But the driver of the next cab demanded twelve francs.
"Jump in," said Gerald to Sophia.
Chirac lifted his eyebrows.
At the same moment a tall, stout man with the hard face of a flourishing scoundrel, and a young, pallid girl on his arm, pushed aside both Gerald and Chirac and got into the cab with his companion.
Chirac protested, telling him that the cab was already engaged.
The usurper scowled and swore, and the young girl laughed boldly.
Sophia, shrinking, expected her escort to execute justice heroic and final; but she was disappointed.
"Brute!" murmured Chirac, and shrugged his shoulders, as the carriage drove off, leaving them foolish on the kerb.
By this time all the other cabs had been seized.
They walked to the Hotel de l'Epee, jostled by the crowd, Sophia and Chirac in front, and Gerald following with the valise, whose weight caused him to lean over to the right and his left arm to rise.
The avenue was long, straight, and misty with a floating dust.
Sophia had a vivid sense of the romantic. They saw towers and spires, and Chirac talked to her slowly and carefully of the cathedral and the famous churches.
He said that the stained glass was marvellous, and with much care he catalogued for her all the things she must visit.
They crossed a river.
She felt as though she was stepping into the middle age.
At intervals Gerald changed the valise from hand to hand; obstinately, he would not let Chirac touch it.
They struggled upwards, through narrow curving streets.
"Voila!" said Chirac.
They were in front of the Hotel de l'Epee.
Across the street was a cafe crammed with people.
Several carriages stood in front.
The Hotel de l'Epee had a reassuring air of mellow respectability, such as Chirac had claimed for it.
He had suggested this hotel for Madame Scales because it was not near the place of execution.
Gerald had said,
"Of course! Of course!"
Chirac, who did not mean to go to bed, required no room for himself.
The Hotel de l'Epee had one room to offer, at the price of twenty- five francs.
Gerald revolted at the attempted imposition.
"A nice thing!" he grumbled, "that ordinary travellers can't get a decent room at a decent price just because some one's going to be guillotined to- morrow!
We'll try elsewhere!"
His features expressed disgust, but Sophia fancied that he was secretly pleased.
They swaggered out of the busy stir of the hotel, as those must who, having declined to be swindled, wish to preserve their importance in the face of the world.
In the street a cabman solicited them, and filled them with hope by saying that he knew of a hotel that might suit them and would drive them there for five francs.
He furiously lashed his horse.
The mere fact of being in a swiftly moving carriage which wayfarers had to avoid nimbly, maintained their spirits.
They had a near glimpse of the cathedral.
The cab halted with a bump, in a small square, in front of a repellent building which bore the sign,
'Hotel de Vezelay.'
The horse was bleeding.
Gerald instructed Sophia to remain where she was, and he and Chirac went up four stone steps into the hotel.
Sophia, stared at by loose crowds that were promenading, gazed about her, and saw that all the windows of the square were open and most of them occupied by people who laughed and chattered.
Then there was a shout: Gerald's voice.
He had appeared at a window on the second floor of the hotel with Chirac and a very fat woman.
Chirac saluted, and Gerald laughed carelessly, and nodded.
"It's all right," said Gerald, having descended.
"How much do they ask?" Sophia inquired indiscreetly.
Gerald hesitated, and looked self-conscious.
"Thirty-five francs," he said.
"But I've had enough of driving about.
It seems we're lucky to get it even at that."