"Well, it is the moment!" he said.
"Did you all forget the food?" she asked.
He shrugged his shoulders.
"What will you?
One cannot think of everything."
"I hope you will have a safe voyage," she said.
She had already taken leave of him once, in the house, and heard all about the balloon and the sailor-aeronaut and the preparations; and now she had nothing to say, nothing whatever.
He shrugged his shoulders again.
"I hope so!" he murmured, but in a tone to convey that he had no such hope.
"The wind isn't too strong?" she suggested.
He shrugged his shoulders again.
"What would you?"
"Is it in the direction you want?"
"Yes, nearly," he admitted unwillingly. Then rousing himself:
"Eh, well, madame. You have been extremely amiable to come.
I held to it very much--that you should come.
It is because of you I quit Paris."
She resented the speech by a frown.
"Ah!" he implored in a whisper.
"Do not do that.
Smile on me.
After all, it is not my fault.
Remember that this may be the last time I see you, the last time I regard your eyes."
She smiled.
She was convinced of the genuineness of the emotion which expressed itself in all this flamboyant behaviour.
And she had to make excuses to herself on behalf of Chirac.
She smiled to give him pleasure.
The hard commonsense in her might sneer, but indubitably she was the centre of a romantic episode.
The balloon darkly swinging there!
The men waiting!
The secrecy of the mission!
And Chirac, bare-headed in the wind that was to whisk him away, telling her in fatalistic accents that her image had devastated his life, while envious aspirants watched their colloquy!
Yes, it was romantic.
And she was beautiful!
Her beauty was an active reality that went about the world playing tricks in spite of herself.
The thoughts that passed through her mind were the large, splendid thoughts of romance.
And it was Chirac who had aroused them!
A real drama existed, then, triumphing over the accidental absurdities and pettinesses of the situation.
Her final words to Chirac were tender and encouraging.
He hurried back to the balloon, resuming his cap.
He was received with the respect due to one who comes fresh from conquest.
He was sacred.
Sophia rejoined Carlier, who had withdrawn, and began to talk to him with a self-conscious garrulity.
She spoke without reason and scarcely noticed what she was saying.
Already Chirac was snatched out of her life, as other beings, so many of them, had been snatched.
She thought of their first meetings, and of the sympathy which had always united them.
He had lost his simplicity, now, in the self-created crisis of his fate, and had sunk in her esteem.
And she was determined to like him all the more because he had sunk in her esteem.
She wondered whether he really had undertaken this adventure from sentimental disappointment.
She wondered whether, if she had not forgotten to wind her watch one night, they would still have been living quietly under the same roof in the Rue Breda.