The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

About a fortnight later—­it was a fine Saturday in early August—­ Sophia, with a large pinafore over her dress, was finishing the portentous preparations for disinfecting the flat.  Part of the affair was already accomplished, her own room and the corridor having been fumigated on the previous day, in spite of the opposition of Madame Foucault, who had taken amiss Laurence’s tale-bearing to Sophia.  Laurence had left the flat—­under exactly what circumstances Sophia knew not, but she guessed that it must have been in consequence of a scene elaborating the tiff caused by Madame Foucault’s resentment against Laurence.  The brief, factitious friendliness between Laurence and Sophia had gone like a dream, and Laurence had gone like a dream.  The servant had been dismissed; in her place Madame Foucault employed a charwoman each morning for two hours.  Finally, Madame Foucault had been suddenly called away that morning by a letter to her sick father at St. Mammes-sur-Seine.  Sophia was delighted at the chance.  The disinfecting of the flat had become an obsession with Sophia—­the obsession of a convalescent whose perspective unconsciously twists things to the most wry shapes.  She had had trouble on the day before with Madame Foucault, and she was expecting more serious trouble when the moment arrived for ejecting Madame Foucault as well as all her movable belongings from Madame Foucault’s own room.  Nevertheless, Sophia had been determined, whatever should happen, to complete an honest fumigation of the entire flat.  Hence the eagerness with which, urging Madame Foucault to go to her father, Sophia had protested that she was perfectly strong and could manage by herself for a couple of days.  Owing to the partial suppression of the ordinary railway services in favour of military needs, Madame Foucault could not hope to go and return on the same day.  Sophia had lent her a louis.

Pans of sulphur were mysteriously burning in each of the three front rooms, and two pairs of doors had been pasted over with paper, to prevent the fumes from escaping.  The charwoman had departed.  Sophia, with brush, scissors, flour-paste, and news-sheets, was sealing the third pair of doors, when there was a ring at the front door.

She had only to cross the corridor in order to open.

It was Chirac.  She was not surprised to see him.  The outbreak of the war had induced even Sophia and her landlady to look through at least one newspaper during the day, and she had in this way learnt, from an article signed by Chirac, that he had returned to Paris after a mission into the Vosges country for his paper.

He started on seeing her.  “Ah!” He breathed out the exclamation slowly.  And then smiled, seized her hand, and kissed it.

The sight of his obvious extreme pleasure in meeting her again was the sweetest experience that had fallen to Sophia for years.

“Then you are cured?”

“Quite.”

He sighed.  “You know, this is an enormous relief to me, to know, veritably, that you are no longer in danger.  You gave me a fright ... but a fright, my dear madame!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Old Wives' Tale from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.