than the one wholly appropriate word. No one’s ever been a more scrupulous writer than Flaubert."
Ray knew his own eyes were sparkling. He was enjoying himself, something he hadn’t expected to do until he was safely back in the library stacks at Northern Cal.
"But," she said, "what has scrupulosity—" She giggled delightfully. "Is that a word? What has it to do with literature? A great book is defined by its power to move, not by how carefully the author peers through his Roget in search of
le mot juste.
Of course
Madame Bovary
is a great novel, but it’s because Flaubert had something great to tell us, not because he worried every line to get the words exactly right."
Ray grinned happily. "No, I disagree…."
THEY talked long past the dinner hour, remaining after the others had left and not getting up until the grumbling Madame Lupis began pointedly sweeping up almost under their feet. Ray had one more surprise in store for himself, and that was when he asked Claire if she’d like to walk to Ploujean with him the following morning for a cup of coffee in one of the cafés. If, of course, the weather was fine.
"Tomorrow? But tomorrow is Cousin Guillaume’s funeral. It wouldn’t be—"
"The next day then?" The boldly inspired Raymond Alphonse Schaefer was not to be so easily put aside.
Claire lowered her eyes. "You’ll still be here?"
"Of course," Ray said, deciding then and there.
Claire hesitated, then accepted his invitation with graceful thanks.
Later that evening, when she came to the salon with her set-faced, close-mouthed parents for ten o’clock coffee, she had added a small gold choker to her plain wool outfit of navy blue and appeared to have put a touch of color on her lips and cheeks. There was even, it seemed to Ray, the hint of a delicate, delicious floral scent when she passed him. She provided little competition to Leona’s chic plumage, but the change was noticeable. Ray spoke to her only in passing—earning a suspicious and belligerent look from Claude—but he had no doubt that she had made the effort for him, and the thought made him giddy with pleasure.
He had no illusions about his own attractiveness. He knew very well that he was one of those gray, quiet men who fail to impress themselves on the consciousness of others. People never remembered whether or not he’d been at a particular meeting or cocktail party, and students who had been at one of his seminars in the morning walked by him in the afternoon without recognizing him.
If you asked the people who knew him whether he smoked a pipe (he didn’t) or wore a bowtie (he did), nine out of ten would have no idea. Most would have said he wore glasses, although in fact he only looked as if he ought to. A few years before, in a wild fit of self-assertion, he’d grown a beard, which came in a startling, curly red. But except for a single acerbic remark from the dean of humanities when it was at the scruffy stage, no one commented. And when he shaved it off two years later, no one noticed at all.
So when an intelligent, attractive woman made herself prettier for his sake, well, that was something to think about.
When he got up to go to his room she was reading Balzac. He stopped at her chair.
"I’ll see you Friday morning," he said gallantly, not caring who heard him say it.
He went humming to bed, taking the stone steps two at a time. He had not bothered to apologize to Jules.
GUILLAUME du Rocher’s funeral went smoothly, conducted with fitting sobriety and according to meticulous instructions left by the deceased. Afterwards, family and servants gathered in the library upstairs, where Monsieur Bonfante, Guillaume’s attorney of more than forty years, was to read the will.
Ray had been in the handsomely wainscoted library on earlier visits to the manoir, but he never felt free to explore it, sensing in Guillaume a jealous and forbidding possessiveness. Now, while people settled themselves on