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"Please make yourself at home. . . . I'll be with you in a minute."
Niedzielska played hostess quite grandly, once they were arrived at her home.
Janina, left alone, observed with curiosity the old-fas.h.i.+oned mahogany table covered with an embroidered net doily which stood before a huge lounge upholstered with black horsehair; the chairs, upholstered with the same material, had lyre-shaped backs. A yellow polished dresser was filled with grotesque porcelain, greenish pitchers, colored bric-a-brac, winegla.s.ses with monograms, and flower-painted teacups standing on high legs. A clock under a bell gla.s.s, old, faded steel engravings of the Empire period, a lamp with a green shade on a separate table, a few pots with miserable flowers on the window sill and two cages with canaries const.i.tuted the entire furnis.h.i.+ngs.
"Let us have a drink of coffee . . ." said Niedzielska, reentering.
She took from the dresser two showy cups and placed them on the table. Then she went to the kitchen and brought in the coffee, already poured into two chipped bowls, and a plate with a few stale cakes.
"O goodness, I forgot that I had already set the cups on the table . . . well, it doesn't matter. We can drink the coffee just as well out of these, can't we? . . ." she said, at once adding, "dear me, I forgot the sugar! Do you like your coffee sweet, mademoiselle?"
The old woman left the room and through the door Janina could hear her taking sugar out of a gla.s.s bowl. She brought in on a little saucer two lumps.
"Please have some in your coffee. . . . You see at my age I can't have anything sweet," she said, drinking audibly.
Finally, after perhaps half an hour, in which her hostess chattered interminably and Janina listened with increasing weariness, the girl got up to go, and at the very door she met Wladek.
"Visiting my mother!" he exclaimed.
"Certainly. There's nothing wrong in that," she answered, smiling at his confusion.
"Heavens! No doubt she's been telling you what a scoundrel I am. I beg your pardon for having had to listen."
"Oh, it didn't offend me in the least."
"It only made you laugh, I know. The whole theater is laughing at my expense, for all the ladies have already been here."
"Your mother loves you," Janina spoke seriously.
"That love is beginning to choke me like a bone in my throat!" he answered sourly and wanted to add something else, but Janina bowed silently and pa.s.sed on.
Wladek did not have the courage to follow her and went upstairs.
"What is happening in my own home?" she thought as she walked toward the theater. "What is my father doing? . . ."
And she suddenly felt within herself a glimmer of sympathy for that tyrant. She saw now how lonely he must be among strangers who ridiculed his eccentricities.
During the whole performance, the vision of her father constantly recurred in her memory. She asked herself what it was that had made him so cruel, and why he hated her?
Kotlicki brought her a bouquet of roses. She received it coolly, without even glancing at him.
"I see that you are out of sorts to-day," he said, taking her hand.
She pulled it away.
Majkowska, who was just then pa.s.sing, whispered, pointing to Rosinska: "What a scarecrow! What conventional acting! She is incapable of producing even a single accent of true feeling!"
Behind Janina some gentleman in a high hat was pressing the hands of one of the chorus girls.
"Things are turning out fine, for to-morrow, there will be no rehearsal and we can go to Bielany in the afternoon. Wait for us at your home, we will drop in and take you along with us," whispered Mimi.
"I also am going on that outing," said Kotlicki, "you are going too, aren't you?"
"Probably . . . but if I couldn't go it would be just as great a success."
"In that case I wouldn't go either."
He bent so closely over Janina that she felt his breath upon her face.
"I don't understand you," she said, moving away from him.
"I am going along only for your sake," he whispered in a still quieter tone.
"For my sake? . . ." she queried, glancing at him sharply, and stirred by a sudden aversion.
"Yes . . . surely you must have guessed by now that I love you,"
said Kotlicki, drawing together his lips which were trembling and looking at her pleadingly.
"There they say the same, only they play a little better!" she remarked scornfully, pointing to the stage.
Kotlicki drew himself erect, a sullen shadow pa.s.sed over his equine face, his eyes gleaming threateningly.
"I will convince you! . . ."
"Very well, but to-morrow at Bielany, not now," Janina coolly extended her hand in farewell and left for the dressing-room.
Kotlicki gazed after her covetously, biting his lips.
"A comedienne!" he finally whispered, leaving the theater.
CHAPTER VII
Janina awoke at about half-past ten in the morning.
Sowinska had just brought in her breakfast.
"Was anyone here to see me? . . ." she asked.
Sowinska nodded her head and handed Janina a letter.
"About an hour ago a ruddy fellow delivered it and asked me to give it to you."
Janina nervously tore open the envelope and immediately recognized the handwriting of Grzesikiewicz:
"My Dear Miss Orlowska,
I have purposely come to Warsaw to see you on a very important matter. If you will kindly deign to be home at eleven o'clock I shall be there at that hour. Please pardon my boldness. Allow me to kiss your hands and remain