II
"It is fortunate," said Severn, sitting up
and stretching, "that we have tided over the dinner hour, for I have
nothing to offer you for supper but what may be purchased with one silver
franc."
The cat on his knee rose, arched her back, yawned, and
looked up at him.
"What shall it be? A roast chicken with salad?
No? Possibly you prefer beef? Of course,—and I shall try an egg and some white
bread. Now for the wines. Milk for you? Good. I shall take a little water,
fresh from the wood," with a motion toward the bucket in the sink.
He put on his hat and left the room. The cat followed
to the door, and after he had closed it behind him, she settled down, smelling
at the cracks, and cocking one ear at every creak from the crazy old building.
The door below opened and shut. The cat looked
serious, for a moment doubtful, and her ears flattened in nervous expectation.
Presently she rose with a jerk of her tail and started on a noiseless tour of
the studio. She sneezed at a pot of turpentine, hastily retreating to the
table, which she presently mounted, and having satisfied her curiosity
concerning a roll of red modelling wax, returned to the door and sat down with
her eyes on the crack over the threshold. Then she lifted her voice in a thin
plaint.
When Severn returned he looked grave, but the cat,
joyous and demonstrative, marched around him, rubbing her gaunt body against his
legs, driving her head enthusiastically into his hand, and purring until her
voice mounted to a squeal.
He placed a bit of meat, wrapped in brown paper, upon
the table, and with a penknife cut it into shreds. The milk he took from a
bottle which had served for medicine, and poured it into the saucer on the
hearth.
The cat crouched before it, purring and lapping at the
same time.
He cooked his egg and ate it with a slice of bread,
watching her busy with the shredded meat, and when he had finished, and had
filled and emptied a cup of water from the bucket in the sink, he sat down,
taking her into his lap, where she at once curled up and began her toilet. He
began to speak again, touching her caressingly at times by way of emphasis.
"Cat, I have found out where your mistress lives.
It is not very far away;—it is here, under this same leaky roof, but in the
north wing which I had supposed was uninhabited. My janitor tells me this. By
chance, he is almost sober this evening. The butcher on the rue de Seine, where
I bought your meat, knows you, and old Cabane the baker identified you with
needless sarcasm. They tell me hard tales of your mistress which I shall not
believe. They say she is idle and vain and pleasure-loving; they say she is
hare-brained and reckless. The little sculptor on the ground floor, who was
buying rolls from old Cabane, spoke to me to-night for the first time, although
we have always bowed to each other. He said she was very good and very
beautiful. He has only seen her once, and does not know her name. I thanked
him;—I don't know why I thanked him so warmly. Cabane said, 'Into this cursed
Street of the Four Winds, the four winds blow all things evil.' The sculptor
looked confused, but when he went out with his rolls, he said to me, 'I am sure,
Monsieur, that she is as good as she is beautiful.'"
The cat had finished her toilet, and now, springing
softly to the floor, went to the door and sniffed. He knelt beside her, and
unclasping the garter held it for a moment in his hands. After a while he said:
"There is a name engraved upon the silver clasp beneath the buckle. It is
a pretty name, Sylvia Elven. Sylvia is a woman's name, Elven is the name of a
town. In Paris, in this quarter, above all, in this Street of the Four Winds,
names are worn and put away as the fashions change with the seasons. I know the
little town of Elven, for there I met Fate face to face and Fate was unkind.
But do you know that in Elven Fate had another name, and that name was
Sylvia?"
He replaced the garter and stood up looking down at
the cat crouched before the closed door.
"The name of Elven has a charm for me. It tells
me of meadows and clear rivers. The name of Sylvia troubles me like perfume
from dead flowers."
The cat mewed.
"Yes, yes," he said soothingly, "I will
take you back. Your Sylvia is not my Sylvia; the world is wide and Elven is not
unknown. Yet in the darkness and filth of poorer Paris, in the sad shadows of
this ancient house, these names are very pleasant to me."
He lifted her in his arms and strode through the
silent corridors to the stairs. Down five flights and into the moonlit court,
past the little sculptor's den, and then again in at the gate of the north wing
and up the worm-eaten stairs he passed, until he came to a closed door. When he
had stood knocking for a long time, something moved behind the door; it opened
and he went in. The room was dark. As he crossed the threshold, the cat sprang
from his arms into the shadows. He listened but heard nothing. The silence was
oppressive and he struck a match. At his elbow stood a table and on the table a
candle in a gilded candlestick. This he lighted, then looked around. The
chamber was vast, the hangings heavy with embroidery. Over the fireplace
towered a carved mantel, grey with the ashes of dead fires. In a recess by the
deep-set windows stood a bed, from which the bedclothes, soft and fine as lace,
trailed to the polished floor. He lifted the candle above his head. A
handkerchief lay at his feet. It was faintly perfumed. He turned toward the
windows. In front of them was a canapé and over it were
flung, pell-mell, a gown of silk, a heap of lace-like garments, white and
delicate as spiders' meshes, long, crumpled gloves, and, on the floor beneath,
the stockings, the little pointed shoes, and one garter of rosy silk, quaintly
flowered and fitted with a silver clasp. Wondering, he stepped forward and drew
the heavy curtains from the bed. For a moment the candle flared in his hand;
then his eyes met two other eyes, wide open, smiling, and the candle-flame flashed
over hair heavy as gold.
She was pale, but not as white as he; her eyes were
untroubled as a child's; but he stared, trembling from head to foot, while the
candle flickered in his hand.
At last he whispered: "Sylvia, it is I."
Again he said, "It is I."
Then, knowing that she was dead, he kissed her on the
mouth. And through the long watches of the night the cat purred on his knee,
tightening and relaxing her padded claws, until the sky paled above the Street
of the Four Winds.
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