IV
It should be obvious enough then that they hailed their approachingseparation with relief. Bohun had been promised by one of thesecretaries at the Embassy that rooms would be found for him. Jerryintended to "hang out" at one of the hotels. The "Astoria" was, hebelieved, the right place.
"I shall go to the 'France' for to-night," Bohun declared, having lived,it would seem, in Petrograd all his days. "Look me up, old man, won'tyou?"
Jerry smiled his slow smile. "I will," he said. "So long."
"You're very miserable and lonely," the Creature said; "you didn'texpect this."
No, Henry had not expected this, and he also had not expected that theIsvostchick would demand eight roubles for his fare to the "France."Henry knew that this was the barest extortion, and he had sworn tohimself long ago that he would allow nobody to "do" him. He looked atthe rain and submitted. "After all, it's war time," he whispered to theCreature.
He huddled himself into the cab, his baggage piled all about him, andtried by pulling at the hood to protect himself from the elements. Hehas told me that he felt that the rain was laughing at him; the cab wasso slow that he seemed to be sitting in the middle of pools and meltingsnow; he was dirty, tired, hungry, and really not far from tears. PoorHenry was very, very young....
The "France" is a good hotel, and its host is one of the kindest ofmortals, but it is in many ways Russian rather than Continental in itsatmosphere. That ought to have pleased and excited so sympathetic a soulas Henry. I am afraid that this moment of his arrival was the firstrealisation in his life of that stern truth that that which seemsromantic in retrospect is only too often unpleasantly realistic in itsactual experience.
He stepped into the dark hall, damp like a well, with a whirringsnarling clock on the wall and a heavy glass door pulled by a ropeswinging and shifting, the walls and door and rack with the lettersshifting too. In this rocking world there seemed to be no stable thing.He was dirty and tired and humiliated. He explained to his host, whosmiled but seemed to be thinking of other things, that he wanted a bathand a room and a meal. He was promised these things, but there was noconviction abroad that the "France" had gone up in the world since HenryBohun had crossed its threshold. An old man with a grey beard and thefixed and glittering eye of the "Ancient Mariner" told him to followhim. How well I know those strange, cold, winding passages of the"France," creeping in and out across boards that shiver and shake, withwalls pressing in upon you so thin and rocky that the wind whistles andscreams and the paper makes ghostly shadows and signs as though unseenfingers moved it. There is that smell, too, which a Russian hotel alone,of all the hostelries in the world, can produce, a smell of damp andcabbage soup, of sunflower seeds and cigarette-ends, of drainage andpatchouli, of, in some odd way, the sea and fish and wet pavements. Itis a smell that will, until I die, be presented to me by those darkhalf-hidden passages, warrens of intricate fumbling ways with boardssuddenly rising like little mountains in the path; behind the wainscotone hears the scuttling of innumerable rats.
The Ancient Mariner showed Henry to his room and left him. Henry wasdepressed at what he saw. His room was a slip cut out of other rooms,and its one window was faced by a high black wall down whose surfacegleaming water trickled. The bare boards showed large and gaping cracks;there was a washstand, a bed, a chest of drawers, and a faded paddedarm-chair with a hole in it. In the corner near the window was an Ikonof tinsel and wood; a little round marble-topped table offered a dustycarafe of water. A heavy red-plush bell-rope tapped the wall.
"_Pajaluista!_" said the Mariner.
Although Henry had learnt Russian, so unexpected was the pronunciationof this familiar word that it was as though the old man had said "OpenSesame!"....