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"She has an engaging expression. Her face shows good breeding and intelligence. Do you know who she is? . . ."
"Wicek!" called Cabinska to the boy who was playing about the garden, "go and ask that lady, standing near the box, to come here."
Wicek ran over to Janina circled about her, glanced into her eyes and said: "The old woman over there wishes to see you."
"What old woman? . . . Who? . . ." she asked, unable to understand him.
"Cabinska, Mrs. Pepa, the directress, of course! . . ."
Janina approached slowly, while the counselor observed her intently.
"Please have a seat, mademoiselle. This is our dear counselor, the patron of our theater," spoke Cabinska, introducing him.
"I beg your pardon!" cried the counselor, grasping her hand and turning the palm to the light.
"Don't be afraid, Miss Orlowska! . . . The counselor has an innocent mania of fortune telling," cried Cabinska merrily, peering over the shoulder of the counselor into the palm he was examining.
"Ho! ho! a strange one, a strange one!" whispered the old man.
He took from his pocket a small magnifying-gla.s.s and through it examined minutely the lines of the palm, the fingernails, the finger joints, and the entire hand.
"Ladies and gentlemen! We tell fortunes here from the hands, the feet, and something else besides! . . . Here we predict the future, and dispense talent, virtue, and money in the future. Admission only five copecks, only five copecks! . . . for the poorer people only ten groszy! Please step in, ladies and gentlemen, please step in!"
cried Wawrzecki, excellently imitating the voice of the show criers on Ujazdowski Square.
The actors and actresses surrounded the trio on all sides.
"Tell us something, Mr. Counselor!"
"Will she marry soon?"
"When will she eclipse Modrzejewska?"
"Will she get a rich hubby?"
"How many suitors has she had in the past?"
The counselor did not answer, but quietly continued to examine both of Janina's palms.
She heard those derisive remarks, but was unable to move, for that strange man actually held her pinned to her seat. She felt herself burning with anger, yet could not move her hands which he held.
Finally, the counselor released her and said to those surrounding them: "For once you might refrain from your clownishness, for sometimes it is not so foolish as it is inhuman. I beg your pardon, mademoiselle, for having exposed you to their rudeness, . . . I greatly beg your pardon, but I simply could not resist examining your hands; that is my weakness. . . ."
He kissed her hand ostentatiously and turned to the surprised Cabinska: "Come, let us go, Mrs. Directress!"
Janina was consumed with such curiosity, that, in spite of all those spectators, she asked quietly: "Will you not tell me anything Mr.
Counselor?"
The counselor gazed about him, and then bent toward Janina and whispered very quietly: "Now, I cannot . . . In two weeks, when I return, I will tell you all."
"Oh come, Counselor!" cried Cabinska, "Oh, I almost forgot! . . .
Will it be possible for you to come to see me after the rehearsal Miss Orlowska?" she asked, turning to Janina.
"Certainly, I'll come," answered Janina, resuming her seat.
"Where shall we go, Madame Directress?" asked the counselor. He seemed less jovial, and wrapt in thought.
"I suppose we might go to my pastry shop."
Cabinska did not question him, and only after they had seated themselves at the pastry shop, where she regularly spent a few hours each day, drinking chocolate, smoking cigarettes, and gazing at the street crowds, did she venture to ask him with a pretended indifference: "What did you notice in that hussy's hands, Mr.
Counselor?"
The counselor s.h.i.+fted impatiently, put his binoculars upon his nose, and called to the waiter, "Black coffee and very light chocolate!"
Then he turned to Cabinska. "You see, that is a secret . . . to be sure, one that means little, but nevertheless, not my own to disclose."
Cabinska insisted, for merely to say: "a secret," throws all women out of balance; but he told her nothing, only remarking abruptly, "I am leaving town, Mrs. Directress."
"Where are you going?" she inquired, greatly surprised.
"I must . . ." he said, "I will return in two weeks. Before I go, I would like to settle our . . ."
Cabinska frowned and waited to hear what he would say further.
"For you see, it might happen that I would return only in the fall when you will no longer be in Warsaw."
"I surmised long ago that you were an old usurer," Cabinska was thinking, tinkling her gla.s.s with a spoon.
"Some fruit cakes!" he called to the waiter and then, turning to her again, continued . . . "And that is why I wish to return to you, dear lady, your bracelet."
"But we have not yet the money. Our success is continually being interrupted . . . we have so many old payments to meet . . ."
"Oh, don't bother about the money. Imagine that I am giving you this for your name day as a small token of friends.h.i.+p . . . will you?" he asked, slipping the bracelet upon her plump wrist.
"Oh, Counselor, Counselor! if I did not love my John so much, I would . . ." she cried, overjoyed at regaining her bracelet without any obligations. She squeezed his hands so heartily and beamed upon him with her joyous gaze so closely, that he felt her breath upon his cheeks.
He gently pushed her aside, biting his lips.
"Ah, Counselor, you are an ideal man!"
"Oh, let us drop that! . . . You can invite me to be a G.o.dfather to your next child."
"Oh, you're a rogue, Mr. Counselor! . . . What's that? . . . you already want to depart?"
"My train leaves in two hours. Goodbye!"
He paid the bill at the buffet and hurried away, sending her a smile through the window.
Cabinska still sat there, gazing out upon the street.