She had a chubby face like a ripe apple, bright eyes, and moved in a curiously jerky way, as if she were on wires.
After taking off her closefitting jacket she sat down and started studying the bill of fare with a sort of rapt attention.
Then she called Celeste and gave her order, very fast but quite distinctly; one didn’t lose a word.
While waiting for the hors d’oeuvre she opened her bag, took out a slip of paper and a pencil, and added up the bill in advance. Diving into her bag again, she produced a purse and took from it the exact sum, plus a small tip, and placed it on the cloth in front of her.
Just then the waiter brought the hors d’oeuvre, which she proceeded to wolf down voraciously.
While waiting for the next course, she produced another pencil, this time a blue one, from her bag, and the radio magazine for the coming week, and started making ticks against almost all the items of the daily programs.
There were a dozen pages in the magazine, and she continued studying them closely throughout the meal.
When I’d finished mine she was still ticking off items with the same meticulous attention.
Then she rose, put on her jacket again with the same abrupt, robot-like gestures, and walked briskly out of the restaurant.
Having nothing better to do, I followed her for a short distance.
Keeping on the curb of the pavement, she walked straight ahead, never swerving or looking back, and it was extraordinary how fast she covered the ground, considering her smallness.
In fact, the pace was too much for me, and I soon lost sight of her and turned back homeward.
For a moment the “little robot” (as I thought of her) had much impressed me, but I soon forgot about her.
As I was turning in at my door I ran into old Salamano.
I asked him into my room, and he informed me that his dog was definitely lost. He’d been to the pound to inquire, but it wasn’t there, and the staff told him it had probably been run over.
When he asked them whether it was any use inquiring about it at the police station, they said the police had more important things to attend to than keeping records of stray dogs run over in the streets.
I suggested he should get another dog, but, reasonably enough, he pointed out that he’d become used to this one, and it wouldn’t be the same thing.
I was seated on my bed, with my legs up, and Salamano on a chair beside the table, facing me, his hands spread on his knees. He had kept on his battered felt hat and was mumbling away behind his draggled yellowish mustache.
I found him rather boring, but I had nothing to do and didn’t feel sleepy. So, to keep the conversation going, I asked some questions about his dog—how long he had had it and so forth.
He told me he had got it soon after his wife’s death.
He’d married rather late in life.
When a young man, he wanted to go on the stage; during his military service he’d often played in the regimental theatricals and acted rather well, so everybody said.
However, finally, he had taken a job in the railway, and he didn’t regret it, as now he had a small pension.
He and his wife had never hit it off very well, but they’d got used to each other, and when she died he felt lonely.
One of his mates on the railway whose bitch had just had pups had offered him one, and he had taken it, as a companion.
He’d had to feed it from the bottle at first.
But, as a dog’s life is shorter than a man’s, they’d grown old together, so to speak.
“He was a cantankerous brute,” Salamano said. “Now and then we had some proper set-tos, he and I.
But he was a good mutt all the same.”
I said he looked well bred, and that evidently pleased the old man.
“Ah, but you should have seen him before his illness!” he said. “He had a wonderful coat; in fact, that was his best point, really.
I tried hard to cure him; every mortal night after he got that skin disease I rubbed an ointment in.
But his real trouble was old age, and there’s no curing that.”
Just then I yawned, and the old man said he’d better make a move.
I told him he could stay, and that I was sorry about what had happened to his dog. He thanked me, and mentioned that my mother had been very fond of his dog.
He referred to her as “your poor mother,” and was afraid I must be feeling her death terribly.
When I said nothing he added hastily and with a rather embarrassed air that some of the people in the street said nasty things about me because I’d sent my mother to the Home. But he, of course, knew better; he knew how devoted to my mother I had always been.
I answered—why, I still don’t know—that it surprised me to learn I’d produced such a bad impression. As I couldn’t afford to keep her here, it seemed the obvious thing to do, to send her to a home.
“In any case,” I added, “for years she’d never had a word to say to me, and I could see she was moping, with no one to talk to.”
“Yes,” he said, “and at a home one makes friends, anyhow.”
He got up, saying it was high time for him to be in bed, and added that life was going to be a bit of a problem for him, under the new conditions.
For the first time since I’d known him he held out his hand to me—rather shyly, I thought—and I could feel the scales on his skin.
Just as he was going out of the door, he turned and, smiling a little, said:
“Let’s hope the dogs won’t bark again tonight.
I always think it’s mine I hear. ...”
VI
IT was an effort waking up that Sunday morning; Marie had to jog my shoulders and shout my name.
As we wanted to get into the water early, we didn’t trouble about breakfast.
My head was aching slightly and my first cigarette had a bitter taste.
Marie told me I looked like a mourner at a funeral, and I certainly did feel very limp.