“That must have been Felix,” Howard said. “Odile’s friend.” He put so much weight on the word “friend” that Carol felt there was more, a great deal more, and that, although he liked gossip as well as anyone else, he did not find Odile’s affairs interesting enough to discuss. “He used to wait for her outside every night. Now I guess he comes in out of the rain.”
“But she’s never mentioned him,” Carol protested. “And he must be younger than she is, and so pale and funny-looking! Where does he come from?”
Howard didn’t know. Felix was Austrian, he thought, or Czech. There was something odd about him, for although he obviously hadn’t enough to eat, he always had plenty of American cigarettes. That was a bad sign. “Why are you so interested?” he said. But Carol was not interested at all.
After that, Carol saw Felix every evening. He was always polite and sometimes murmured a perfunctory greeting as she passed his chair. He continued to look tired and ill, and Carol wondered if it was true that he hadn’t enough to eat. She mentioned him to Odile, who was surprisingly willing to discuss her friend. He was twenty-one, she said, and without relatives. They had all been killed at the end of the war, in the final bombings. He was in Paris illegally, without a proper passport or working papers. The police were taking a long time to straighten it out, and meanwhile, not permitted to work, Felix “did other things.” Odile did not say what the other things were, and Carol was rather shocked.
That night, before going to sleep, she thought about Felix, and about how he was only twenty-one. She and Felix, then, were closer in age than he was to Odile or she herself was to Howard. When I was in school, he was in school, she thought. When the war stopped, we were fourteen and fifteen.… But here she lost track, for where Carol had had a holiday, Felix’s parents had been killed. Their closeness in age gave her unexpected comfort, as if someone in this disappointing city had some tie with her. In the morning she was ashamed of her disloyal thoughts — her closest tie in Paris was, after all, with Howard — and decided to ignore Felix when she saw him again. That night, when she passed his chair, he said “Good evening,” and she was suddenly acutely conscious of every bit of her clothing: the press of the belt at her waist, the pinch of her earrings, the weight of her dress, even her gloves, which felt as scratchy as sacking. It was a disturbing feeling; she was not sure that she liked it.
“I don’t see why Felix should just sit in that hall all the time,” she complained to Howard. “Can’t he wait for Odile somewhere else?”
Howard was too busy to worry about Felix. It occurred to him that Carol was being tiresome, and that this whining over who sat in the hall was only one instance of her new manner. She had taken to complaining about their friends, and saying she wanted to meet new people and see more of Paris. Sometimes she looked at him helplessly and eagerly, as if there were something he ought to be saying or doing. He was genuinely perplexed; it seemed to him they got along well and were reasonably happy together. But Carol was changing. She hunted up odd, cheap restaurants. She made him walk in the rain. She said that they ought to see the sun come up from the steps of the Sacré-Coeur, and actually succeeded in dragging him there, nearly dead of cold. And, as he might have foreseen, the expedition came to nothing, for it was a rainy dawn and a suspicious gendarme sent them both home.
At Christmas, Carol begged him to take her to the carol singing in the Place Vendôme. Here, she imagined, with the gentle fall of snow and the small, rosy choirboys singing between lighted Christmas trees, she would find something — a warm memory that would, later, bring her closer to Howard, a glimpse of the Paris other people liked. But, of course, there was no snow. Howard and Carol stood under her umbrella as a fine, misty rain fell on the choristers, who sang over and over the opening bars of “Il est né, le Divin Enfant,” testing voice levels for a broadcast. Newspaper photographers drifted on the rim of the crowd, and the flares that lit the scene for a newsreel camera blew acrid smoke in their faces. Howard began to cough. Around the square, the tenants of the Place emerged on their small balconies. Some of them had champagne glasses in their hands, as if they had interrupted an agreeable party to step outside for a moment. Carol looked up at the lighted open doorways, through which she could see a painted ceiling, a lighted chandelier. But nothing happened. None of the people seemed beautiful or extraordinary. No one said, “Who is that charming girl down there? Let’s ask her up!”
Howard blew his nose and said that his feet were cold; they drifted over the square to a couturier’s window, where the Infant Jesus wore a rhinestone pin and a worshiping plaster angel extended a famous brand of perfume. “It just looks like New York or something,” Carol said, plaintive with disappointment. As she stopped to close her umbrella, the wind carried to her feet a piece of mistletoe and, glancing up, she saw that cheap tinsel icicles and bunches of mistletoe had been tied on the street lamps of the square. It looked pretty, and rather poor, and she thought of the giant tree in Rockefeller Center. She suddenly felt sorry for Paris, just as she had felt sorry for Felix because he looked hungry and was only twenty-one. Her throat went warm, like the prelude to a rush of tears. Stooping, she picked up the sprig of mistletoe and put it in her pocket.
“Is this all?” Howard said. “Was this what you wanted to see?” He was cold and uncomfortable, but because it was Christmas, he said nothing impatient, and tried to remember, instead, that she was only twenty-two.
“I suppose so.”
They found a taxi and went on to finish the evening with some friends from their office. Howard made an amusing story of their adventure in the Place Vendôme. She realized for the first time that something could be perfectly accurate but untruthful — they had not found any part of that evening funny — and that this might cover more areas of experience than the occasional amusing story. She looked at Howard thoughtfully, as if she had learned something of value.
The day after Christmas, Howard came down with a bad cold, the result of standing in the rain. He did not shake it off for the rest of the winter, and Carol, feeling guiltily that it was her fault, suggested no more excursions. Temporarily, she put the question of falling in love to one side. Paris was not the place, she thought; perhaps it had been, fifty years ago, or whenever it was that people wrote all the songs. It did not occur to her to break her engagement.
She wore out the winter working, nursing Howard’s cold, toying with office gossip, and, now and again, lunching with Odile, who was just as unsatisfactory as ever. It was nearly spring when Odile, stopping by Carol’s desk, said that Martine was making a concert debut the following Sunday. It was a private gathering, a subscription concert. Odile sounded vague. She dropped two tickets on Carol’s desk and said, walking away, “If you want to come.”
“If I want to!”
Carol flew away to tell Howard at once. “It’s a sort of private musical thing,” she said. “There should be important musicians there, since it’s a debut, and all Odile’s family. The old count — everyone.” She half expected Odile’s impoverished uncle to turn up in eighteenth-century costume, his hands clasped on the head of a cane.
Howard said it was all right with him, provided they needn’t stand out in the rain.
“Of course not! It’s a concert.” She looked at the tickets; they were handwritten slips bearing mimeographed numbers. “It’s probably in someone’s house,” she said. “In one of those lovely old drawing rooms. Or in a little painted theater. There are supposed to be little theaters all over Paris that belong to families and that foreigners never see.”
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