He went to an hotel in the Rue Caumartin, highly recommended to

Forsytes, where practically nobody spoke French. He had formed no plan.

He did not want to startle her; yet must contrive that she had no chance

to evade him by flight. And next morning he set out in bright weather.

Paris had an air of gaiety, a sparkle over its star-shape which almost

annoyed Soames. He stepped gravely, his nose lifted a little sideways

in real curiosity. He desired now to understand things French. Was not

Annette French? There was much to be got out of his visit, if he could

only get it. In this laudable mood and the Place de la Concorde he was

nearly run down three times. He came on the 'Cours la Reine,' where

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Irene's hotel was situated, almost too suddenly, for he had not yet

fixed on his procedure. Crossing over to the river side, he noted the

building, white and cheerful-looking, with green sunblinds, seen through

a screen of plane-tree leaves. And, conscious that it would be far

better to meet her casually in some open place than to risk a call, he

sat down on a bench whence he could watch the entrance. It was not quite

eleven o'clock, and improbable that she had yet gone out. Some pigeons

were strutting and preening their feathers in the pools of sunlight

between the shadows of the plane-trees. A workman in a blue blouse

passed, and threw them crumbs from the paper which contained his dinner.

A 'bonne' coiffed with ribbon shepherded two little girls with pig-tails

and frilled drawers. A cab meandered by, whose cocher wore a blue coat

and a black-glazed hat. To Soames a kind of affectation seemed to

cling about it all, a sort of picturesqueness which was out of date. A

theatrical people, the French! He lit one of his rare cigarettes, with

a sense of injury that Fate should be casting his life into outlandish

waters. He shouldn't wonder if Irene quite enjoyed this foreign life;

she had never been properly English--even to look at! And he began

considering which of those windows could be hers under the green

sunblinds. How could he word what he had come to say so that it might

pierce the defence of her proud obstinacy? He threw the fag-end of his

cigarette at a pigeon, with the thought: 'I can't stay here for ever

twiddling my thumbs. Better give it up and call on her in the late

afternoon.' But he still sat on, heard twelve strike, and then

half-past. 'I'll wait till one,' he thought, 'while I'm about it.' But

just then he started up, and shrinkingly sat down again. A woman

had come out in a cream-coloured frock, and was moving away under a

fawn-coloured parasol. Irene herself! He waited till she was too far

away to recognise him, then set out after her. She was strolling

as though she had no particular objective; moving, if he remembered

rightly, toward the Bois de Boulogne. For half an hour at least he kept

his distance on the far side of the way till she had passed into the

Bois itself. Was she going to meet someone after all? Some confounded

Frenchman--one of those 'Bel Ami' chaps, perhaps, who had nothing to do

but hang about women--for he had read that book with difficulty and a

sort of disgusted fascination. He followed doggedly along a shady alley,

losing sight of her now and then when the path curved. And it came back

to him how, long ago, one night in Hyde Park he had slid and sneaked

from tree to tree, from seat to seat, hunting blindly, ridiculously, in

burning jealousy for her and young Bosinney. The path bent sharply, and,

hurrying, he came on her sitting in front of a small fountain--a little

green-bronze Niobe veiled in hair to her slender hips, gazing at the

pool she had wept: He came on her so suddenly that he was past before

he could turn and take off his hat. She did not start up. She had always

had great self-command--it was one of the things he most admired in her,

one of his greatest grievances against her, because he had never

been able to tell what she was thinking. Had she realised that he

was following? Her self-possession made him angry; and, disdaining to

explain his presence, he pointed to the mournful little Niobe, and said:




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