Mr. Bridge_ A Novel - Evan S. Connell [106]
Finally she emerged from the Louvre and he knew at once that it had been everything she hoped. He asked what she wanted to do next and she wondered if they might walk around awhile in St. Germain, which they had not visited because of Morgan Hager’s extraordinary disappearance. He doubted if there was much in St. Germain except some more Bohemian artists, and they had encountered plenty of those the previous night; however if that was where she wished to go that was where they would go.
He flagged another taxi. They rode across the Seine, got out of the taxi and walked around, and finally they settled in a café to rest and discuss what they had seen.
Presently a little girl about nine or ten years old stopped at the table and held out her hand. She was dressed in a rag and did not have any shoes. Her face was streaked with dirt. She had been crying. She stood beside the table, her eyes fastened on Mr. Bridge, and she murmured, “Monsieur, j’ai faim.”
He reached into his pocket for a coin. Then he paused without knowing why, and he exclaimed harshly: “Go away! Go away, child! Get away from this table.”
The little girl coughed. In her soft, pleading voice she repeated, “J’ai faim.”
He waved at her. “Off! Off! Allez-vous!” he cried, brushing at her. “You may as well leave right now, because I will not give you one red cent. Not one cent will you get from me, do you understand?”
“J’ai faim. S’il vous plait, monsieur,” she whimpered. She wiped her nose. She coughed again. Her beseeching eyes stuck to him.
Mrs. Bridge said, “Walter! For Heaven’s sake!”
“You let me handle this,” he replied. He shook his finger at the child. “Allez-vous vite! Run away, child. You will get nothing here. Go away!”
“J’ai faim,” whispered the little girl, and clutched her stomach in case he did not quite understand French.
He gestured furiously because she was attempting to humiliate him. “Leave us alone,” he said, aiming his index finger straight between her eyes, “or I will send for the police. The police. Comprenez-vous?”
She pretended that she did not, but he was sure she did. Very sadly she wandered away.
“Oh, Walter,” Mrs. Bridge gasped after the child was gone. “I know how you feel about giving to people in the street, but goodness, there are exceptions! I haven’t been so embarrassed since I don’t know when.”
“That child was attempting to take advantage of the fact that we are tourists,” he said, and he was still angered. “The waiter should not have allowed her to molest us. Nor was she begging, she was demanding. I will not be coerced. I contribute a reasonable percentage of what I earn each year to various charities. In addition, I do occasionally give money to street beggars. However, I refuse to be taken advantage of. That is all there is to it. The subject is closed.”
He knew she was ashamed of him, and it was an unpleasant way to end the afternoon, but he did not see how he could have behaved differently.
Half an hour later