“Americans!” exclaimed Clélie, with sudden interest.
“Americans,” answered the concierge. “It was Madame who came. Mon Dieu! it was wonderful! So rich and so—so”—filling up the blank by a shrug of deep meaning.
“It cannot have been long since they were—peasants,” her voice dropping into a cautious whisper.
“Why not our friends of the Louvre?” said Clélie as we went on up-stairs.
“Why not?” I replied. “It is very possible.”
The next day there arrived at the house numberless trunks of large dimensions, superintended by the small angry woman and a maid. An hour later came a carriage, from whose door emerged the young lady and her father. Both looked pale and fagged; both were led up-stairs in the midst of voluble comments and commands by the mother; and both, entering the apartment, seemed swallowed up by it, as we saw and heard nothing further of them. Clélie was indignant.
“It is plain that the mother overwhelms them,” she said. “A girl of that age should speak and be interested in any novelty. This one would be if she were not wretched. And the poor little husband!”—
“My dear,” I remarked, “you are a feminine Bayard. You engage yourself with such ardor in everybody's wrongs.”
When I returned from my afternoon's work a few days later, I found Clélie again excited. She had been summoned to the first floor by Madame.
“I went into the room,” said Clélie, “and found the mother and daughter together. Mademoiselle, who stood by the fire, had evidently been weeping Madame was in an abrupt and angry mood. She wasted no words. 'I want you to give her lessons,' she said, making an ungraceful gesture in the direction of her daughter. 'What do you charge a lesson?' And on my telling her, she engaged me at once. 'It's a great deal, but I guess I can pay as well as other people,' she remarked.”