Yes, a charwoman!
More soon or more late.
Well, that is life.
What would you?
One exists always."
Then in a different tone:
"I demand your pardon, madame, for talking like this.
I ought to have shame."
And Sophia felt that in listening she also ought to be ashamed.
But she was not ashamed.
Everything seemed very natural, and even ordinary. And, moreover, Sophia was full of the sense of her superiority over the woman on the bed.
Four years ago, in the Restaurant Sylvain, the ingenuous and ignorant Sophia had shyly sat in awe of the resplendent courtesan, with her haughty stare, her large, easy gestures, and her imperturbable contempt for the man who was paying.
And now Sophia knew that she, Sophia, knew all that was to be known about human nature.
She had not merely youth, beauty, and virtue, but knowledge--knowledge enough to reconcile her to her own misery.
She had a vigorous, clear mind, and a clean conscience.
She could look any one in the face, and judge every one too as a woman of the world.
Whereas this obscene wreck on the bed had nothing whatever left.
She had not merely lost her effulgent beauty, she had become repulsive.
She could never have had any commonsense, nor any force of character.
Her haughtiness in the day of glory was simply fatuous, based on stupidity.
She had passed the years in idleness, trailing about all day in stuffy rooms, and emerging at night to impress nincompoops; continually meaning to do things which she never did, continually surprised at the lateness of the hour, continually occupied with the most foolish trifles.
And here she was at over forty writhing about on the bare floor because a boy of twenty-five (who MUST be a worthless idiot) had abandoned her after a scene of ridiculous shoutings and stampings.
She was dependent on the caprices of a young scamp, the last donkey to turn from her with loathing!
Sophia thought: "Goodness!
If I had been in her place I shouldn't have been like that.
I should have been rich.
I should have saved like a miser.
I wouldn't have been dependent on anybody at that age.
If I couldn't have made a better courtesan than this pitiable woman, I would have drowned myself."
In the harsh vanity of her conscious capableness and young strength she thought thus, half forgetting her own follies, and half excusing them on the ground of inexperience.
Sophia wanted to go round the flat and destroy every crimson lampshade in it.
She wanted to shake Madame Foucault into self- respect and sagacity.
Moral reprehension, though present in her mind, was only faint.
Certainly she felt the immense gulf between the honest woman and the wanton, but she did not feel it as she would have expected to feel it.
"What a fool you have been!" she thought; not: "What a sinner!"
With her precocious cynicism, which was somewhat unsuited to the lovely northern youthfulness of that face, she said to herself that the whole situation and their relative attitudes would have been different if only Madame Foucault had had the wit to amass a fortune, as (according to Gerald) some of her rivals had succeeded in doing.
And all the time she was thinking, in another part of her mind:
"I ought not to be here.
It's no use arguing. I ought not to be here.
Chirac did the only thing for me there was to do.
But I must go now."
Madame Foucault continued to recite her woes, chiefly financial, in a weak voice damp with tears; she also continued to apologize for mentioning herself.
She had finished sobbing, and lay looking at the wall, away from Sophia, who stood irresolute near the bed, ashamed for her companion's weakness and incapacity.
"You must not forget," said Sophia, irritated by the unrelieved darkness of the picture drawn by Madame Foucault, "that at least I owe you a considerable sum, and that I am only waiting for you to tell me how much it is.
I have asked you twice already, I think."
"Oh, you are still suffering!" said Madame Foucault.
"I am quite well enough to pay my debts," said Sophia.
"I do not like to accept money from you," said Madame Foucault.
"But why not?"
"You will have the doctor to pay."