The Old Wives' Tale by Arnold Bennett (thriller books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Arnold Bennett
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âI donât know,â said Peel-Swynnerton.
This was a lie, justified in the uttererâs opinion as a repulse to Mr. Mardonâs vulgar inquisitiveness, such inquisitiveness as might have been expected from a fellow who tucked his serviette under his chin. Peel-Swynnerton knew exactly how long he would stay. He would stay until the day after the morrow; he had only about fifty francs in his pocket. He had been making a fool of himself in another quarter of Paris, and he had descended to the Pension Frensham as a place where he could be absolutely sure of spending not more than twelve francs a day. Its reputation was high, and it was convenient for the Galliera Museum, where he was making some drawings which he had come to Paris expressly to make, and without which he could not reputably return to England. He was capable of foolishness, but he was also capable of wisdom, and scarcely any pressure of need would have induced him to write home for money to replace the money spent on making himself into a fool.
Mr. Mardon was conscious of a check. But, being of an accommodating disposition, he at once tried another direction.
âGood food here, eh?â he suggested.
âVery,â said Peel-Swynnerton, with sincerity. âI was quiteââ
At that moment, a tall straight woman of uncertain age pushed open the principal door and stood for an instant in the doorway. Peel-Swynnerton had just time to notice that she was handsome and pale, and that her hair was black, and then she was gone again, followed by a clipped poodle that accompanied her. She had signed with a brief gesture to one of the servants, who at once set about lighting the gas-jets over the table.
âWho is that?â asked Peel-Swynnerton, without reflecting that it was now he who was making advances to the fellow whose napkin covered all his shirt-front.
âThatâs the missis, that is,â said Mr. Mardon, in a lower and semi-confidential voice.
âOh! Mrs. Frensham?â
âYes. But her real name is Scales,â said Mr. Mardon, proudly.
âWidow, I suppose?â
âYes.â
âAnd she runs the whole show?â
âShe runs the entire contraption,â said Mr. Mardon, solemnly; âand donât you make any mistake!â He was getting familiar.
Peel-Swynnerton beat him off once more, glancing with careful, uninterested nonchalance at the gas-burners which exploded one after another with a little plop under the application of the maidâs taper. The white table gleamed more whitely than ever under the flaring gas. People at the end of the room away from the window instinctively smiled, as though the sun had begun to shine. The aspect of the dinner was changed, ameliorated; and with the reiterated statement that the evenings were drawing in though it was only July, conversation became almost general. In two minutes Mr. Mardon was genially talking across the whole length of the table. The meal finished in a state that resembled conviviality.
Matthew Peel-Swynnerton might not go out into the crepuscular delights of Paris. Unless he remained within the shelter of the Pension, he could not hope to complete successfully his re-conversion from folly to wisdom. So he bravely passed through the small rose-embroidered door into a small glass-covered courtyard, furnished with palms, wicker armchairs, and two small tables; and he lighted a pipe and pulled out of his pocket a copy of The Referee. That retreat was called the Lounge; it was the only part of the Pension where smoking was not either a positive crime or a transgression against good form. He felt lonely. He said to himself grimly in one breath that pleasure was all rot, and in the next he sullenly demanded of the universe how it was that pleasure could not go on for ever, and why he was not Mr. Barney Barnato. Two old men entered the retreat and burnt cigarettes with many precautions. Then Mr. Lewis Mardon appeared and sat down boldly next to Matthew, like a privileged friend. After all, Mr. Mardon was better than nobody whatever, and Matthew decided to suffer him, especially as he began without preliminary skirmishing to talk about life in Paris. An irresistible subject! Mr. Mardon said in a worldly tone that the existence of a bachelor in Paris might easily be made agreeable. But that, of course, for himselfâwell, he preferred, as a general rule, the Pension Frensham sort of thing; and it was excellent for his business. Still he could not ⊠he knew ⊠He compared the advantages of what he called âknocking aboutâ in Paris, with the equivalent in London. His information about London was out of date, and Peel-Swynnerton was able to set him right on important details. But his information about Paris was infinitely precious and interesting to the younger man,, who saw that he had hitherto lived under strange misconceptions.
âHave a whiskey?â asked Mr. Mardon, suddenly. âVery good here!â he added.
âThanks!â drawled Peel-Swynnerton.
The temptation to listen to Mr. Mardon as long as Mr. Mardon would talk was not to be overcome. And presently, when the old men had departed, they were frankly telling each other stories in the dimness of the retreat. Then, when the supply of stories came to an end, Mr. Mardon smacked his lips over the last drop of whiskey and ejaculated: âYes!â as if giving a general confirmation to all that had been said.
âDo have one with me,â said Matthew, politely. It was the least he could do.
The second supply of whiskies was brought into the Lounge by Mr. Mardonâs Marie. He smiled on her familiarly, and remarked that he supposed she would soon be going to bed after a hard dayâs work. She gave a moue and a flounce in reply, and swished out.
âCarries herself well, doesnât she?â observed Mr. Mardon, as though Marie had been an exhibit at an agricultural show. âTen years ago she was very fresh and pretty, but of course it takes it out of âem, a place like this!â
âBut still,â said Peel-Swynnerton, âthey must like it or they wouldnât stayâthat is, unless things are very different here from what they are in England.â
The conversation seemed to have stimulated him to examine the woman question in all its bearings, with philosophic curiosity.
âOh! They LIKE it,â Mr. Mardon assured him, as one who knew. âBesides, Mrs. Scales treats âem very well. I know THAT. Sheâs told me. Sheâs very particularââhe looked around to see if walls had earsââand, by Jove, youâve got to be; but she treats âem well. Youâd scarcely believe the wages they get, and pickings. Now at the Hotel Moscowâknow the Hotel Moscow?â
Happily Peel-Swynnerton did. He had been advised to avoid it because it catered exclusively for English visitors, but in the Pension Frensham he had accepted something even more exclusively British than the Hotel Moscow. Mr. Mardon was quite relieved at his affirmative.
âThe Hotel Moscow is a limited company now,â said he; âEnglish.â
âReally?â
âYes. I floated it. It was my idea. A great success! Thatâs how I know all about the Hotel Moscow.â He looked at the walls again. âI wanted to do the same here,â he murmured, and Peel-Swynnerton had to show that he appreciated this confidence. âBut she never would agree. Iâve tried her all ways. No go! Itâs a thousand pities.â
âPaying thing, eh?â
âThis place? I should say it was! And I ought to be able to judge, I reckon. Mrs. Scales is one of the shrewdest women youâd meet in a dayâs march. Sheâs made a lot of money here, a lot of money. And thereâs no reason why a place like this shouldnât be five times as big as it is. Ten times. The scopeâs unlimited, my dear sir. All thatâs wanted is capital. Naturally she has capital of her own, and she could get more. But then, as she says, she doesnât want the place any bigger. She says itâs now just as big as she can handle. That isnât so. Sheâs a woman who could handle anythingâa born managerâbut even if it was so, all she would have to do would be to retireâonly leave us the place and the name. Itâs the name that counts. And sheâs made the name of Frensham worth something, I can tell you!â
âDid she get the place from her husband?â asked Peel-Swynnerton. Her own name of Scales intrigued him.
Mr. Mardon shook his head. âBought it on her own, after the husbandâs time, for a songâa song! I know, because I knew the original Frenshams.â
âYou must have been in Paris a long time,â said Peel-Swynnerton.
Mr. Mardon could never resist an opportunity to talk about himself. His was a wonderful history. And Peel-Swynnerton, while scorning the man for his fatuity, was impressed. And when that was finishedâ
âYes!â said Mr. Mardon after a pause,, reaffirming everything in general by a single monosyllable.
Shortly afterwards he rose, saying that his habits were regular.
âGood-night,â he said with a mechanical smile.
âG-good-night,â said Peel-Swynnerton, trying to force the tone of fellowship and not succeeding. Their intimacy, which had sprung up like a mushroom, suddenly fell into dust. Peel-Swynnertonâs unspoken comment to Mr. Mardonâs back was: âAss!â Still, the sum of Peel-Swynnertonâs knowledge had indubitably been increased during the evening. And the hour was yet early. Half-past ten! The Folies-Marigny, with its beautiful architecture and its crowds of white toilettes, and its frothing of champagne and of beer, and its musicians in tight red coats, was just beginning to be aliveâ and at a distance of scarcely a stoneâs-throw! Peel-Swynnerton pictured the terraced, glittering hall, which had been the prime origin of his exceeding foolishness. And he pictured all the other resorts, great and small, garlanded with white lanterns, in the Champs Elysees; and the sombre aisles of the Champs Elysees where mysterious pale figures walked troublingly under the shade of trees, while snatches of wild song or absurd brassy music floated up from the resorts and restaurants. He wanted to go out and spend those fifty francs that remained in his pocket. After all, why not telegraph to England for more money? âOh, damn it!â he said savagely, and stretched his arms and got up. The Lounge was very small, gloomy and dreary.
One brilliant incandescent light burned in the hall, crudely illuminating the wicker fauteuils, a corded trunk with a blue-and- red label on it, a Fitzroy barometer, a map of Paris, a coloured poster of the Compagnie Transatlantique, and the mahogany retreat of the hall-portress. In that retreat was not only the hall-portressâan aged woman with a white cap above her wrinkled pink faceâbut the mistress of the establishment. They were murmuring together softly; they seemed to be well disposed to one another. The portress was respectful, but the mistress was respectful also. The hall, with its one light tranquilly burning, was bathed in an honest calm, the calm of a dayâs work accomplished, of gradual relaxation from tension, of growing expectation of repose. In its simplicity it affected Peel-Swynnerton as a medicine tonic for nerves might have affected him. In that hall, though exterior nocturnal life was but just stirring into activity, it seemed that the middle of the night had come, and that these two women alone watched in a mansion full of sleepers. And all the recitals which Peel-Swynnerton and Mr. Mardon had exchanged sank to the level of pitiably foolish gossip. Peel-Swynnerton felt that his duty to the house was to retire to bed. He felt, too, that he could not leave the house without saying that he was going out, and that he lacked the courage deliberately to tell these two women that he was going outâat that time of night! He dropped into one of the chairs and made a second attempt to peruse The Referee. Useless! Either his mind was outside in the Champs Elysees, or his
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