Virginie stopped to sip at her coffee.
Gervaise, realizing that she was expected to say something, asked, with a pretence of indifference:
“Are they still living at La Glaciere?”
“No!” the other replied.
“Didn’t I tell you?
They separated last week.
One morning, Adele moved out and Lantier didn’t chase after her.”
“So they’re separated!” Gervaise exclaimed.
“Who are you talking about?” Clemence asked, interrupting her conversation with mother Coupeau and Madame Putois.
“Nobody you know,” said Virginie.
She was looking at Gervaise carefully and could see that she was upset. She moved still closer, maliciously finding pleasure in bringing up these old stories.
Of a sudden she asked Gervaise what she would do if Lantier came round here.
Men were really such strange creatures, he might decide to return to his first love.
This caused Gervaise to sit up very straight and dignified. She was a married woman; she would send Lantier off immediately.
There was no possibility of anything further between them, not even a handshake.
She would not even want to look that man in the face.
“I know that Etienne is his son, and that’s a relationship that remains,” she said.
“If Lantier wants to see his son, I’ll send the boy to him because you can’t stop a father from seeing his child. But as for myself, I don’t want him to touch me even with the tip of his finger.
That is all finished.”
Desiring to break off this conversation, she seemed to awake with a start and called out to the women:
“You ladies!
Do you think all these clothes are going to iron themselves?
Get to work!”
The workwomen, slow from the heat and general laziness, didn’t hurry themselves, but went right on talking, gossiping about other people they had known.
Gervaise shook herself and got to her feet.
Couldn’t earn money by sitting all day.
She was the first to return to the ironing, but found that her curtains had been spotted by the coffee and she had to rub out the stains with a damp cloth.
The other women were now stretching and getting ready to begin ironing.
Clemence had a terrible attack of coughing as soon as she moved.
Finally she was able to return to the shirt she had been doing.
Madame Putois began to work on the petticoat again.
“Well, good-bye,” said Virginie.
“I only came out for a quarter-pound of Swiss cheese.
Poisson must think I’ve frozen to death on the way.”
She had only just stepped outside when she turned back to say that Augustine was at the end of the street, sliding on the ice with some urchins.
The squint-eyed imp rushed in all red-faced and out of breath with snow all in her hair.
She didn’t mind the scolding she received, merely saying that she hadn’t been able to walk fast because of the ice and then some brats threw snow at her.
The afternoons were all the same these winter days.
The laundry was the refuge for anyone in the neighborhood who was cold.
There was an endless procession of gossiping women.
Gervaise took pride in the comforting warmth of her shop and welcomed those who came in, “holding a salon,” as the Lorilleuxs and the Boches remarked meanly.
Gervaise was always thoughtful and generous. Sometimes she even invited poor people in if she saw them shivering outside.
A friendship sprang up with an elderly house-painter who was seventy. He lived in an attic room and was slowly dying of cold and hunger.
His three sons had been killed in the war. He survived the best he could, but it had been two years since he had been able to hold a paint-brush in his hand.
Whenever Gervaise saw Pere Bru walking outside, she would call him in and arrange a place for him close to the stove. Often she gave him some bread and cheese.
Pere Bru’s face was as wrinkled as a withered apple. He would sit there, with his stooping shoulders and his white beard, without saying a word, just listening to the coke sputtering in the stove.
Maybe he was thinking of his fifty years of hard work on high ladders, his fifty years spent painting doors and whitewashing ceilings in every corner of Paris.
“Well, Pere Bru,” Gervaise would say, “what are you thinking of now?”
“Nothing much. All sorts of things,” he would answer quietly.
The workwomen tried to joke with him to cheer him up, saying he was worrying over his love affairs, but he scarcely listened to them before he fell back into his habitual attitude of meditative melancholy.