The driver, with head turned and a grin on his face, was waiting.
"Rue de Douai," said Diaz sullenly.
"What number?" the driver asked.
"Does that regard you?" Diaz retorted crossly in French. "I will tell you later."
"Tell him now," I pleaded.
"Well, to oblige you, I will. Twenty-seven. But what I can"t stand is the impudence of these fellows."
The driver winked at me.
"Just so," I soothed Diaz, and we drove off.
I have never been happier than in unhappiness. Happiness is not joy, and it is not tranquillity. It is something deeper and something more disturbing. Perhaps it is an acute sense of life, a realization of one"s secret being, a continual renewal of the mysterious savour of existence.
As I crossed Paris with the drunken Diaz leaning clumsily against my shoulder, I was profoundly unhappy. I was desolated by the sight of this ruin, and yet I was happier than I had been since Frank died. I had glimpses and intimations of the baffling essence of our human lives here, strange, fleeting comprehensions of the eternal wonder and the eternal beauty.... In vain, professional writer as I am, do I try to express myself. What I want to say cannot be said; but those who have truly lived will understand.
We pa.s.sed over the Seine, lighted and asleep in the exquisite Parisian night, and the rattling of the cab on the cobble-stones roused Diaz from his stupor.
"Where are we?" he asked.
"Just going through the Louvre," I replied.
"I don"t know how I got to the other s-side of the river," he said.
"Don"t remember. So you"re coming home with me, eh? You aren"t "shamed of me?"
"You are hurting me," I said coldly, "with your elbow."
"Oh, a thousand pardons! a thous" parnds, Magda! That isn"t your real name, is it?"
He sat upright and turned his face to glance at mine with a fatuous smile; but I would not look at him. I kept my eyes straight in front. Then a swerve of the carriage swung his body away from me, and he subsided into the corner. The intoxication was gaining on him every minute.
"What shall I do with him?" I thought.
I blushed as we drove up the Avenue de l"Opera and across the Grand Boulevard, for it seemed to me that all the gay loungers must observe Diaz" condition. We followed darker thoroughfares, and at last the cab, after climbing a hill, stopped before a house in a street that appeared rather untidy and irregular. I got out first, and Diaz stumbled after me, while two women on the opposite side of the road stayed curiously to watch us. Hastily I opened my purse and gave the driver a five-franc-piece, and he departed before Diaz could decide what to say. I had told him to go.
I did not wish to tell the driver to go. I told him in spite of myself.
Diaz, grumbling inarticulately, pulled the bell of the great door of the house. But he had to ring several times before finally the door opened; and each second was a year for me, waiting there with him in the street.
And when the door opened he was leaning against it, and so pitched forward into the gloom of the archway. A laugh--the loud, unrestrained laugh of the courtesan--came from across the street.
The archway was as black as night.
"Shut the door, will you?" I heard Diaz" voice. "I can"t see it.
Where are you?"
But I was not going to shut the door.
"Have you got a servant here?" I asked him.
"She comes in the mornings," he replied.
"Then there is no one in your flat?"
"Not a shoul," said Diaz. "Needn"t be "fraid."
I"m not afraid," I said. "But I wanted to know. Which floor is it?"
"Third. I"ll light a match."
Then I pushed to the door, whose automatic latch clicked. We were fast in the courtyard.
Diaz dropped his matches in attempting to strike one. The metal box bounced on the tiles. I bent down and groped with both hands till I found it. And presently we began painfully to ascend the staircase, Diaz holding his umbrella and the rail, and I striking matches from time to time. We were on the second landing when I heard the bell ring again, and the banging of the front-door, and then voices at the foot of the staircase. I trembled lest we should be over-taken, and I would have hurried Diaz on, but he would not be hurried. Happily, as we were halfway between the second and third story, the man and the girl whose voices I heard stopped at the second. I caught sight of them momentarily through the banisters. The man was striking matches as I had been. "_C"est ici_,"
the girl whispered. She was dressed in blue with a very large hat. She put a key in the door when they had stopped, and then our matches went out simultaneously. The door shut, and Diaz and I were alone on the staircase again. I struck another match; we struggled on.
When I had taken his key from Diaz" helpless hand, and opened his door and guided him within, and closed the door definitely upon the outer world, I breathed a great sigh. Every turn of the stair had been a station of the cross for me. We were now in utter darkness. The cla.s.sical effluvium of inebriety mingled with the cla.s.sical odour of the furnished lodging. But I cared not. I had at last successfully hidden his shame. No one could witness it now but me. So I was glad.
Neither of us said anything as, still with the aid of matches, I penetrated into the flat. Silently I peered about until I perceived a pair of candles, which I lighted. Diaz, with his hat on his head and his umbrella clasped tightly in his hand, fell into a chair. We glanced at each other.
"You had better go to bed," I suggested. "Take your hat off. You will feel better without it."
He did not move, and I approached him and gently took his hat. I then touched the umbrella.
"No, no, no!" he cried suddenly; "I"m always losing this umbrella, and I won"t let it out of my sight."
"As you wish," I replied coldly.
I was standing by him when he got up with a surprising lurch and put a hand on my shoulder. He evidently meant to kiss me. I kept him at arm"s length, feeling a sort of icy anger.
"Go to bed," I repeated fiercely. "It is the only place for you."
He made inarticulate noises in his throat, and ultimately achieved the remark:
"You"re very hard, Magda."
Then he bent himself towards the next room.
"You will want a candle," I said, with bitterness. "No; I will carry it.
Let me go first."
I preceded him through a tiny salon into the bedroom, and, leaving him there with one candle, came back into the first room. The whole place was deplorable, though not more deplorable than I had expected from the look of the street and the house and the stairs and the girl with the large hat. It was small, badly arranged, disordered, ugly, bare, comfortless, and, if not very dirty, certainly not clean; not a home, but a kennel--a kennel furnished with chairs and spotted mirrors and spotted engravings and a small upright piano; a kennel whose sides were covered with enormous red poppies, and on whose floor was something which had once been a carpet; a kennel fitted with windows and curtains; a kennel with actually a bed! It was the ready-made human kennel of commerce, which every large city supplies wholesale in tens of thousands to its victims.
In that street there were hundreds such; in the house alone there were probably a score at least. Their sole virtue was their privacy. Ah the blessedness of the sacred outer door, which not even the tyrant concierge might violate! I thought of all the other interiors of the house, floor above floor, and serried one against another--vile, mean, squalid, cramped, unlovely, frowsy, fetid; but each lighted and intensely alive with the interplay of hearts; each cloistered, a secure ground where the instincts that move the world might show themselves naturally and in secret. There was something tragically beautiful in that.
I had heard uncomfortable sounds from the bedroom. Then Diaz called out:
"It"s no use. Can"t do it. Can"t get into bed." I went directly to him.
He sat on the bed, still clasping the umbrella, one arm out of his coat.