Sophia learnt the complete history of the woman’s efforts to pay for the furniture: a farrago of folly and deceptions. Madame Foucault confessed too much. Sophia scorned confession for the sake of confession. She scorned the impulse which forces a weak creature to insist on its weakness, to revel in remorse, and to find an excuse for its conduct in the very fact that there is no excuse. She gathered that Madame Foucault had in fact gone away in the hope that Sophia, trapped, would pay; and that in the end, she had not even had the courage of her own trickery, and had run back, driven by panic into audacity, to fall at Sophia’s feet, lest Sophia might not have yielded and the furniture have been seized. From, beginning to end the conduct of Madame Foucault had been fatuous and despicable and wicked. Sophia coldly condemned Madame Foucault for having allowed herself to be brought into the world with such a weak and maudlin character, and for having allowed herself to grow old and ugly. As a sight the woman was positively disgraceful.
“Save me!” she exclaimed again. “I did what I could for you!”
Sophia hated her. But the logic of the appeal was irresistible.
“But what can I do?” she asked reluctantly.
“Lend me the money. You can. If you don’t, this will be the end for me.”
“And a good thing, too!” thought Sophia’s hard sense.
“How much is it?” Sophia glumly asked.
“It isn’t a thousand francs!” said Madame Foucault with eagerness. “All my beautiful furniture will go for less than a thousand francs! Save me!”
She was nauseating Sophia.
“Please rise,” said Sophia, her hands fidgeting undecidedly.