"One can refuse you nothing!"
She behaved just as though Chirac had disgusted her.
She humbled him.
But with his fellow-lodgers his airs of importance as a member of the editorial staff of the Debats were comical in their ingenuousness.
On the very same day Carlier gave notice to leave Sophia.
He was comparatively rich; but the habits which had enabled him to arrive at independence in the uncertain vocation of a journalist would not allow him, while he was earning nothing, to spend a sou more than was absolutely necessary.
He had decided to join forces with a widowed sister, who was accustomed to parsimony as parsimony is understood in France, and who was living on hoarded potatoes and wine.
"There!" said Sophia, "you have lost me a tenant!"
And she insisted, half jocularly and half seriously, that Carlier was leaving because he could not stand Chirac's infantile conceit.
The flat was full of acrimonious words.
On Christmas morning Chirac lay in bed rather late; the newspapers did not appear that day.
Paris seemed to be in a sort of stupor.
About eleven o'clock he came to the kitchen door.
"I must speak with you," he said. His tone impressed Sophia.
"Enter," said she.
He went in, and closed the door like a conspirator.
"We must have a little fete," he said.
"You and I."
"Fete!" she repeated.
"What an idea!
How can I leave?"
If the idea had not appealed to the secrecies of her heart, stirring desires and souvenirs upon which the dust of time lay thick, she would not have begun by suggesting difficulties; she would have begun by a flat refusal.
"That is nothing," he said vigorously.
"It is Christmas, and I must have a chat with you.
We cannot chat here.
I have not had a true little chat with you since you were ill.
You will come with me to a restaurant for lunch."
She laughed.
"And the lunch of my lodgers?"
"You will serve it a little earlier.
We will go out immediately afterwards, and we will return in time for you to prepare dinner.
It is quite simple."
She shook her head.
"You are mad," she said crossly.
"It is necessary that I should offer you something," he went on scowling.
"You comprehend me?
I wish you to lunch with me to-day.
I demand it, and you are not going to refuse me."
He was very close to her in the little kitchen, and he spoke fiercely, bullyingly, exactly as she had spoken to him when insisting that he should live on credit with her for a while.
"You are very rude," she parried.
"If I am rude, it is all the same to me," he held out uncompromisingly.
"You will lunch with me; I hold to it."
"How can I be dressed?" she protested.
"That does not concern me.
Arrange that as you can."
It was the most curious invitation to a Christmas dinner imaginable.
At a quarter past twelve they issued forth side by side, heavily clad, into the mournful streets.
The sky, slate-coloured, presaged snow.
The air was bitterly cold, and yet damp.
There were no fiacres in the little three-cornered place which forms the mouth of the Rue Clausel.