<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p>Every year, the day he walked back from the great graveyard,
he went to church as he had done the day his idea was born.
It was on this occasion, as it happened, after a year had passed,
that he began to observe his altar to be haunted by a worshipper
at least as frequent as himself. Others of the faithful,
and in the rest of the church, came and went, appealing
sometimes, when they disappeared, to a vague or to a particular
recognition; but this unfailing presence was always to be
observed when he arrived and still in possession when he
departed. He was surprised, the first time, at the
promptitude with which it assumed an identity for him—the
identity of the lady whom two years before, on his anniversary,
he had seen so intensely bowed, and of whose tragic face he had
had so flitting a vision. Given the time that had passed,
his recollection of her was fresh enough to make him
wonder. Of himself she had of course no impression, or
rather had had none at first: the time came when her manner of
transacting her business suggested her having gradually guessed
his call to be of the same order. She used his altar for
her own purpose—he could only hope that sad and solitary as
she always struck him, she used it for her own Dead. There
were interruptions, infidelities, all on his part, calls to other
associations and duties; but as the months went on he found her
whenever he returned, and he ended by taking pleasure in the
thought that he had given her almost the contentment he had given
himself. They worshipped side by side so often that there
were moments when he wished he might be sure, so straight did
their prospect stretch away of growing old together in their
rites. She was younger than he, but she looked as if her
Dead were at least as numerous as his candles. She had no
colour, no sound, no fault, and another of the things about which
he had made up his mind was that she had no fortune. Always
black-robed, she must have had a succession of sorrows.
People weren’t poor, after all, whom so many losses could
overtake; they were positively rich when they had had so much to
give up. But the air of this devoted and indifferent woman,
who always made, in any attitude, a beautiful accidental line,
conveyed somehow to Stransom that she had known more kinds of
trouble than one.</p>
<p>He had a great love of music and little time for the joy of
it; but occasionally, when workaday noises were muffled by
Saturday afternoons, it used to come back to him that there were
glories. There were moreover friends who reminded him of
this and side by side with whom he found himself sitting out
concerts. On one of these winter afternoons, in St.
James’s Hall, he became aware after he had seated himself
that the lady he had so often seen at church was in the place
next him and was evidently alone, as he also this time happened
to be. She was at first too absorbed in the consideration
of the programme to heed him, but when she at last glanced at him
he took advantage of the movement to speak to her, greeting her
with the remark that he felt as if he already knew her. She
smiled as she said “Oh yes, I recognise you”; yet in
spite of this admission of long acquaintance it was the first he
had seen of her smile. The effect of it was suddenly to
contribute more to that acquaintance than all the previous
meetings had done. He hadn’t “taken in,”
he said to himself, that she was so pretty. Later, that
evening—it was while he rolled along in a hansom on his way
to dine out—he added that he hadn’t taken in that she
was so interesting. The next morning in the midst of his
work he quite suddenly and irrelevantly reflected that his
impression of her, beginning so far back, was like a winding
river that had at last reached the sea.</p>
<p>His work in fact was blurred a little all that day by the
sense of what had now passed between them. It wasn’t
much, but it had just made the difference. They had
listened together to Beethoven and Schumann; they had talked in
the pauses, and at the end, when at the door, to which they moved
together, he had asked her if he could help her in the matter of
getting away. She had thanked him and put up her umbrella,
slipping into the crowd without an allusion to their meeting yet
again and leaving him to remember at leisure that not a word had
been exchanged about the usual scene of that coincidence.
This omission struck him now as natural and then again as
perverse. She mightn’t in the least have allowed his
warrant for speaking to her, and yet if she hadn’t he would
have judged her an underbred woman. It was odd that when
nothing had really ever brought them together he should have been
able successfully to assume they were in a manner old
friends—that this negative quantity was somehow more than
they could express. His success, it was true, had been
qualified by her quick escape, so that there grew up in him an
absurd desire to put it to some better test. Save in so far
as some other poor chance might help him, such a test could be
only to meet her afresh at church. Left to himself he would
have gone to church the very next afternoon, just for the
curiosity of seeing if he should find her there. But he
wasn’t left to himself, a fact he discovered quite at the
last, after he had virtually made up his mind to go. The
influence that kept him away really revealed to him how little to
himself his Dead <i>ever</i> left him. He went only for
<i>them</i>—for nothing else in the world.</p>
<p>The force of this revulsion kept him away ten days: he hated
to connect the place with anything but his offices or to give a
glimpse of the curiosity that had been on the point of moving
him. It was absurd to weave a tangle about a matter so
simple as a custom of devotion that might with ease have been
daily or hourly; yet the tangle got itself woven. He was
sorry, he was disappointed: it was as if a long happy spell had
been broken and he had lost a familiar security. At the
last, however, he asked himself if he was to stay away for ever
from the fear of this muddle about motives. After an
interval neither longer nor shorter than usual he re-entered the
church with a clear conviction that he should scarcely heed the
presence or the absence of the lady of the concert. This
indifference didn’t prevent his at once noting that for the
only time since he had first seen her she wasn’t on the
spot. He had now no scruple about giving her time to
arrive, but she didn’t arrive, and when he went away still
missing her he was profanely and consentingly sorry. If her
absence made the tangle more intricate, that was all her own
doing. By the end of another year it was very intricate
indeed; but by that time he didn’t in the least care, and
it was only his cultivated consciousness that had given him
scruples. Three times in three months he had gone to church
without finding her, and he felt he hadn’t needed these
occasions to show him his suspense had dropped. Yet it was,
incongruously, not indifference, but a refinement of delicacy
that had kept him from asking the sacristan, who would of course
immediately have recognised his description of her, whether she
had been seen at other hours. His delicacy had kept him
from asking any question about her at any time, and it was
exactly the same virtue that had left him so free to be decently
civil to her at the concert.</p>
<p>This happy advantage now served him anew, enabling him when
she finally met his eyes—it was after a fourth
trial—to predetermine quite fixedly his awaiting her
retreat. He joined her in the street as soon as she had
moved, asking her if he might accompany her a certain
distance. With her placid permission he went as far as a
house in the neighbourhood at which she had business: she let him
know it was not where she lived. She lived, as she said, in
a mere slum, with an old aunt, a person in connexion with whom
she spoke of the engrossment of humdrum duties and regular
occupations. She wasn’t, the mourning niece, in her
first youth, and her vanished freshness had left something behind
that, for Stransom, represented the proof it had been tragically
sacrificed. Whatever she gave him the assurance of she gave
without references. She might have been a divorced
duchess—she might have been an old maid who taught the
harp.</p>
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