<h3><SPAN name="XIII" id="XIII"></SPAN>XIII</h3>
<p class="nind"><span class="letter">I</span> had felt I could risk such directness only by making it
extravagant—by suggesting it as barely imaginable that she could so
have played our game; and during the instant for which I had now pulled
her up I could judge I had been right. It was an instant that settled
everything, for I saw her, with intensity, with gallantry too, surprised
but not really embarrassed, recognise that of course she must simply
lie. I had been justified by making it so possible for her to lie. "It
would have been a short cut," I said, "and even more strikingly
perhaps—to do it justice—a bold deed. But it would have been, in
strictness, a departure—wouldn't it?—from our so distinguished little
compact. Yet while I look at you," I went on, "I wonder. Bold deeds are,
after all, quite in your line; and I'm not sure I don't rather want not
to have missed so much possible comedy. 'I have it for you from Mr. Long
himself that, every appearance to the contrary notwithstanding, his
stupidity is unimpaired'—isn't that, for the beauty of it, after all,
what you've veraciously to give me?" We stood face to face a moment, and
I laughed out. "The beauty of it would be great!"<SPAN name="page_265" id="page_265"></SPAN></p>
<p>I had given her time; I had seen her safely to shore. It was quite what
I had meant to do, but she now took still better advantage than I had
expected of her opportunity. She not only scrambled up the bank, she
recovered breath and turned round. "Do you imagine he would have told
me?"</p>
<p>It was magnificent, but I felt she was still to better it should I give
her a new chance. "Who the lady really is? Well, hardly; and that's why,
as you so acutely see, the question of your having risked such a step
has occurred to me only as a jest. Fancy indeed"—I piled it up—"your
saying to him: 'We're all noticing that you're so much less of an idiot
than you used to be, and we've different views of the miracle'!"</p>
<p>I had been going on, but I was checked without a word from her. Her look
alone did it, for, though it was a look that partly spoiled her lie,
it—by that very fact—sufficed to my confidence. "I've not spoken to a
creature."</p>
<p>It was beautifully said, but I felt again the abysses that the mere
saying of it covered, and the sense of these wonderful things was not a
little, no doubt, in my immediate cheer. "Ah, then, we're all right!" I
could have rubbed my hands over it. "I mean, however," I quickly added,
"only as far as that. I don't at all feel comfortable about your new
theory itself, which puts me so wretchedly in the wrong."<SPAN name="page_266" id="page_266"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Rather!" said Mrs. Briss almost gaily. "Wretchedly indeed in the
wrong!"</p>
<p>"Yet only—equally of course," I returned after a brief brooding, "if I
come within a conceivability of accepting it. Are you conscious that, in
default of Long's own word—equivocal as that word would be—you press
it upon me without the least other guarantee?"</p>
<p>"And pray," she asked, "what guarantee had <i>you</i>?"</p>
<p>"For the theory with which we started? Why, our recognised fact. The
change in the man. You may say," I pursued, "that I was the first to
speak for him; but being the first didn't, in your view, constitute a
weakness when it came to your speaking yourself for Mrs. Server. By
which I mean," I added, "speaking against her."</p>
<p>She remembered, but not for my benefit. "Well, you then asked me <i>my</i>
warrant. And as regards Mr. Long and your speaking against <i>him</i>——"</p>
<p>"Do you describe what I say as 'against' him?" I immediately broke in.</p>
<p>It took her but an instant. "Surely—to have made him out horrid."</p>
<p>I could only want to fix it. "'Horrid'——?"</p>
<p>"Why, having such secrets." She was roundly ready now. "Sacrificing poor
May."</p>
<p>"But <i>you</i>, dear lady, sacrificed poor May! It didn't strike you as
horrid <i>then</i>."<SPAN name="page_267" id="page_267"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Well, that was only," she maintained, "because you talked me over."</p>
<p>I let her see the full process of my taking—or not taking—this in.
"And who is it then that—if, as you say, you've spoken to no one—has,
as I may call it, talked you under?"</p>
<p>She completed, on the spot, her statement of a moment before. "Not a
creature has spoken to me."</p>
<p>I felt somehow the wish to make her say it in as many ways as
possible—I seemed so to enjoy her saying it. This helped me to make my
tone approve and encourage. "You've communicated so little with anyone!"
I didn't even make it a question.</p>
<p>It was scarce yet, however, quite good enough. "So little? I've not
communicated the least mite."</p>
<p>"Precisely. But don't think me impertinent for having for a moment
wondered. What I should say to you if you had, you know, would be that
you just accused me."</p>
<p>"Accused you?"</p>
<p>"Of talking too much."</p>
<p>It came back to her dim. "Are we accusing each other?"</p>
<p>Her tone seemed suddenly to put us nearer together than we had ever been
at all. "Dear no," I laughed—"not each other; only with each other's
help, a few of our good friends."<SPAN name="page_268" id="page_268"></SPAN></p>
<p>"A few?" She handsomely demurred. "But one or two at the best."</p>
<p>"Or at the worst!"—I continued to laugh. "And not even those, it after
all appears, very much!"</p>
<p>She didn't like my laughter, but she was now grandly indulgent. "Well, I
accuse no one."</p>
<p>I was silent a little; then I concurred. "It's doubtless your best line;
and I really quite feel, at all events, that when you mentioned a while
since that I talk too much you only meant too much to <i>you</i>."</p>
<p>"Yes—I wasn't imputing to you the same direct appeal. I didn't
suppose," she explained, "that—to match your own supposition of
<i>me</i>—you had resorted to May herself."</p>
<p>"You didn't suppose I had asked her?" The point was positively that she
didn't; yet it made us look at each other almost as hard as if she did.
"No, of course you couldn't have supposed anything so cruel—all the
more that, as you knew, I had not admitted the possibility."</p>
<p>She accepted my assent; but, oddly enough, with a sudden qualification
that showed her as still sharply disposed to make use of any loose scrap
of her embarrassed acuteness. "Of course, at the same time, you yourself
saw that your not admitting the possibility would have taken the edge
from your cruelty. It's not the innocent," she suggestively remarked,
"that we fear to frighten."<SPAN name="page_269" id="page_269"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Oh," I returned, "I fear, mostly, I think, to frighten <i>any</i> one. I'm
not particularly brave. I haven't, at all events, in spite of my
certitude, interrogated Mrs. Server, and I give you my word of honour
that I've not had any denial from her to prop up my doubt. It still
stands on its own feet, and it was its own battle that, when I came here
at your summons, it was prepared to fight. Let me accordingly remind
you," I pursued, "in connection with that, of the one sense in which you
were, as you a moment ago said, talked over by me. I persuaded you
apparently that Long's metamorphosis was not the work of Lady John. I
persuaded you of nothing else."</p>
<p>She looked down a little, as if again at a trap. "You persuaded me that
it was the work of somebody." Then she held up her head. "It came to the
same thing."</p>
<p>If I had credit then for my trap it at least might serve. "The same
thing as what?"</p>
<p>"Why, as claiming that it <i>was</i> she."</p>
<p>"Poor May—'claiming'? When I insisted it wasn't!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Brissenden flushed. "You didn't insist it wasn't anybody!"</p>
<p>"Why should I when I didn't believe so? I've left you in no doubt," I
indulgently smiled, "of my beliefs. It was somebody—and it still is."</p>
<p>She looked about at the top of the room. "The mistake's now yours."<SPAN name="page_270" id="page_270"></SPAN></p>
<p>I watched her an instant. "Can you tell me then what one does to recover
from such mistakes?"</p>
<p>"One thinks a little."</p>
<p>"Ah, the more I've thought the deeper I've sunk! And that seemed to me
the case with you this morning," I added, "the more <i>you</i> thought."</p>
<p>"Well, then," she frankly declared, "I must have stopped thinking!"</p>
<p>It was a phenomenon, I sufficiently showed, that thought only could
meet. "Could you tell me then at what point?"</p>
<p>She had to think even to do that. "At what point?"</p>
<p>"What in particular determined, I mean, your arrest? You surely
didn't—launched as you were—stop short all of yourself."</p>
<p>She fronted me, after all, still so bravely that I believed her for an
instant not to be, on this article, without an answer she could produce.
The unexpected therefore broke for me when she fairly produced none. "I
confess I don't make out," she simply said, "while you seem so little
pleased that I agree with you."</p>
<p>I threw back, in despair, both head and hands. "But, you poor, dear
thing, you don't in the <i>least</i> agree with me! You flatly contradict me.
You deny my miracle."</p>
<p>"I don't believe in miracles," she panted.</p>
<p>"So I exactly, at this late hour, learn. But I<SPAN name="page_271" id="page_271"></SPAN> don't insist on the
name. Nothing <i>is</i>, I admit, a miracle from the moment one's on the
track of the cause, which was the scent we were following. Call the
thing simply my fact."</p>
<p>She gave her high head a toss. "If it's yours it's nobody else's!"</p>
<p>"Ah, there's just the question—if we could know all! But my point is
precisely, for the present, that you do deny it."</p>
<p>"Of course I deny it," said Mrs. Briss.</p>
<p>I took a moment, but my silence held her. "Your 'of course' would be
what I would again contest, what I would denounce and brand as the word
too much—the word that spoils, were it not that it seems best, that it
in any case seems necessary, to let all question of your consistency
go."</p>
<p>On that I had paused, and, as I felt myself still holding her, I was not
surprised when my pause had an effect. "You do let it go?"</p>
<p>She had tried, I could see, to put the inquiry as all ironic. But it was
not all ironic; it was, in fact, little enough so to suggest for me some
intensification—not quite, I trust, wanton—of her suspense. I should
be at a loss to say indeed how much it suggested or half of what it
told. These things again almost violently moved me, and if I, after an
instant, in my silence, turned away, it was not only to keep her
waiting, but to make my elation more private. I turned away to that tune
that I literally, for a few<SPAN name="page_272" id="page_272"></SPAN> minutes, quitted her, availing myself thus,
superficially, of the air of weighing a consequence. I wandered off
twenty steps and, while I passed my hand over my troubled head, looked
vaguely at objects on tables and sniffed absently at flowers in bowls. I
don't know how long I so lost myself, nor quite why—as I must for some
time have kept it up—my companion didn't now really embrace her
possible alternative of rupture and retreat. Or rather, as to her action
in this last matter, I am, and was on the spot, clear: I knew at that
moment how much <i>she</i> knew she must not leave me without having got from
me. It came back in waves, in wider glimpses, and produced in so doing
the excitement I had to control. It could <i>not</i> but be exciting to talk,
as we talked, on the basis of those suppressed processes and unavowed
references which made the meaning of our meeting so different from its
form. We knew ourselves—what moved me, that is, was that she knew
me—to mean, at every point, immensely more than I said or than she
answered; just as she saw me, at the same points, measure the space by
which her answers fell short. This made my conversation with her a
totally other and a far more interesting thing than any colloquy I had
ever enjoyed; it had even a sharpness that had not belonged, a few hours
before, to my extraordinary interview with Mrs. Server. She couldn't
afford to quarrel with me for catechising her; she couldn't afford not
to have<SPAN name="page_273" id="page_273"></SPAN> kept, in her way, faith with me; she couldn't afford, after
inconceivable passages with Long, not to treat me as an observer to be
squared. She had come down to square me; she was hanging on to square
me; she was suffering and stammering and lying; she was both carrying it
grandly off and letting it desperately go: all, all to square me. And I
caught moreover perfectly her vision of her way, and I followed her way
even while I judged it, feeling that the only personal privilege I
could, after all, save from the whole business was that of
understanding. I couldn't save Mrs. Server, and I couldn't save poor
Briss; I <i>could</i>, however, guard, to the last grain of gold, my precious
sense of their loss, their disintegration and their doom; and it was for
this I was now bargaining.</p>
<p>It was of giving herself away just enough not to spoil for me my bargain
over my treasure that Mrs. Briss's bribe would consist. She would let me
see as far as I would if she could feel sure I would <i>do</i> nothing; and
it was exactly in this question of how much I might have scared my
couple into the sense I <i>could</i> "do" that the savour of my suspense most
dwelt. I could have made them uneasy, of course, only by making them
fear my intervention; and yet the idea of their being uneasy was less
wonderful than the idea of my having, with all my precautions,
communicated to them a consciousness. This was so the last thing I had
wanted to do that I felt, during<SPAN name="page_274" id="page_274"></SPAN> my swift excursion, how much time I
should need in the future for recovery of the process—all of the finest
wind-blown intimations, woven of silence and secrecy and air—by which
their suspicion would have throbbed into life. I could only,
provisionally and sketchily, figure it out, this suspicion, as having,
little by little—not with a sudden start—felt itself in the presence
of my own, just as my own now returned the compliment. What came back to
me, as I have said, in waves and wider glimpses, was the marvel of their
exchange of signals, the phenomenon, scarce to be represented, of their
breaking ground with each other. They both had their treasure to guard,
and they had looked to each other with the instinct of help. They had
felt, on either side, the victim possibly slip, and they had connected
the possibility with an interest discernibly inspired in me by this
personage, and with a relation discoverably established by that
interest. It wouldn't have been a danger, perhaps, if the two victims
hadn't slipped together; and more amazing, doubtless, than anything else
was the recognition by my sacrificing couple of the opportunity drawn by
my sacrificed from being conjoined in my charity. How could they know,
Gilbert Long and Mrs. Briss, that actively to communicate a
consciousness to my other friends had no part in my plan? The most I had
dreamed of, I could honourably feel, was to assure myself of their
independent possession of<SPAN name="page_275" id="page_275"></SPAN> one. These things were with me while, as I
have noted, I made Grace Brissenden wait, and it was also with me that,
though I condoned her deviation, she must take it from me as a charity.
I had presently achieved another of my full revolutions, and I faced her
again with a view of her overture and my answer to her last question.
The terms were not altogether what my pity could have wished, but I
sufficiently kept everything together to have to see that there were
limits to my choice. "Yes, I let it go, your change of front, though it
vexes me a little—and I'll in a moment tell you why—to have to. But
let us put it that it's on a condition."</p>
<p>"Change of front?" she murmured while she looked at me. "Your
expressions are not of the happiest."</p>
<p>But I saw it was only again to cover a doubt. My condition, for her, was
questionable, and I felt it would be still more so on her hearing what
it was. Meanwhile, however, in spite of her qualification of it, I had
fallen back, once and for all, on pure benignity. "It scarce matters if
I'm clumsy when you're practically so bland. I wonder if you'll
understand," I continued, "if I make you an explanation."</p>
<p>"Most probably," she answered, as handsome as ever, "not."</p>
<p>"Let me at all events try you. It's moreover the one I just promised;
which was no more indeed<SPAN name="page_276" id="page_276"></SPAN> than the development of a feeling I've already
permitted myself to show you. I lose"—I brought it out—"by your
agreeing with me!"</p>
<p>"'Lose'?"</p>
<p>"Yes; because while we disagreed you were, in spite of that, on the
right side."</p>
<p>"And what do you call the right side?"</p>
<p>"Well"—I brought it out again—"on the same side as my imagination."</p>
<p>But it gave her at least a chance. "Oh, your imagination!"</p>
<p>"Yes—I know what you think of it; you've sufficiently hinted how little
that is. But it's precisely because you regard it as rubbish that I now
appeal to you."</p>
<p>She continued to guard herself by her surprises. "Appeal? I thought you
were on the ground, rather," she beautifully smiled, "of dictation."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm that too. I dictate my terms. But my terms are in themselves
the appeal." I was ingenious but patient. "See?"</p>
<p>"How in the world can I see?"</p>
<p>"<i>Voyons</i>, then. Light or darkness, my imagination rides me. But of
course if it's all wrong I want to get rid of it. You can't, naturally,
help me to destroy the faculty itself, but you can aid in the defeat of
its application to a particular case. It was because you so smiled,
before, on that application, that I valued even my minor difference with
you;<SPAN name="page_277" id="page_277"></SPAN> and what I refer to as my loss is the fact that your frown leaves
me struggling alone. The best thing for me, accordingly, as I feel, is
to get rid altogether of the obsession. The way to do that, clearly,
since <i>you've</i> done it, is just to quench the fire. By the fire I mean
the flame of the fancy that blazed so for us this morning. What the
deuce have you, for yourself, poured on it? Tell me," I pleaded, "and
teach me."</p>
<p>Equally with her voice her face echoed me again. "Teach you?"</p>
<p>"To abandon my false gods. Lead me back to peace by the steps <i>you've</i>
trod. By so much as they must have remained traceable to you, shall I
find them of interest and profit. They must in fact be most remarkable:
won't they even—for what <i>I</i> may find in them—be more remarkable than
those we should now be taking together if we hadn't separated, if we
hadn't pulled up?" That was a proposition I could present to her with
candour, but before her absence of precipitation had permitted her much
to consider it I had already followed it on. "You'll just tell me,
however, that since I do pull up and turn back with you we shall just
have <i>not</i> separated. Well, then, so much the better—I see you're
right. But I want," I earnestly declared, "not to lose an inch of the
journey."</p>
<p>She watched me now as a Roman lady at the circus<SPAN name="page_278" id="page_278"></SPAN> may have watched an
exemplary Christian. "The journey has been a very simple one," she said
at last. "With my mind made up on a single point, it was taken at a
stride."</p>
<p>I was all interest. "On a single point?" Then, as, almost excessively
deliberate, she still kept me: "You mean the still commonplace character
of Long's—a—consciousness?"</p>
<p>She had taken at last again the time she required. "Do you know what I
think?"</p>
<p>"It's exactly what I'm pressing you to make intelligible."</p>
<p>"Well," said Mrs. Briss, "I think you're crazy."</p>
<p>It naturally struck me. "Crazy?"</p>
<p>"Crazy."</p>
<p>I turned it over. "But do you call that intelligible?"</p>
<p>She did it justice. "No: I don't suppose it <i>can</i> be so for you if you
<i>are</i> insane."</p>
<p>I risked the long laugh which might have seemed that of madness. "'If I
am' is lovely!" And whether or not it was the special sound, in my ear,
of my hilarity, I remember just wondering if perhaps I mightn't be.
"Dear woman, it's the point at issue!"</p>
<p>But it was as if she too had been affected. "It's not at issue for me
now."</p>
<p>I gave her then the benefit of my stirred speculation. "It always
happens, of course, that one is<SPAN name="page_279" id="page_279"></SPAN> one's self the last to know. You're
perfectly convinced?"</p>
<p>She not ungracefully, for an instant, faltered; but since I really would
have it——! "Oh, so far as what we've talked of is concerned,
perfectly!"</p>
<p>"And it's actually what you've come down then to tell me?"</p>
<p>"Just exactly what. And if it's a surprise to you," she added, "that I
<i>should</i> have come down—why, I can only say I was prepared for
anything."</p>
<p>"Anything?" I smiled.</p>
<p>"In the way of a surprise."</p>
<p>I thought; but her preparation was natural, though in a moment I could
match it. "Do you know that's what I was too?"</p>
<p>"Prepared——?"</p>
<p>"For anything in the way of a surprise. But only <i>from</i> you," I
explained. "And of course—yes," I mused, "I've got it. If I <i>am</i>
crazy," I went on—"it's indeed simple."</p>
<p>She appeared, however, to feel, from the influence of my present tone,
the impulse, in courtesy, to attenuate. "Oh, I don't pretend it's
simple!"</p>
<p>"No? I thought that was just what you did pretend."</p>
<p>"I didn't suppose," said Mrs. Briss, "that you'd like it. I didn't
suppose that you'd accept it or even listen to it. But I owed it to
you——" She hesitated.<SPAN name="page_280" id="page_280"></SPAN></p>
<p>"You owed it to me to let me know what you thought of me even should it
prove very disagreeable?"</p>
<p>That perhaps was more than she could adopt. "I owed it to myself," she
replied with a touch of austerity.</p>
<p>"To let me know I'm demented?"</p>
<p>"To let you know I'm <i>not</i>." We each looked, I think, when she had said
it, as if she had done what she said. "That's all."</p>
<p>"All?" I wailed. "Ah, don't speak as if it were so little. It's much.
It's everything."</p>
<p>"It's anything you will!" said Mrs. Briss impatiently. "Good-night."</p>
<p>"Good-night?" I was aghast. "You leave me on it?"</p>
<p>She appeared to profess for an instant all the freshness of her own that
she was pledged to guard. "I must leave you on something. I couldn't
come to spend a whole hour."</p>
<p>"But do you think it's so quickly done—to persuade a man he's crazy?"</p>
<p>"I haven't expected to persuade you."</p>
<p>"Only to throw out the hint?"</p>
<p>"Well," she admitted, "it would be good if it could work in you. But
I've told you," she added as if to wind up and have done, "what
determined me."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon"—oh, I protested! "That's<SPAN name="page_281" id="page_281"></SPAN> just what you've not told
me. The reason of your change——"</p>
<p>"I'm not speaking," she broke in, "of my change."</p>
<p>"Ah, but <i>I</i> am!" I declared with a sharpness that threw her back for a
minute on her reserves. "It's your change," I again insisted, "that's
the interesting thing. If I'm crazy, I must once more remind you, you
were simply crazy <i>with</i> me; and how can I therefore be indifferent to
your recovery of your wit or let you go without having won from you the
secret of your remedy?" I shook my head with kindness, but with
decision. "You mustn't leave me till you've placed it in my hand."</p>
<p>The reserves I had spoken of were not, however, to fail her. "I thought
you just said that you let my inconsistency go."</p>
<p>"Your moral responsibility for it—perfectly. But how can I show a
greater indulgence than by positively desiring to enter into its
history? It's in that sense that, as I say," I developed, "I do speak of
your change. There must have been a given moment when the need of it—or
when, in other words, the truth of my personal state—dawned upon you.
That moment is the key to your whole position—the moment for us to
fix."</p>
<p>"Fix it," said poor Mrs. Briss, "when you like!"</p>
<p>"I had much rather," I protested, "fix it when<SPAN name="page_282" id="page_282"></SPAN> <i>you</i> like. I want—you
surely must understand if I want anything of it at all—to get it
absolutely right." Then as this plea seemed still not to move her, I
once more compressed my palms. "You <i>won't</i> help me?"</p>
<p>She bridled at last with a higher toss. "It wasn't with such views I
came. I don't believe," she went on a shade more patiently, "I don't
believe—if you want to know the reason—that you're really sincere."</p>
<p>Here indeed was an affair. "Not sincere—<i>I</i>?"</p>
<p>"Not properly honest. I mean in giving up."</p>
<p>"Giving up what?"</p>
<p>"Why, everything."</p>
<p>"Everything? Is it a question"—I stared—"of <i>that</i>?"</p>
<p>"You would if you <i>were</i> honest."</p>
<p>"Everything?" I repeated.</p>
<p>Again she stood to it. "Everything."</p>
<p>"But is that quite the readiness I've professed?"</p>
<p>"If it isn't then, what is?"</p>
<p>I thought a little. "Why, isn't it simply a matter rather of the
renunciation of a confidence?"</p>
<p>"In your sense and your truth?" This, she indicated, was all she asked.
"Well, what is that but everything?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps," I reflected, "perhaps." In fact, it no doubt was. "We'll take
it then for everything,<SPAN name="page_283" id="page_283"></SPAN> and it's as so taking it that I renounce. I
keep nothing at all. Now do you believe I'm honest?"</p>
<p>She hesitated. "Well—yes, if you say so."</p>
<p>"Ah," I sighed, "I see you don't! What can I do," I asked, "to prove
it?"</p>
<p>"You can easily prove it. You can let me go."</p>
<p>"Does it strike you," I considered, "that I should take your going as a
sign of your belief?"</p>
<p>"Of what else, then?"</p>
<p>"Why, surely," I promptly replied, "my assent to your leaving our
discussion where it stands would constitute a very different symptom.
Wouldn't it much rather represent," I inquired, "a failure of belief on
my own part in <i>your</i> honesty? If you can judge me, in short, as only
pretending——"</p>
<p>"Why shouldn't you," she put in for me, "also judge <i>me</i>? What have I to
gain by pretending?"</p>
<p>"I'll tell you," I returned, laughing, "if you'll tell me what <i>I</i>
have."</p>
<p>She appeared to ask herself if she could, and then to decide in the
negative. "If I don't understand you in any way, of course I don't in
that. Put it, at any rate," she now rather wearily quavered, "that one
of us has as little to gain as the other. I believe you," she repeated.
"There!"</p>
<p>"Thanks," I smiled, "for the way you say it. If you don't, as you say,
understand me," I insisted, "it's because you think me crazy. And if you
think me crazy I don't see how you <i>can</i> leave me."<SPAN name="page_284" id="page_284"></SPAN></p>
<p>She presently met this. "If I believe you're sincere in saying you give
up I believe you've recovered. And if I believe you've recovered I don't
think you crazy. It's simple enough."</p>
<p>"Then why isn't it simple to understand me?"</p>
<p>She turned about, and there were moments in her embarrassment, now, from
which she fairly drew beauty. Her awkwardness was somehow noble; her
sense of her predicament was in itself young. "Is it <i>ever</i>?" she
charmingly threw out.</p>
<p>I felt she must see at this juncture how wonderful I found her, and even
that that impression—one's whole consciousness of her personal
victory—was a force that, in the last resort, was all on her side. "It
was quite worth your while, this sitting up to this hour, to show a
fellow how you bloom when other women are fagged. If that was really,
with the truth that we're so pulling about laid bare, what you did most
want to show, why, then, you've splendidly triumphed, and I congratulate
and thank you. No," I quickly went on, "I daresay, to do you justice,
the interpretation of my tropes and figures <i>isn't</i> 'ever' perfectly
simple. You doubtless <i>have</i> driven me into a corner with my dangerous
explosive, and my only fair course must be therefore to sit on it till
you get out of the room. I'm sitting on it now; and I think you'll find
you can get out as soon as you've told me <i>this</i>. Was the moment your
change of view dawned upon you<SPAN name="page_285" id="page_285"></SPAN> the moment of our exchanging a while
ago, in the drawing-room, our few words?"</p>
<p>The light that, under my last assurances, had so considerably revived
faded in her a little as she saw me again tackle the theme of her
inconstancy; but the prospect of getting rid of me on these terms made
my inquiry, none the less, worth trying to face. "That moment?" She
showed the effort to think back.</p>
<p>I gave her every assistance. "It was when, after the music, I had been
talking to Lady John. You were on a sofa, not far from us, with Gilbert
Long; and when, on Lady John's dropping me, I made a slight movement
toward you, you most graciously met it by rising and giving me a chance
while Mr. Long walked away."</p>
<p>It was as if I had hung the picture before her, so that she had fairly
to look at it. But the point that she first, in her effort, took up was
not, superficially, the most salient. "Mr. Long walked away?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't mean to say that that had anything to do with it."</p>
<p>She continued to think. "To do with what?"</p>
<p>"With the way the situation comes back to me now as possibly marking
your crisis."</p>
<p>She wondered. "Was it a 'situation'?"</p>
<p>"That's just what I'm asking you. <i>Was</i> it? Was it <i>the</i> situation?"<SPAN name="page_286" id="page_286"></SPAN></p>
<p>But she had quite fallen away again. "I remember the moment you mean—it
was when I said I would come to you here. But why should it have struck
you as a crisis?"</p>
<p>"It didn't in the least at the time, for I didn't then know you were no
longer 'with' me. But in the light of what I've since learned from you I
seem to recover an impression which, on the spot, was only vague. The
impression," I explained, "of your taking a decision that presented some
difficulty, but that was determined by something that had then—and even
perhaps a little suddenly—come up for you. That's the point"—I
continued to unfold my case—"on which my question bears. <i>Was</i> this
'something' your conclusion, then and there, that there's nothing in
anything?"</p>
<p>She kept her distance. "'In anything'?"</p>
<p>"And that I could only be, accordingly, out of my mind? Come," I
patiently pursued; "such a perception as that had, at some instant or
other, to <i>begin</i>; and I'm only trying to aid you to recollect when the
devil it did!"</p>
<p>"Does it particularly matter?" Mrs. Briss inquired.</p>
<p>I felt my chin. "That depends a little—doesn't it?—on what you mean by
'matter'! It matters for your meeting my curiosity, and that matters, in
its turn, as we just arranged, for my releasing you. You may ask of
course if my curiosity itself matters;<SPAN name="page_287" id="page_287"></SPAN> but to that, fortunately, my
reply can only be of the clearest. The satisfaction of my curiosity is
the pacification of my mind. We've granted, we've accepted, I again
press upon you, in respect to that precarious quantity, its topsy-turvy
state. Only give me a lead; I don't ask you for more. Let me for an
instant see play before me any feeble reflection whatever of the flash
of new truth that unsettled you."</p>
<p>I thought for a moment that, in her despair, she would find something
that would do. But she only found: "It didn't come in a flash."</p>
<p>I remained all patience. "It came little by little? It began then
perhaps earlier in the day than the moment to which I allude? And yet,"
I continued, "we were pretty well on in the day, I must keep in mind,
when I had your last news of your credulity."</p>
<p>"My credulity?"</p>
<p>"Call it then, if you don't like the word, your sympathy."</p>
<p>I had given her time, however, to produce at last something that, it
visibly occurred to her, might pass. "As soon as I was not with you—I
mean with you personally—you <i>never</i> had my sympathy."</p>
<p>"Is my person then so irresistible?"</p>
<p>Well, she was brave. "It <i>was</i>. But it's not, thank God, now!"</p>
<p>"Then there we are again at our mystery! I don't think, you know," I
made out for her, "it was<SPAN name="page_288" id="page_288"></SPAN> my person, really, that gave its charm to my
theory; I think it was much more my theory that gave its charm to my
person. My person, I flatter myself, has remained through these few
hours—hours of tension, but of a tension, you see, purely
intellectual—as good as ever; so that if we're not, even in our
anomalous situation, in danger from any such source, it's simply that my
theory is dead and that the blight of the rest is involved."</p>
<p>My words were indeed many, but she plumped straight through them. "As
soon as I was away from you I hated you."</p>
<p>"Hated <i>me</i>?"</p>
<p>"Well, hated what you call 'the rest'—hated your theory."</p>
<p>"I see. Yet," I reflected, "you're not at present—though you wish to
goodness, no doubt, you <i>were</i>—away from me."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't care now," she said with courage; "since—for you see I
believe you—we're away from your delusions."</p>
<p>"You wouldn't, in spite of your belief,"—I smiled at her—"like to be a
little further off yet?" But before she could answer, and because also,
doubtless, the question had too much the sound of a taunt, I came up, as
if for her real convenience, quite in another place. "Perhaps my
idea—my timing, that is, of your crisis—is the result, in my mind, of
my own association with that particular instant.<SPAN name="page_289" id="page_289"></SPAN> It comes back to me
that what I was most full of while your face signed to me and your voice
then so graciously confirmed it, and while too, as I've said, Long
walked away—what I was most full of, as a consequence of another go,
just ended, at Lady John, was, once more, this same Lady John's want of
adjustability to the character you and I, in our associated speculation
of the morning, had so candidly tried to fit her with. I was still even
then, you see, speculating—all on my own hook, alas!—and it had just
rolled over me with renewed force that she was nothing whatever, not the
least little bit, to our purpose. The moment, in other words, if you
understand, happened to be one of <i>my</i> moments; so that, by the same
token, I simply wondered if it mightn't likewise have happened to be one
of yours."</p>
<p>"It <i>was</i> one of mine," Mrs. Briss replied as promptly as I could
reasonably have expected; "in the sense that—as you've only to
consider—it was to lead more or less directly to these present words of
ours."</p>
<p>If I had only to consider, nothing was more easy; but each time I
considered, I was ready to show, the less there seemed left by the act.
"Ah, but you had then <i>already</i> backed out. <i>Won't</i> you understand—for
you're a little discouraging—that I want to catch you at the earlier
stage?"</p>
<p>"To 'catch' me?" I had indeed expressions!<SPAN name="page_290" id="page_290"></SPAN></p>
<p>"Absolutely catch! Focus you under the first shock of the observation
that was to make everything fall to pieces for you."</p>
<p>"But I've told you," she stoutly resisted, "that there was no 'first'
shock."</p>
<p>"Well, then, the second or the third."</p>
<p>"There was no shock," Mrs. Briss magnificently said, "at all."</p>
<p>It made me somehow break into laughter. "You found it so natural
then—and you so rather liked it—to make up your mind of a sudden that
you had been steeped in the last intellectual intimacy with a maniac?"</p>
<p>She thought once more, and then, as I myself had just previously done,
came up in another place. "I had at the moment you speak of wholly given
up any idea of Lady John."</p>
<p>But it was so feeble it made me smile. "Of course you had, you poor
innocent! You couldn't otherwise, hours before, have strapped the saddle
so tight on another woman."</p>
<p>"I had given up everything," she stubbornly continued.</p>
<p>"It's exactly what, in reference to that juncture, I perfectly embrace."</p>
<p>"Well, even in reference to that juncture," she resumed, "you may catch
me as much as you like." With which, suddenly, during some seconds, I
saw her hold herself for a leap. "You talk of 'focussing,<SPAN name="page_291" id="page_291"></SPAN>' but what
else, even in those minutes, were you in fact engaged in?"</p>
<p>"Ah, then, you do recognise them," I cried—"those minutes?"</p>
<p>She took her jump, though with something of a flop. "Yes—as, consenting
thus to be catechised, I cudgel my brain for your amusement—I do
recognise them. I remember what I thought. You focussed—I felt you
focus. I saw you wonder whereabouts, in what you call our associated
speculation, I would by that time be. I asked myself whether you'd
understand if I should try to convey to you simply by my expression such
a look as would tell you all. By 'all' I meant the fact that, sorry as I
was for you—or perhaps for myself—it had struck me as only fair to let
you know as straight as possible that I was nowhere. That was why I
stared so, and I of course couldn't explain to you," she lucidly
pursued, "to whom my stare had reference."</p>
<p>I hung on her lips. "But you can <i>now</i>?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly. To Mr. Long."</p>
<p>I remained suspended. "Ah, but this is lovely! It's what I want."</p>
<p>I saw I should have more of it, and more in fact came. "You were saying
just now what you were full of, and I can do the same. I was full of
<i>him</i>."</p>
<p>I, on my side, was now full of eagerness. "Yes? He had left you full as
he walked away?"<SPAN name="page_292" id="page_292"></SPAN></p>
<p>She winced a little at this renewed evocation of his retreat, but she
took it as she had not done before, and I felt that with another push
she would be fairly afloat. "He had reason to walk!"</p>
<p>I wondered. "What had you said to him?"</p>
<p>She pieced it out. "Nothing—or very little. But I had listened."</p>
<p>"And to <i>what</i>?"</p>
<p>"To what he says. To his platitudes."</p>
<p>"His platitudes?" I stared. "Long's?"</p>
<p>"Why, don't you know he's a prize fool?"</p>
<p>I mused, sceptical but reasonable. "He <i>was</i>."</p>
<p>"He <i>is</i>!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Briss was superb, but, as I quickly felt I might remind her, there
was her possibly weak judgment. "Your confidence is splendid; only
mustn't I remember that your sense of the finer kinds of cleverness
isn't perhaps absolutely secure? Don't you know?—you also, till just
now, thought <i>me</i> a prize fool."</p>
<p>If I had hoped, however, here to trip her up, I had reckoned without the
impulse, and even perhaps the example, that she properly owed to me.
"Oh, no—not anything of that sort, you, at all. Only an intelligent man
gone wrong."</p>
<p>I followed, but before I caught up, "Whereas Long's only a stupid man
gone right?" I threw out.</p>
<p>It checked her too briefly, and there was indeed something of my own it
brought straight back. "I<SPAN name="page_293" id="page_293"></SPAN> thought that just what you told me, this
morning or yesterday, was that you had never known a case of the
conversion of an idiot."</p>
<p>I laughed at her readiness. Well, I had wanted to make her fight! "It's
true it would have been the only one."</p>
<p>"Ah, you'll have to do without it!" Oh, she was brisk now. "And if you
know what I think of him, you know no more than <i>he</i> does."</p>
<p>"You mean you told him?"</p>
<p>She hung fire but an instant. "I told him, practically—and it was in
fact all I did have to say to him. It was enough, however, and he
disgustedly left me on it. Then it was that, as you gave me the chance,
I tried to telegraph you—to say to you on the spot and under the sharp
impression: 'What on earth do you mean by your nonsense? It doesn't hold
water!' It's a pity I didn't succeed!" she continued—for she had become
almost voluble. "It would have settled the question, and I should have
gone to bed."</p>
<p>I weighed it with the grimace that, I feared, had become almost as fixed
as Mrs. Server's. "It would have settled the question perhaps; but I
should have lost this impression of you."</p>
<p>"Oh, this impression of me!"</p>
<p>"Ah, but don't undervalue it: it's what I want! What was it then Long
had said?"</p>
<p>She had it more and more, but she had it as<SPAN name="page_294" id="page_294"></SPAN> nothing at all. "Not a word
to repeat—you wouldn't believe! He does say nothing at all. One can't
remember. It's what I mean. I tried him on purpose, while I thought of
you. But he's perfectly stupid. I don't see how we can have
fancied——!" I had interrupted her by the movement with which again,
uncontrollably tossed on one of my surges of certitude, I turned away.
<i>How</i> deep they must have been in together for her to have so at last
gathered herself up, and in how doubly interesting a light, above all,
it seemed to present Long for the future! That was, while I warned
myself, what I most read in—literally an implication of the enhancement
of this latter side of the prodigy. If his cleverness, under the alarm
that, first stirring their consciousness but dimly, had so swiftly
developed as to make next of each a mirror for the other, and then to
precipitate for them, in some silence deeper than darkness, the exchange
of recognitions, admissions and, as they certainly would have phrased
it, tips—if his excited acuteness was henceforth to protect itself by
dissimulation, what wouldn't perhaps, for one's diversion, be the new
spectacle and wonder? I could in a manner already measure this larger
play by the amplitude freshly determined in Mrs. Briss, and I was for a
moment actually held by the thought of the possible finish our friend
would find it in him to give to a represented, a fictive ineptitude.
The<SPAN name="page_295" id="page_295"></SPAN> sharpest jostle to my thought, in this rush, might well have been,
I confess, the reflection that as it was I who had arrested, who had
spoiled their unconsciousness, so it was natural they should fight
against me for a possible life in the state I had given them instead. I
had spoiled their unconsciousness, I had destroyed it, and it was
consciousness alone that could make them effectively cruel. Therefore,
if they were cruel, it was I who had determined it, inasmuch as,
consciously, they could only want, they could only intend, to live.
Wouldn't that question have been, I managed even now to ask myself, the
very basis on which they had inscrutably come together? "It's life, you
know," each had said to the other, "and I, accordingly, can only cling
to mine. But you, poor dear—shall <i>you</i> give up?" "Give up?" the other
had replied; "for what do you take me? I shall fight by your side,
please, and we can compare and exchange weapons and manœuvres, and
you may in every way count upon me."</p>
<p>That was what, with greater vividness, was for the rest of the occasion
before me, or behind me; and that I had done it all and had only myself
to thank for it was what, from this minute, by the same token, was more
and more for me the inner essence of Mrs. Briss's attitude. I know not
what heavy admonition of my responsibility had thus suddenly descended
on me; but nothing, under it, was indeed<SPAN name="page_296" id="page_296"></SPAN> more sensible than that
practically it paralysed me. And I could only say to myself that this
was the price—the price of the secret success, the lonely liberty and
the intellectual joy. There were things that for so private and splendid
a revel—that of the exclusive king with his Wagner opera—I could only
let go, and the special torment of my case was that the condition of
light, of the satisfaction of curiosity and of the attestation of
triumph, was in this direct way the sacrifice of feeling. There was no
point at which my assurance could, by the scientific method, judge
itself complete enough not to regard feeling as an interference and, in
consequence, as a possible check. If it had to go I knew well who went
with it, but I wasn't there to save <i>them</i>. I was there to save my
priceless pearl of an inquiry and to harden, to that end, my heart. I
should need indeed all my hardness, as well as my brightness, moreover,
to meet Mrs. Briss on the high level to which I had at last induced her
to mount, and, even while I prolonged the movement by which I had
momentarily stayed her, the intermission of her speech became itself for
me a hint of the peculiar pertinence of caution. It lasted long enough,
this drop, to suggest that her attention was the sharper for my having
turned away from it, and I should have feared a renewed challenge if she
hadn't, by good luck, presently gone on: "There's really nothing in him
at all!"<SPAN name="page_297" id="page_297"></SPAN></p>
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