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<h2> VI. </h2>
<p>For some time thereafter Philip went no more to Sulby. He had a sufficient
excuse. His profession made demand of all his energies. When he was not at
work in Douglas he was expected to be at home with his aunt at Ballure.
But neither absence nor the lapse of years served to lift him out of the
reach of temptation. He had one besetting provocation to remembrance—one
duty which forbade him to forget Kate—his pledge to Pete, his office
as <i>Dooiney Molla</i>. Had he not vowed to keep guard over the girl? He
must do it. The trust was a sacred one.</p>
<p>Philip found a way out of his difficulty. The post was an impersonal and
incorruptible go-between, so he wrote frequently. Sometimes he had news to
send, for, to avoid the espionage of C�sar, intelligence of Pete came
through him; occasionally he had love-letters to enclose; now and then he
had presents to pass on. When such necessity did not arise, he found it
agreeable to keep up the current of correspondence. At Christmas he sent
Christmas cards, on Midsummer Day a bunch of moss roses, and even on St.
Valentine's Day a valentine. All this was in discharge of his duty, and
everything he did was done in the name of Pete. He persuaded himself that
he sank his own self absolutely. Having denied his eyes the very sight of
the girl's face, he stood erect in the belief that he was a true and loyal
friend.</p>
<p>Kate was less afraid and less ashamed. She took the presents from Pete and
wore them for Philip. In her secret heart she thought no shame of this.
The years gave her a larger flow of life, and made out of the bewitching
girl a splendid woman, brought up to the full estate of maidenly beauty.</p>
<p>This change wrought by time on her bodily form caused the past to seem to
her a very long way off. Something had occurred that made her a different
being. She was like the elder sister of that laughing girl who had known
Pete. To think of that little sister as having a kind of control over her
was impossible. Kate never did think of it.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, she held her tongue. Her people were taken in by the episode
of Ross Christian. According to their view, Kate loved the man and still
longed for him, and that was why she never talked of Pete. Philip was
disgusted with her unfaithfulness to his friend, and that was the reason
of his absence. She never talked of Philip either, but they, on their
part, talked of him perpetually, and fed her secret passion with his
praises. Thus for three years these two were like two prisoners in
neighbouring cells, very close and yet very far apart, able to hear each
other's voices, yet never to see each other's faces, yearning to come
together and to touch, but unable to do so because of the wall that stood
between.</p>
<p>Since the fight, C�sar had removed her from all duties of the inn, and one
day in the spring she was in the gable house peeling rushes to make tallow
candles when Kelly, the postman, passed by the porch, where Nancy Joe was
cleaning the candle-irons.</p>
<p>"Heard the newses, Nancy?" said Kelly. "Mr. Philip Christian is let off
two years' time and called to the bar."</p>
<p>Nancy looked grave. "I'm sure the young gentleman is that quiet and
studdy," she said. "What are they doing on him?"</p>
<p>"Only making him a full advocate, woman," said Kelly.</p>
<p>"You don't say?" said Nancy.</p>
<p>"He passed his examination before the Govenar's man yesterday."</p>
<p>"Aw, there now!"</p>
<p>"I took the letter to Ballure this evening."</p>
<p>"It's like you would, Mr. Kelly. That's the boy for you. I'm always saying
it. 'Deed I am, though, but there's ones here that won't have it at all,
at all."</p>
<p>"Miss Kate, you mane? We know the raison. He's lumps in her porridge,
woman. Good-day to you, Nancy."</p>
<p>"Yes, it's doing a nice day enough, Mr. Kelly," said Nancy, and the
postman passed on.</p>
<p>Kate came gliding out with a brush in her hand. "What was the postman
saying?"</p>
<p>"That—Mr.—Philip—Christian—has been passing—for
an advocate," said Nancy deliberately.</p>
<p>Kate's eyes glistened, and her lips quivered with delight; but she only
said, with an air of indifference, "Was that all his news, then?"</p>
<p>"All? D'ye say all?" said Nancy, digging away at the candle-irons. "Listen
to the girl! And him that good to her while her promist man's away!"</p>
<p>Kate shelled her rush, and said, with a sigh and a sly look, "I'm afraid
you think a deal too much of him, Nancy."</p>
<p>"Then I'll be making mends," said Nancy, "for some that's thinking a dale
too little."</p>
<p>"I'm quite at a loss to know what you see in him," said Kate.</p>
<p>"Now, you don't say!" said Nancy with scorching irony. Then, banging her
irons, she added, "I'm not much of a woman for a man myself. They're only
poor helpless creatures anyway, and I don't approve of them. But if I was
for putting up with one of the sort, he wouldn't have legs and arms like a
dolly, and a face like curds and whey, and coat and trousers that loud you
can hear them coming up the street."</p>
<p>With this parting shot at Ross Christian, Nancy flung into the house,
thinking she had given Kate a dressing that she would never forget. Kate
was radiant. Such abuse was honey on her lips, such scoldings were
joy-bells in her ears. She took silent delight in provoking these attacks.
They served her turn both ways, bringing her delicious joy at the praise
of Philip, and at the same time preserving her secret.</p>
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