<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
<br/>
<div class="first">WITH a new day began a new epoch. On the morning
following the night, of first adventure Max woke in his odd,
mountainous bed at the Hôtel Railleux kindling to fresh and
definite sensations. In a manner miraculously swift, miraculously
smooth and subtle, he had discovered a niche in this strange city,
and had elected to fit himself to it. A knowledge of present, a
pledge of future interests seemed to permeate the atmosphere, and
he rose and dressed with the grave deliberation of the being who
sees his way clear before him.</div>
<p>It was nine o'clock when he entered the
<i>salle-à-manger</i>, and one sharp glance brought the
satisfying conviction that it was deserted save for the presence of
the assiduous young waiter, who came hurrying forward as though no
span of hours and incidents separated yesterday's meal from
to-day's.</p>
<p>His attentive attitude was unrelaxed, his smile was as
deferential as before, but this morning he found a less responsive
guest. Max was filled with a quiet assurance that debarred
familiarity; Max, in fine, was bound upon a quest, and the
submissive young waiter, the bare eating-room, Paris itself, formed
but the setting and background in his arrogant young mind to the
greatness of the mission.</p>
<p>The thought—the small seed of thought that was responsible
for the idea had been sown last night, as he leaned over the
parapet fronting the Sacré-Coeur, looking down upon the city
with its tangle of lights; and later, in the hours of darkness,
when he had tossed on his heavy bed, too excited to lure sleep, it
had fructified with strange rapidity, growing and blossoming with
morning into definite resolve.</p>
<p>He drank his coffee and ate his roll in happy preoccupation,
and, having finished his meal, left the room and went quietly down
the stairs and through the glass door of the hotel.</p>
<p>The frost still held; Paris still smiled; and, buttoning up his
coat, he paused for a moment on the doorstep to turn his face to
the copper-red sun and breathe in the crisp, invigorating air;
then, with a quaintly decisive manner that seemed to set sentiment
aside, he walked to the edge of the footpath and hailed a passing
<i>fiacre</i>.</p>
<p>"To the church of the Sacré-Coeur," he commanded.</p>
<p>The <i>cocher</i> received the order with a grumble, looked from
his unreliable horse to the frosty roadway, and was about to shake
his head in definite negation when Max cajoled him with a more
ingratiating voice.</p>
<p>"The rue Ronsard, then? Will you take me to the corner of the
rue Ronsard?"</p>
<p>The man grumbled again, and shrugged his shoulders until his
ears disappeared in the shaggy depths of his fur cape; but, when
all hope seemed fled, he laconically murmured the one word
"<i>Bon!</i>" whipped up his horse, and started off with a fine
disregard of whether his fare had taken his seat or been left
behind upon the footpath.</p>
<p>To those who know Montmartre only as an abode of night—a
place of light and laughter and folly—Montmartre in the day,
Montmartre at half-past nine in the morning, comes as a revelation.
The whole picture is as a coin reversed. The theatres, the
music-halls, the <i>cabarets</i> all lie with closed eyes,
innocently sleeping; the population of pleasure-seekers and
pleasure-mongers has disappeared as completely as if some magician
had waved his wand, and in its place the streets teem with the
worker—the early, industrious shopkeeper and the householder
bent upon a profitable morning's marketing. Max, gazing from the
<i>fiacre</i> with attentive eyes, followed the varying scenes,
while his horse wound a careful and laborious way up the
cobble-paved streets, and noted with an artist's eye the black,
hurrying figures of the men, cloaked and hooded against the cold,
and the black, homely figures of the women, silhouetted against the
sharp greens and yellows of the laden vegetable stalls at which
they chattered and bargained.</p>
<p>It was all noisy, interesting, alive; and us he watched the
pleasant, changing pictures, his courage strengthened, his belief
in his own star mounted higher; the decision of last night stood
out, as so few nocturnal decisions can stand out, unashamed and
justified in the light of day.</p>
<p>At the corner where the rue André de Sarte joins the rue
Ronsard he dismissed his cab, and with a young inquisitiveness in
all that concerned the quarter, paused to look into the old curio
shop, no longer closed as on the previous night, but open and
inviting in its dingy suggestion of mysteries unsolved.</p>
<p>Now—at this moment of recording the boy's doings—the
curio shop no longer exists at the corner of the rue André
de Sarte; it has faded into the unknown with its coppers and
brasses, its silver and tinsel, its woollen and silk stuffs; but on
that January morning of his first coming it still held place, its
musty perfumes still conjured dreams, its open doorway, festooned
with antique objects, still offered tempting glimpses into the long
and dim interior, where an old Jew, presiding genius of the place,
lurked like a spider in the innermost circle of his web.</p>
<p>Max lingered, drawn into self-forgetfulness by the blending of
faded hues, the atmosphere of must and spices, the air of age
indescribable that veiled the place. He loitered about the windows,
peeped in at the doorway, would even have ventured across the
threshold had not a ponderous figure, rising silently from a heap
of cushions upon the floor of the inmost room, sent him hastening
round the corner, guiltily conscious that it was new lamps and not
old he was here to light.</p>
<p>The interest of his mission flowed back, sharpened by the
momentary break, and it was with very swift steps that he ran up
the Escalier de Sainte-Marie to the rue Müller; there, in the
rue Müller, he paused, his back to the green plantation, his
face to the row of houses rising one above the other, each with its
open doorway, each with its front of brick and plaster, its iron
balcony from which hung the inevitable array of blankets, rugs, and
mattresses absorbing the morning air.</p>
<p>To say that, in the mystic silence of the previous night and
restless hours of the dawn, Max had vowed to himself that here in
the rue Müller he would make a home, and to add that, coming
in the light of day, he found a door open to him, sounds at the
least fabulous; yet, as he stood there—eager, alert, with
face lifted expectantly, and bright gaze winging to right and
left—fable was made fact: the legend '<i>Appartement à
louer</i>' caught his glance like a pronouncement of fate.</p>
<p>It sounds fabulous, it sounds preposterous, and yet it obtains,
to be accounted for only by the fact that in this curious world
there are certain beings to whom it is given to say of all things
with naïve faith, not 'I shall seek,' but 'I shall find.'</p>
<p>Max had never doubted that, if courage were high enough to
undertake the quest, absolute success awaited him. He read the
legend again, '<i>Appartement à louer 5ième
étage. Gaz: l'eau,'</i> and without hesitation crossed the
rue Müller and passed through the open door.</p>
<p>The difference was vast between his nervous entry thirty-six
hours ago into the Hôtel Railleux and the boldness of his
step now. The difference between secret night and candid morning
lay in the two proceedings—the difference between
self-distrust and self-confidence. Then he had been a creature
newly created, looking upon himself and all the world with a
sensitive distrust; now he was an individual accepted of others,
assured of himself, already beginning to move and have his being in
happy self-forgetfulness.</p>
<p>He stepped into the hallway of the strange house and paused to
look about him, his only emotion a keen interest that kept every
nerve alert. The hallway round which he looked displayed no
original features: it was a lofty, rather narrow space, the walls
of which—painted to resemble marble—were defaced by
time, by the passing of many skirts and the rubbing of many
shoulders. In the rear was a second door, composed of glass, and
beyond it the suggestion of a staircase of polished oak that sprang
upward from the dingy floor in a surprising beauty of panelled dado
and fine old banister.</p>
<p>Max's eyes rested upon this staircase: in renewed excitement he
hurried down the hall and, regardless of the consequence, beat a
quick tattoo with his knuckles upon the glass door.</p>
<p>Silence greeted his imperative summons, and as he waited,
listening intently, he became aware of the monotonous hum of a
sewing-machine coming through a closed door upon his left.</p>
<p>The knowledge of a human presence emboldened him; again he
knocked, this time more sharply, more persistently. Again
inattention; then, as he lifted his hand for the third time, the
hum of the machine ceased abruptly, the door opened, and he turned
to confront a small woman with wispy hair and untidy clothes, whose
bodice was adorned with innumerable pins, and at whose side hung a
pair of scissors large as shears.</p>
<p>"Monsieur?" Her manner was curt—the manner of one who has
been disturbed at some engrossing occupation.</p>
<p>Max felt rebuffed; he raised his hat and bowed with as close an
imitation as he could summon of Blake's ingratiating
friendliness.</p>
<p>"Madame, you have an <i>appartement</i> to let?"</p>
<p>"True, monsieur! An <i>appartement</i> on the fifth
floor—gas and water." There was pride in the last words, if a
grudging pride.</p>
<p>"Precisely! And it is a good <i>appartement</i>?"</p>
<p>"No better in Montmartre."</p>
<p>"A sufficiency of light?"</p>
<p>'Light?' The woman smiled in scorn. 'Was it not open to the
skies—with those two windows in front, and that balcony?'</p>
<p>Max's excitement kindled.</p>
<p>"Madame, I must see this <i>appartement</i>! May I mount
now—at once?"</p>
<p>But the matter was no such light one. Madame shook her head.
'Ah, that was not possible!'</p>
<p>'Why not?'</p>
<p>'Ah, well, there was the <i>concierge</i>! The <i>concierge</i>
was out.'</p>
<p>'But the <i>concierge</i> would return?'</p>
<p>'Oh yes! It was true he would return!'</p>
<p>The little woman cast a wistful eye on the door of her own
room.</p>
<p>'At what hour?'</p>
<p>'Ah! That was a question!'</p>
<p>'This morning?'</p>
<p>'Possibly!'</p>
<p>'This afternoon?'</p>
<p>'Possibly!'</p>
<p>'But not for a certainty?'</p>
<p>'Nothing was entirely certain.'</p>
<p>Anger broke through Max's disappointment. Without a word he
turned on his heel and strode down the hall with the air of an
offended prince.</p>
<p>The woman watched him with an expressionless face until he
reached the door, then something—perhaps his youth, perhaps
his brave carriage, perhaps his defiant disappointment—moved
her.</p>
<p>"Monsieur!" she called.</p>
<p>He stopped.</p>
<p>"Monsieur, if it is absolutely necessary that you see the
<i>appartement</i>—"</p>
<p>"It is. Absolutely necessary." Max ran back.</p>
<p>"Then, monsieur, I will conduct you up-stairs."</p>
<p>The suggestion was greedily seized upon. This <i>appartement</i>
on the fifth floor had grown in value with each moment of
denial.</p>
<p>"Thank you, madame, a thousand times!"</p>
<p>"Shall we mount?"</p>
<p>"On the moment, if you will."</p>
<p>Through the glass door they went, and up the stairs, mounting
higher and ever higher in an unbroken silence. Half way up each
flight of stairs there was a window through which the light fell
upon the bare oak steps, proving them to be spotless and polished
as the floor of a convent. It was an unexpected quality, this rigid
cleanliness, and the boy acknowledged it with a mute and deep
satisfaction.</p>
<p>Upon each landing were two doors—closed doors that
sturdily guarded whatever of secrecy might lie behind, and at each
of these silent portals Max glanced with that intent and searching
look that one bestows upon objects that promise to become
intertwined with one's daily life. At last the ascent was made, the
goal reached, and he paused on the last step of the stairs to
survey the coveted fifth floor.</p>
<p>It was as bare, as scrupulously clean as were the other
landings; but his quick glance noted that while the door upon the
left was plain and unadorned as the others he had passed, that upon
the right bore a small brass plate engraved with the name 'L.
Salas.'</p>
<p>This, then, was his possible neighbor! He scanned the name
attentively.</p>
<p>"This is the fifth floor, madame?"</p>
<p>"The fifth floor, monsieur!" Without ceremony the little woman
went forward and, to his astonishment, rapped sharply upon the door
with the brass plate.</p>
<p>Max started. "Madame! The <i>appartement</i> is not
occupied?"</p>
<p>The only reply that came to him was the opening of the door by
an inch or two and the hissing whisper of a conversation of which
he caught no word. Then the lady of the scissors looked round upon
him, and the door closed.</p>
<p>"One moment, monsieur, while madame throws on a garment!"</p>
<p>A sudden loss of nerve, a sudden desire for flight seized upon
Max. He had mounted the stairs anticipating the viewing of empty
rooms, and now he was confronted with a furnished and inhabited
<i>appartement</i>, and commanded to wait 'while madame threw on a
garment'! A hundred speculations crowded to his mind. Into what
<i>milieu</i> was he about to be hurled? What sordid morning scene
was he about to witness? In a strange confusion of ideas, the white
face of the woman Lize sprang to his imagination, coupled with the
memory of the empty champagne bottle and the battered tray of the
first night at the Hôtel Railleux. A deadly sensitiveness
oppressed him; he turned sharply to his guide.</p>
<p>"Madame! Madame! It is an altogether unreasonable hour to
intrude—"</p>
<p>The reopening of the door on the right checked him, and a gentle
voice broke across his words:</p>
<p>"Now, madame, if you will!"</p>
<p>He turned, his heart still beating quickly, and a sudden shame
at his own thoughts—a sudden relief so strong as almost to be
painful—surged through him.</p>
<p>The open door revealed a woman of forty-five, perhaps of fifty,
clothed in a meagre black skirt and a plain linen wrapper of
exquisite cleanliness. It was this cleanliness that struck the note
of her personality—that fitted her as a garment, accentuating
the quiet austerity of her thin figure, the streaks of gray in her
brown hair, the pale face marked with suffering and sympathy and
repression.</p>
<p>With an instinctive deference the boy bared his head.</p>
<p>"Madame," he stammered, "I apologize profoundly for my intrusion
at such an hour."</p>
<p>"Do not apologize, monsieur. Enter, if you will!" She drew back,
smiling a little, and making him welcome by a simple gesture. "We
are anxious, I assure you, to find a tenant for the
<i>appartement</i>; my husband's health is not what it was, and we
find it necessary to move into the country."</p>
<p>He followed her into a tiny hall; and with her fingers on the
handle of an inner door, she looked at him again in her gentle,
self-possessed way.</p>
<p>"You will excuse my husband, monsieur! He is an invalid and
cannot rise from his chair."</p>
<p>She opened the inner door, and Max found himself in a bedroom,
plain in furniture and without adornment, but possessing a large
window, the full light from which was falling with pathetic
vividness on the shrunken figure and wan, expressionless face of a
very old man who sat huddled in a shabby leathern arm-chair. This
arm-chair had been drawn to the window to catch the wintry sun, and
pathos unspeakable lay in the contrasts of the picture—the
eternal youth in the cold, dancing beams—the waste, the
frailty of human things in the inert figure, the dim eyes, the
folded, twitching hands.</p>
<p>The old man looked up as the little party entered, and his eyes
sought his wife's with a mute, appealing glance; then, with a
slight confusion, he turned to Max, and his shaking hand went up
instinctively to the old black skullcap that covered his head.</p>
<p>"He wishes to greet you, monsieur, but he has not the strength."
The woman's voice dropped to tenderness, and she stooped and
arranged the rug about the shrunken knees. "If you will come this
way, I will show you the <i>salon</i>."</p>
<p>She moved quietly forward, opening a second door.</p>
<p>"You see, monsieur, it is all very convenient. In summer you can
throw the windows open and pass from one room to the other by way
of the balcony."</p>
<p>She moved from the bedroom into the <i>salon</i> as she spoke,
Max and the lady of the pins following.</p>
<p>"See, monsieur! It is quite a good room."</p>
<p>Max, still subdued by the vision of age, went forward silently,
but as he entered this second room irrepressible surprise possessed
him. Here was an atmosphere he had not anticipated. A soft, if
faded, carpet covered the floor; a fine old buffet stood against
the wall; antique carved chairs were drawn up to a massive table
that had obviously known more spacious surroundings; while upon the
walls, from floor to ceiling, were pictures—pictures of all
sizes, pictures obviously from the same hand, on the heavy gold
frames of which the name 'L. Salas' stood out conspicuously in
proof of former publicity.</p>
<p>"Madame!" He turned to the sad-faced woman, the enthusiasm of a
fellow-craftsman instantly kindled. "Madame! You are an artist?
This is your work?"</p>
<p>The woman caught the sympathy, caught the fire of interest, and
a faint flush warmed her cheek.</p>
<p>"Alas, no, monsieur! I am not artistic. It is my husband who is
the creator of these." She waved her hand proudly toward the walls.
"My husband is an artist."</p>
<p>"A renowned artist!"</p>
<p>It was the woman of the pins and scissors who spoke, surprising
Max, not by the sudden sound of her voice, but by her sudden warmth
of feeling. Again Blake's words came back—'These are the true
citizens of the true Bohemia!'—and he looked curiously from
one to the other of the women, so utterly apart in station, in
education, in ideals, yet bound by a common respect for art.</p>
<p>"It is my loss," he said, quietly, "that I did not, until
to-day, know of M. Salas."</p>
<p>"But no, monsieur! What would you know of twenty years ago? It
is true that then my husband had a reputation; but, alas, time
moves quickly—and the world is for the young!"</p>
<p>She smiled again, gently and patiently, and a sudden desire
seized Max to lift and kiss one of her thin, work-worn hands. The
whole pitiful story of a vogue outlived, of a generation pushed
aside, breathed in the silence of these fifth-floor rooms.</p>
<p>"They must be a great pride to you, madame—these
pictures."</p>
<p>"These, monsieur—and the fact that he is still with me. We
can dispense with anything save the being we love—is it not
so? But I must not detain you, talking of myself! The other rooms
are still to see! This, monsieur, is our second bedroom! And this
the kitchen!"</p>
<p>Max, following her obediently, took one peep into what was
evidently her own bedroom—a tiny apartment of rigid
simplicity, in which a narrow bed, with a large black crucifix
hanging above it, seemed the only furniture, and passed on into the
kitchen, a room scarce larger than a cupboard, in which a gas-stove
and a water-tap promised future utility.</p>
<p>"See, monsieur! Everything is very convenient. All things are
close at hand for cooking, and the light is good. And now, perhaps,
you would wish to pass back into the <i>salon</i> and step out upon
the balcony?"</p>
<p>Still silent, still preoccupied, he assented, and they passed
into the room so eloquent of past hours and dwindled fortunes.</p>
<p>"See, monsieur! The view is wonderful! Not to-day, perhaps, for
the frost blurs the distances; but in the spring—a little
later in the year—"</p>
<p>Crossing the room, she opened the long French window and stepped
out upon the narrow iron balcony.</p>
<p>Max followed, and, moving to her side, stood gazing down upon
the city of his dreams. For long he stood absorbed in thought, then
he turned and looked frankly into her face.</p>
<p>"Madame," he said, softly, "it is a place of miracle. It is here
that I shall live."</p>
<p>She smiled. She had served an apprenticeship in the reading of
the artist's heart—the child's heart.</p>
<p>"Yes, monsieur? You will live here?"</p>
<p>"As soon, madame, as it suits you to vacate the
<i>appartement</i>."</p>
<p>Again she smiled, gently, indulgently. "And may I ask, monsieur,
whether you have ascertained the figure of the rent?"</p>
<p>"No, madame."</p>
<p>"And is not that—pardon me!—a little
improvident?"</p>
<p>Max laughed. "Probably, madame! But if it demanded my last franc
I would give that last franc with an open heart, so greatly do I
desire the place."</p>
<p>The quiet eyes of the woman softened to a gentle
comprehension.</p>
<p>"You are an artist, monsieur."</p>
<p>The color leaped into the boy's face, his eyes flashed with
triumph.</p>
<p>"Madame, how did you guess?"</p>
<p>"It is no guessing, monsieur. You tell me with every word."</p>
<p>"Ah, madame, I thank you!" With a charming, swift grace he bent
and caught her hand. "And, madame"—he hesitated naïvely
and colored again. "Madame, I would like to say that when my home
is here it will be my care never to desecrate the atmosphere you
have created." He bent still lower, the sun caressing his crisp,
dark hair, and very lightly his lips touched her fingers.</p>
<p>"<i>Adieu</i>, madame!"</p>
<p>"<i>Adieu</i>, monsieur!"</p>
<hr style='width: 65%;'>
<br/>
<br/>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XI'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />