PAGE 9
Esmeralda
by
“Monsieur!” I exclaimed, “a thousand pardons. I was so unlucky as not to see you.”
But he did not seem to hear. He remained silent, gazing fixedly at the ladies until they had disappeared, and then, on my addressing him again he awakened, as it were, with a start.
“It doesn’t matter,” he answered, in a heavy bewildered voice and in English, and turning back made his way slowly up the stairs.
But even the utterance of this brief sentence had betrayed to my practiced ear a peculiar accent–an accent which, strange to say, bore a likeness to that of our friends downstairs, and which caused me to stop a moment at the lodge of the concierge, and ask her a question or so.
“Have we a new occupant upon the fifth floor?” I inquired. “A person who speaks English?”
She answered me with a dubious expression.
“You must mean the strange young man upon the sixth,” she said. “He is a new one and speaks English. Indeed, he does not speak anything else, or even understand a word. Mon Dieu! the trials one encounters with such persons,–endeavoring to comprehend, poor creatures, and failing always,–and this one is worse than the rest and looks more wretched–as if he had not a friend in the world.”
“What is his name?” I asked.
“How can one remember their names?–it is worse than impossible. This one is frightful. But he has no letters, thank Heaven. If there should arrive one with an impossible name upon it, I should take it to him and run the risk.”
Naturally, Clelie, to whom I related the incident, was much interested. But it was some time before either of us saw the hero of it again, though both of us confessed to having been upon the watch for him. The concierge could only tell us that he lived a secluded life–rarely leaving his room in he daytime, and seeming to be very poor.
“He does not work and eats next to nothing,” she said. “Late at night he occasionally carries up a loaf, and once he treated himself to a cup of bouillon from the restaurant at the corner–but it was only once, poor young man. He is at least very gentle and well-conducted.”
So it was not to be wondered at that we did not see him. Clelie mentioned him to her young friend, but Mademoiselle’s interest in him was only faint and ephemeral. She had not the spirit to rouse herself to any strong emotion.
“I dare say he’s an American,” she said. “There are plenty of Americans in Paris, but none of them seem a bit nearer to me than if they were French. They are all rich and fine, and they all like the life here better than the life at home. This is the first poor one I have heard of.”
Each day brought fresh unhappiness to her. Madame was inexorable. She spent a fortune upon toilette for her, and insisted upon dragging her from place to place, and wearying her with gayeties from which her sad young heart shrank. Each afternoon their equipage was to be seen upon the Champs Elysees, and each evening it stood before the door waiting to bear them to some place of festivity.
Mademoiselle’s bete noir, the marquis, who was a debilitated roue in search of a fortune, attached himself to them upon all occasions.
“Bah!” said Clelie with contempt, “she amazes one by her imbecility–this woman. Truly, one would imagine that her vulgar sharpness would teach her that his object is to use her as a tool, and that having gained Mademoiselle’s fortune, he will treat them with brutality and derision.”
But she did not seem to see–possibly she fancied that having obtained him for a son-in-law, she would be bold and clever enough to outwit and control him. Consequently, he was encouraged and fawned upon, and Mademoiselle grew thin and pale and large-eyed, and wore continually an expression of secret terror.