out, restored
it to the envelope, and replaced it in the table drawer.