Mr. Mark sat down, his legs were short and his knees pointed beneath the mound of his belly. They chatted ... all three ... she too.
“Well, dear,” his breath was short and thick, “expecting the crowd?”
“O no. Just Tessie and Susan, and Abe Mangel and Jim of course. My friend wants to meet my friends.”
Fanny began to see him under the cloud of himself: ... the grey sharp face, larded in fat, the shiny eyes set deep, the lips rounded and red and soft-thrust forward from a chin too long and grey-blue with its undertone of beard. His nose twitched, conspicuous, large-pored, under a brow that was smooth and white like a card.
“It’s good of you, Madame. We’re not such a bad lot.”
“O ... I could know that,” Fanny laughed, “from just knowing Clara.”
“That good we’re not ... not as good as Clara. But we do our best.”
Clara laughed. He sighed, and his little eyes, hard like the shoe-button eyes of a rag doll, rolled up.
In this opening of mood, Fanny looked at the room ... hard gas-jets, brash lambrequins, plush.... Room she had lived in ... the floor was blood-red beneath a shrill blue carpet. Details ... details. It meant nothing. It formed no word.
The door opened again, again. Susan Sennister stood there bleak and tense like a caustic refrain to the long heavy man at her side: he was spiritually galvanized, he moved for all his power as if he were lined with metal ... Lieutenant Statt. Tessie ensconced in a big chair with her feet trilling, mocked him. A man, soft, short, slow, with unctious hands and voice, watched her effrontery with eyes afraid in his heavy mournful face.—That is Abe Mangel.