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on, primrose-colored street lamps, violet arc lights, ruddy sheets of light poured out of shop windows.

“Let’s go inside. I’m cold as hell,” said Heineman crossly, and they filed in through the revolving door, followed by a waiter with their drinks.

“I’ve been in the Red Cross all afternoon, Andy…. I think I am going to work that Roumania business…. Want to come?” said Henslowe in Andrews’ ear.

“If I can get hold of a piano and some lessons and the concerts keep up you won’t be able to get me away from Paris with wild horses. No, sir, I want to see what Paris is like…. It’s going to my head so it’ll be weeks before I know what I think about it.”

“Don’t think about it…. Drink,” growled Heineman, scowling savagely.

“That’s two things I’m going to keep away from in Paris; drink and women…. And you can’t have one without the other,” said Walters.

“True enough…. You sure do need them both,” said Heineman.

Andrews was not listening to their talk; twirling the stem of his glass of vermouth in his fingers, he was thinking of the Queen of Sheba slipping down from off the shoulders of her elephant, glistening fantastically with jewels in the light of crackling, resinous torches. Music was seeping up through his mind as the water seeps into a hole dug in the sand of the seashore. He could feel all through his body the tension of rhythms and phrases taking form, not quite to be seized as yet, still hovering on the borderland of consciousness. “From the girl at the cross-roads singing under her street-lamp to the patrician pulling roses to pieces from the height of her litter….All the imaginings of your desire….” He thought of the girl with skin like old ivory he had seen in the Place de Medicis. The Queen of Sheba’s face was like that now in his imaginings, quiet and inscrutable. A sudden cymbal-clanging of joy made his heart thump hard. He was free now of the imaginings of his desire, to loll all day at cafe tables watching the tables move in changing patterns before him, to fill his mind and body with a reverberation of all the rhythms of men and women moving in the frieze of life before his eyes; no more like wooden automatons knowing only the motions of the drill manual, but supple and varied, full of force and tragedy.

“For Heaven’s sake let’s beat it from here…. Gives me a pain this place does.” Heineman beat his fist on the table.

“All right,” said Andrews, getting up with a yawn.

Henslowe and Andrews walked off, leaving Walters to follow them with Heineman.

“We’re going to dine at Le Rat qui Danse,” said Henslowe, “an awfully funny place…. We just have time to walk there comfortably with an appetite.”

They followed the long dimly-lighted Rue de Richelieu to the Boulevards, where they drifted a little while with the crowd. The glaring lights seemed to powder the air with gold. Cafes and the tables outside were crowded. There was an odor of vermouth and coffee and perfume and cigarette smoke mixed with the fumes of burnt gasoline from taxicabs.

“Isn’t this mad?” said Andrews.

“It’s always carnival at seven on the Grands Boulevards.”

They started climbing the steep streets to Montmartre. At a corner they passed a hard-faced girl with rouge-smeared lips and over-powdered cheeks, laughing on the arm of an American soldier, who had a sallow face and dull-green eyes that glittered in the slanting light of a street-lamp.

“Hello, Stein,” said Andrews.

“Who’s that?”

“A fellow from our division, got here with me this morning.”

“He’s got curious lips for a Jew,” said Henslowe.

At the fork of two slanting streets, they went into a restaurant that had small windows pasted over with red paper, through which the light came dimly. Inside were crowded oak tables and oak wainscoting with a shelf round the top, on which were shell-cans, a couple of skulls, several cracked majolica plates and a number of stuffed rats. The only people there were a fat woman and a man with long grey hair and beard who sat talking earnestly over two small glasses in the center of the room. A husky-looking waitress with a Dutch cap and apron hovered near the inner door from which came a great smell of fish frying in olive oil.

“The cook here’s from Marseilles,” said Henslowe, as they settled themselves at a table for four.

“I wonder if the rest of them lost the way,” said Andrews.

“More likely old Heinz stopped to have a drink,” said Henslowe. “Let’s have some hors d’oeuvre while we are waiting.”

The waitress brought a collection of boat-shaped plates of red salads and yellow salads and green salads and two little wooden tubs with herrings and anchovies.

Henslowe stopped her as she was going, saying: “Rien de plus?”

The waitress contemplated the array with a tragic air, her arms folded over her ample bosom. “Que voulez-vous, Monsieur, c’est l’armistice.”

“The greatest fake about all this war business is the peace. I tell you, not till the hors d’oeuvre has been restored to its proper abundance and variety will I admit that the war’s over.”

The waitress tittered.

“Things aren’t what they used to be,” she said, going back to the kitchen.

Heineman burst into the restaurant at that moment, slamming the door behind him so that the glass rang, and the fat woman and the hairy man started violently in their chairs. He tumbled into a place, grinning broadly.

“And what have you done to Walters?”

Heineman wiped his glasses meticulously.

“Oh, he died of drinking raspberry shrub,” he said…. “Dee-dong peteet du ving de Bourgogne,” he shouted towards the waitress in his nasal French. Then he added: “Le Guy is coming in a minute, I just met him.”

The restaurant was gradually filling up with men and women of very various costumes, with a good sprinkling of Americans in uniform and out.

“God I hate people who don’t drink,” cried Heineman, pouring out wine. “A man who don’t drink just cumbers the earth.”

“How are you going to take it in America when they have prohibition?”

“Don’t talk about it; here’s le Guy. I wouldn’t have him know I belong to a nation that prohibits good liquor…. Monsieur le Guy, Monsieur Henslowe et Monsieur Andrews,” he continued getting up ceremoniously. A little man with twirled mustaches and a small vandyke beard sat down at the fourth place. He had a faintly red nose and little twinkling eyes.

“How glad I am,” he said, exposing his starched cuffs with a curious gesture, “to have some one to dine with! When one begins to get old loneliness is impossible. It is only youth that dares think…. Afterwards one has only one thing to think about: old age.”

“There’s always work,” said Andrews.

“Slavery. Any work is slavery. What is the use of freeing your intellect if you sell yourself again to the first bidder?”

“Rot!” said Heineman, pouring out from a new bottle.

Andrews had begun to notice the girl who sat at the next table, in front of a pale young soldier in French-blue who resembled her extraordinarily. She had high cheek bones and a forehead in which the modelling of the skull showed through the transparent, faintly-olive skin. Her heavy chestnut hair was coiled carelessly at the back of her head. She spoke very quietly, and pressed her lips together when she smiled. She ate quickly and neatly, like a cat.

The restaurant had gradually filled up with people. The waitress and the patron, a fat man with a wide red sash coiled tightly round his waist, moved with difficulty among the crowded tables. A woman at a table in the corner, with dead white skin and drugged staring eyes, kept laughing hoarsely, leaning her head, in a hat with bedraggled white plumes, against the wall. There was a constant jingle of plates and glasses, and an oily fume of food and women’s clothes and wine.

“D’you want to know what I really did with your friend?” said Heineman, leaning towards Andrews.

“I hope you didn’t push him into the Seine.”

“It was damn impolite…. But hell, it was damn impolite of him not to drink…. No use wasting time with a man who don’t drink. I took him into a cafe and asked him to wait while I telephoned. I guess he’s still waiting. One of the whoreiest cafes on the whole Boulevard Clichy.” Heineman laughed uproariously and started explaining it in nasal French to M. le Guy.

Andrews flushed with annoyance for a moment, but soon started laughing. Heineman had started singing again.

“O, Sinbad was in bad in Tokio and Rome, In bad in Trinidad And twice as bad at home, O, Sinbad was in bad all around!”

Everybody clapped. The white-faced woman in the corner cried “Bravo, Bravo,” in a shrill nightmare voice.

Heineman bowed, his big grinning face bobbing up and down like the face of a Chinese figure in porcelain.

“Lui est Sinbad,” he cried, pointing with a wide gesture towards Henslowe.

“Give ‘em some more, Heinz. Give them some more,” said Henslowe, laughing.

“Big brunettes with long stelets On the shores of Italee, Dutch girls with golden curls Beside the Zuyder Zee…”

Everybody cheered again; Andrews kept looking at the girl at the next table, whose face was red from laughter. She had a handkerchief pressed to her mouth, and kept saying in a low voice:

“O qu’il est drole, celui-la…. O qu’il est drole.”

Heineman picked up a glass and waved it in the air before drinking it off. Several people got up and filled it up from their bottles with white wine and red. The French soldier at the next table pulled an army canteen from under his chair and hung it round Heineman’s neck.

Heineman, his face crimson, bowed to all sides, more like a Chinese porcelain figure than ever, and started singing in all solemnity this time.

“Hulas and hulas would pucker up their lips, He fell for their ball-bearing hips For they were pips …”

His chunky body swayed to the ragtime. The woman in the corner kept time with long white arms raised above her head.

“Bet she’s a snake charmer,” said Henslowe.

“O, wild woman loved that child He would drive ten women wild! O, Sinbad was in bad all around!”

Heineman waved his arms, pointed again to Henslowe, and sank into his chair saying in the tones of a Shakespearean actor:

“C’est lui Sinbad.”

The girl hid her face on the tablecloth, shaken with laughter. Andrews could hear a convulsed little voice saying:

“O qu’il est rigolo….”

Heineman took off the canteen and handed it back to the French soldier.

“Merci, Camarade,” he said solemnly.

“Eh bien, Jeanne, c’est temps de ficher le camp,” said the French soldier to the girl. They got up. He shook hands with the Americans. Andrews caught the girl’s eye and they both started laughing convulsively again. Andrews noticed how erect and supple she walked as his eyes followed her to the door.

Andrews’s party followed soon after.

“We’ve got to hurry if we want to get to the Lapin Agile before closing…and I’ve got to have a drink,” said Heineman, still talking in his stagey Shakespearean voice.

“Have you ever been on the stage?” asked Andrews.

“What stage, sir? I’m in the last stages now, sir…. I am an artistic photographer and none other…. Moki and I are going into the movies together when they decide to have peace.”

“Who’s Moki?”

“Moki Hadj is the lady in the salmon-colored dress,” said Henslowe, in a loud stage whisper in Andrews’s ear. “They have a lion cub named Bubu.”

“Our first born,” said Heineman with a wave of the hand.

The streets were deserted. A thin ray of moonlight, bursting now and then through

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