<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>He had ruthlessly abandoned her—that of course was what
he had done. Stransom made it all out in solitude, at
leisure, fitting the unmatched pieces gradually together and
dealing one by one with a hundred obscure points. She had
known Hague only after her present friend’s relations with
him had wholly terminated; obviously indeed a good while after;
and it was natural enough that of his previous life she should
have ascertained only what he had judged good to
communicate. There were passages it was quite conceivable
that even in moments of the tenderest expansion he should have
withheld. Of many facts in the career of a man so in the
eye of the world there was of course a common knowledge; but this
lady lived apart from public affairs, and the only time perfectly
clear to her would have been the time following the dawn of her
own drama. A man in her place would have “looked
up” the past—would even have consulted old
newspapers. It remained remarkable indeed that in her long
contact with the partner of her retrospect no accident had
lighted a train; but there was no arguing about that; the
accident had in fact come: it had simply been that security had
prevailed. She had taken what Hague had given her, and her
blankness in respect of his other connexions was only a touch in
the picture of that plasticity Stransom had supreme reason to
know so great a master could have been trusted to produce.</p>
<p>This picture was for a while all our friend saw: he caught his
breath again and again as it came over him that the woman with
whom he had had for years so fine a point of contact was a woman
whom Acton Hague, of all men in the world, had more or less
fashioned. Such as she sat there to-day she was
ineffaceably stamped with him. Beneficent, blameless as
Stransom held her, he couldn’t rid himself of the sense
that he had been, as who should say, swindled. She had
imposed upon him hugely, though she had known it as little as
he. All this later past came back to him as a time
grotesquely misspent. Such at least were his first
reflexions; after a while he found himself more divided and only,
as the end of it, more troubled. He imagined, recalled,
reconstituted, figured out for himself the truth she had refused
to give him; the effect of which was to make her seem to him only
more saturated with her fate. He felt her spirit, through
the whole strangeness, finer than his own to the very degree in
which she might have been, in which she certainly had been, more
wronged. A women, when wronged, was always more wronged
than a man, and there were conditions when the least she could
have got off with was more than the most he could have to
bear. He was sure this rare creature wouldn’t have
got off with the least. He was awestruck at the thought of
such a surrender—such a prostration. Moulded indeed
she had been by powerful hands, to have converted her injury into
an exaltation so sublime. The fellow had only had to die
for everything that was ugly in him to be washed out in a
torrent. It was vain to try to guess what had taken place,
but nothing could be clearer than that she had ended by accusing
herself. She absolved him at every point, she adored her
very wounds. The passion by which he had profited had
rushed back after its ebb, and now the tide of tenderness,
arrested for ever at flood, was too deep even to fathom.
Stransom sincerely considered that he had forgiven him; but how
little he had achieved the miracle that she had achieved!
His forgiveness was silence, but hers was mere unuttered
sound. The light she had demanded for his altar would have
broken his silence with a blare; whereas all the lights in the
church were for her too great a hush.</p>
<p>She had been right about the difference—she had spoken
the truth about the change: Stransom was soon to know himself as
perversely but sharply jealous. <i>His</i> tide had ebbed,
not flowed; if he had “forgiven” Acton Hague, that
forgiveness was a motive with a broken spring. The very
fact of her appeal for a material sign, a sign that should make
her dead lover equal there with the others, presented the
concession to her friend as too handsome for the case. He
had never thought of himself as hard, but an exorbitant article
might easily render him so. He moved round and round this
one, but only in widening circles—the more he looked at it
the less acceptable it seemed. At the same time he had no
illusion about the effect of his refusal; he perfectly saw how it
would make for a rupture. He left her alone a week, but
when at last he again called this conviction was cruelly
confirmed. In the interval he had kept away from the
church, and he needed no fresh assurance from her to know she
hadn’t entered it. The change was complete enough: it
had broken up her life. Indeed it had broken up his, for
all the fires of his shrine seemed to him suddenly to have been
quenched. A great indifference fell upon him, the weight of
which was in itself a pain; and he never knew what his devotion
had been for him till in that shock it ceased like a dropped
watch. Neither did he know with how large a confidence he
had counted on the final service that had now failed: the mortal
deception was that in this abandonment the whole future gave
way.</p>
<p>These days of her absence proved to him of what she was
capable; all the more that he never dreamed she was vindictive or
even resentful. It was not in anger she had forsaken him;
it was in simple submission to hard reality, to the stern logic
of life. This came home to him when he sat with her again
in the room in which her late aunt’s conversation lingered
like the tone of a cracked piano. She tried to make him
forget how much they were estranged, but in the very presence of
what they had given up it was impossible not to be sorry for
her. He had taken from her so much more than she had taken
from him. He argued with her again, told her she could now
have the altar to herself; but she only shook her head with
pleading sadness, begging him not to waste his breath on the
impossible, the extinct. Couldn’t he see that in
relation to her private need the rites he had established were
practically an elaborate exclusion? She regretted nothing
that had happened; it had all been right so long as she
didn’t know, and it was only that now she knew too much and
that from the moment their eyes were open they would simply have
to conform. It had doubtless been happiness enough for them
to go on together so long. She was gentle, grateful,
resigned; but this was only the form of a deep
immoveability. He saw he should never more cross the
threshold of the second room, and he felt how much this alone
would make a stranger of him and give a conscious stiffness to
his visits. He would have hated to plunge again into that
well of reminders, but he enjoyed quite as little the vacant
alternative.</p>
<p>After he had been with her three or four times it struck him
that to have come at last into her house had had the horrid
effect of diminishing their intimacy. He had known her
better, had liked her in greater freedom, when they merely walked
together or kneeled together. Now they only pretended;
before they had been nobly sincere. They began to try their
walks again, but it proved a lame imitation, for these things,
from the first, beginning or ending, had been connected with
their visits to the church. They had either strolled away
as they came out or gone in to rest on the return.
Stransom, besides, now faltered; he couldn’t walk as of
old. The omission made everything false; it was a dire
mutilation of their lives. Our friend was frank and
monotonous, making no mystery of his remonstrance and no secret
of his predicament. Her response, whatever it was, always
came to the same thing—an implied invitation to him to
judge, if he spoke of predicaments, of how much comfort she had
in hers. For him indeed was no comfort even in complaint,
since every allusion to what had befallen them but made the
author of their trouble more present. Acton Hague was
between them—that was the essence of the matter, and never
so much between them as when they were face to face. Then
Stransom, while still wanting to banish him, had the strangest
sense of striving for an ease that would involve having accepted
him. Deeply disconcerted by what he knew, he was still
worse tormented by really not knowing. Perfectly aware that
it would have been horribly vulgar to abuse his old friend or to
tell his companion the story of their quarrel, it yet vexed him
that her depth of reserve should give him no opening and should
have the effect of a magnanimity greater even than his own.</p>
<p>He challenged himself, denounced himself, asked himself if he
were in love with her that he should care so much what adventures
she had had. He had never for a moment allowed he was in
love with her; therefore nothing could have surprised him more
than to discover he was jealous. What but jealousy could
give a man that sore contentious wish for the detail of what
would make him suffer? Well enough he knew indeed that he
should never have it from the only person who to-day could give
it to him. She let him press her with his sombre eyes, only
smiling at him with an exquisite mercy and breathing equally
little the word that would expose her secret and the word that
would appear to deny his literal right to bitterness. She
told nothing, she judged nothing; she accepted everything but the
possibility of her return to the old symbols. Stransom
divined that for her too they had been vividly individual, had
stood for particular hours or particular
attributes—particular links in her chain. He made it
clear to himself, as he believed, that his difficulty lay in the
fact that the very nature of the plea for his faithless friend
constituted a prohibition; that it happened to have come from
<i>her</i> was precisely the vice that attached to it. To
the voice of impersonal generosity he felt sure he would have
listened; he would have deferred to an advocate who, speaking
from abstract justice, knowing of his denial without having known
Hague, should have had the imagination to say: “Ah,
remember only the best of him; pity him; provide for
him.” To provide for him on the very ground of having
discovered another of his turpitudes was not to pity but to
glorify him. The more Stransom thought the more he made out
that whatever this relation of Hague’s it could only have
been a deception more or less finely practised. Where had
it come into the life that all men saw? Why had one never
heard of it if it had had the frankness of honourable
things? Stransom knew enough of his other ties, of his
obligations and appearances, not to say enough of his general
character, to be sure there had been some infamy. In one
way or another this creature had been coldly sacrificed.
That was why at the last as well as the first he must still leave
him out and out.</p>
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