Often they would sit in the bedroom and talk without ceasing.
Sophia learnt that the stout woman was named Foucault, and the other Laurence.
Sometimes Laurence would address Madame Foucault as Aimee, but usually she was more formal.
Madame Foucault always called the other Laurence.
Sophia's curiosity stirred and awoke.
But she could not obtain any very exact information as to where she was, except that the house was in the Rue Breda, off the Rue Notre Dame de Lorette.
She recollected vaguely that the reputation of the street was sinister.
It appeared that, on the day when she had gone out with Chirac, the upper part of the Rue Notre Dame de Lorette was closed for repairs--(this she remembered)--and that the cabman had turned up the Rue Breda in order to make a detour, and that it was just opposite to the house of Madame Foucault that she had lost consciousness.
Madame Foucault happened to be getting into a cab at the moment; but she had told Chirac nevertheless to carry Sophia into the house, and a policeman had helped.
Then, when the doctor came, it was discovered that she could not be moved, save to a hospital, and both Madame Foucault and Laurence were determined that no friend of Chirac's should be committed to the horrors of a Paris hospital.
Madame Foucault had suffered in one as a patient, and Laurence had been a nurse in another. ...
Chirac was now away.
The women talked loosely of a war.
"How kind you have been!" murmured Sophia, with humid eyes.
But they silenced her with gestures.
She was not to talk.
They seemed to have nothing further to tell her.
They said Chirac would be returning perhaps soon, and that she could talk to him.
Evidently they both held Chirac in affection.
They said often that he was a charming boy.
Bit by bit Sophia comprehended the length and the seriousness of her illness, and the immense devotion of the two women, and the terrific disturbance of their lives, and her own debility.
She saw that the women were strongly attached to her, and she could not understand why, as she had never done anything for them, whereas they had done everything for her.
She had not learnt that benefits rendered, not benefits received, are the cause of such attachments.
All the time she was plotting, and gathering her strength to disobey orders and get as far as the mirror.
Her preliminary studies and her preparations were as elaborate as those of a prisoner arranging to escape from a fortress.
The first attempt was a failure.
The second succeeded.
Though she could not stand without support, she managed by clinging to the bed to reach a chair, and to push the chair in front of her until it approached the mirror.
The enterprise was exciting and terrific.
Then she saw a face in the glass: white, incredibly emaciated, with great, wild, staring eyes; and the shoulders were bent as though with age.
It was a painful, almost a horrible sight.
It frightened her, so that in her alarm she recoiled from it.
Not attending sufficiently to the chair, she sank to the ground.
She could not pick herself up, and she was caught there, miserably, by her angered jailers.
The vision of her face taught her more efficiently than anything else the gravity of her adventure.
As the women lifted her inert, repentant mass into the bed, she reflected,
"How queer my life is!"
It seemed to her that she ought to have been trimming hats in the showroom instead of being in that curtained, mysterious, Parisian interior.
II
One day Madame Foucault knocked at the door of Sophia's little room (this ceremony of knocking was one of the indications that Sophia, convalescent, had been reinstated in her rights as an individual), and cried:
"Madame, one is going to leave you all alone for some time."
"Come in," said Sophia, who was sitting up in an armchair, and reading.
Madame Foucault opened the door.
"One is going to leave you all alone for some time," she repeated in a low, confidential voice, sharply contrasting with her shriek behind the door.
Sophia nodded and smiled, and Madame Foucault also nodded and smiled.
But Madame Foucault's face quickly resumed its anxious expression.
"The servant's brother marries himself to-day, and she implored me to accord her two days--what would you?
Madame Laurence is out.
And I must go out.
It is four o'clock.