<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<p>And yet this was no solution, especially after he had talked
again to his friend of all it had been his plan she should
finally do for him. He had talked in the other days, and
she had responded with a frankness qualified only by a courteous
reluctance, a reluctance that touched him, to linger on the
question of his death. She had then practically accepted
the charge, suffered him to feel he could depend upon her to be
the eventual guardian of his shrine; and it was in the name of
what had so passed between them that he appealed to her not to
forsake him in his age. She listened at present with
shining coldness and all her habitual forbearance to insist on
her terms; her deprecation was even still tenderer, for it
expressed the compassion of her own sense that he was
abandoned. Her terms, however, remained the same, and
scarcely the less audible for not being uttered; though he was
sure that secretly even more than he she felt bereft of the
satisfaction his solemn trust was to have provided her.
They both missed the rich future, but she missed it most, because
after all it was to have been entirely hers; and it was her
acceptance of the loss that gave him the full measure of her
preference for the thought of Acton Hague over any other thought
whatever. He had humour enough to laugh rather grimly when
he said to himself: “Why the deuce does she like him so
much more than she likes me?”—the reasons being
really so conceivable. But even his faculty of analysis
left the irritation standing, and this irritation proved perhaps
the greatest misfortune that had ever overtaken him. There
had been nothing yet that made him so much want to give up.
He had of course by this time well reached the age of
renouncement; but it had not hitherto been vivid to him that it
was time to give up everything.</p>
<p>Practically, at the end of six months, he had renounced the
friendship once so charming and comforting. His privation
had two faces, and the face it had turned to him on the occasion
of his last attempt to cultivate that friendship was the one he
could look at least. This was the privation he inflicted;
the other was the privation he bore. The conditions she
never phrased he used to murmur to himself in solitude:
“One more, one more—only just one.”
Certainly he was going down; he often felt it when he caught
himself, over his work, staring at vacancy and giving voice to
that inanity. There was proof enough besides in his being
so weak and so ill. His irritation took the form of
melancholy, and his melancholy that of the conviction that his
health had quite failed. His altar moreover had ceased to
exist; his chapel, in his dreams, was a great dark cavern.
All the lights had gone out—all his Dead had died
again. He couldn’t exactly see at first how it had
been in the power of his late companion to extinguish them, since
it was neither for her nor by her that they had been called into
being. Then he understood that it was essentially in his
own soul the revival had taken place, and that in the air of this
soul they were now unable to breathe. The candles might
mechanically burn, but each of them had lost its lustre.
The church had become a void; it was his presence, her presence,
their common presence, that had made the indispensable
medium. If anything was wrong everything was—her
silence spoiled the tune.</p>
<p>Then when three months were gone he felt so lonely that he
went back; reflecting that as they had been his best society for
years his Dead perhaps wouldn’t let him forsake them
without doing something more for him. They stood there, as
he had left them, in their tall radiance, the bright cluster that
had already made him, on occasions when he was willing to compare
small things with great, liken them to a group of sea-lights on
the edge of the ocean of life. It was a relief to him,
after a while, as he sat there, to feel they had still a
virtue. He was more and more easily tired, and he always
drove now; the action of his heart was weak and gave him none of
the reassurance conferred by the action of his fancy. None
the less he returned yet again, returned several times, and
finally, during six months, haunted the place with a renewal of
frequency and a strain of impatience. In winter the church
was unwarmed and exposure to cold forbidden him, but the glow of
his shrine was an influence in which he could almost bask.
He sat and wondered to what he had reduced his absent associate
and what she now did with the hours of her absence. There
were other churches, there were other altars, there were other
candles; in one way or another her piety would still operate; he
couldn’t absolutely have deprived her of her rites.
So he argued, but without contentment; for he well enough knew
there was no other such rare semblance of the mountain of light
she had once mentioned to him as the satisfaction of her
need. As this semblance again gradually grew great to him
and his pious practice more regular, he found a sharper and
sharper pang in the imagination of her darkness; for never so
much as in these weeks had his rites been real, never had his
gathered company seemed so to respond and even to invite.
He lost himself in the large lustre, which was more and more what
he had from the first wished it to be—as dazzling as the
vision of heaven in the mind of a child. He wandered in the
fields of light; he passed, among the tall tapers, from tier to
tier, from fire to fire, from name to name, from the white
intensity of one clear emblem, of one saved soul, to
another. It was in the quiet sense of having saved his
souls that his deep strange instinct rejoiced. This was no
dim theological rescue, no boon of a contingent world; they were
saved better than faith or works could save them, saved for the
warm world they had shrunk<i> </i>from dying to, for actuality,
for continuity, for the certainty of human remembrance.</p>
<p>By this time he had survived all his friends; the last
straight flame was three years old, there was no one to add to
the list. Over and over he called his roll, and it appeared
to him compact and complete. Where should he put in
another, where, if there were no other objection, would it stand
in its place in the rank? He reflected, with a want of
sincerity of which he was quite conscious, that it would be
difficult to determine that place. More and more, besides,
face to face with his little legion, over endless histories,
handling the empty shells and playing with the silence—more
and more he could see that he had never introduced an
alien. He had had his great companions, his
indulgences—there were cases in which they had been
immense; but what had his devotion after all been if it
hadn’t been at bottom a respect? He was, however,
himself surprised at his stiffness; by the end of the winter the
responsibility of it was what was uppermost in his
thoughts. The refrain had grown old to them, that plea for
just one more. There came a day when, for simple
exhaustion, if symmetry should demand just one he was ready so
far to meet symmetry. Symmetry was harmony, and the idea of
harmony began to haunt him; he said to himself that harmony was
of course everything. He took, in fancy, his composition to
pieces, redistributing it into other lines, making other
juxtapositions and contrasts. He shifted this and that
candle, he made the spaces different, he effaced the
disfigurement of a possible gap. There were subtle and
complex relations, a scheme of cross-reference, and moments in
which he seemed to catch a glimpse of the void so sensible to the
woman who wandered in exile or sat where he had seen her with the
portrait of Acton Hague. Finally, in this way, he arrived
at a conception of the total, the ideal, which left a clear
opportunity for just another figure. “Just one
more—to round it off; just one more, just one,”
continued to hum in his head. There was a strange confusion
in the thought, for he felt the day to be near when he too should
be one of the Others. What in this event would the Others
matter to him, since they only mattered to the living? Even
as one of the Dead what would his altar matter to him, since his
particular dream of keeping it up had melted away? What had
harmony to do with the case if his lights were all to be
quenched? What he had hoped for was an instituted
thing. He might perpetuate it on some other pretext, but
his special meaning would have dropped. This meaning was to
have lasted with the life of the one other person who understood
it.</p>
<p>In March he had an illness during which he spent a fortnight
in bed, and when he revived a little he was told of two things
that had happened. One was that a lady whose name was not
known to the servants (she left none) had been three times to ask
about him; the other was that in his sleep and on an occasion
when his mind evidently wandered he was heard to murmur again and
again: “Just one more—just one.” As soon
as he found himself able to go out, and before the doctor in
attendance had pronounced him so, he drove to see the lady who
had come to ask about him. She was not at home; but this
gave him the opportunity, before his strength should fall again,
to take his way to the church. He entered it alone; he had
declined, in a happy manner he possessed of being able to decline
effectively, the company of his servant or of a nurse. He
knew now perfectly what these good people thought; they had
discovered his clandestine connexion, the magnet that had drawn
him for so many years, and doubtless attached a significance of
their own to the odd words they had repeated to him. The
nameless lady was the clandestine connexion—a fact nothing
could have made clearer than his indecent haste to rejoin
her. He sank on his knees before his altar while his head
fell over on his hands. His weakness, his life’s
weariness overtook him. It seemed to him he had come for
the great surrender. At first he asked himself how he
should get away; then, with the failing belief in the power, the
very desire to move gradually left him. He had come, as he
always came, to lose himself; the fields of light were still
there to stray in; only this time, in straying, he would never
come back. He had given himself to his Dead, and it was
good: this time his Dead would keep him. He couldn’t
rise from his knees; he believed he should never rise again; all
he could do was to lift his face and fix his eyes on his
lights. They looked unusually, strangely splendid, but the
one that always drew him most had an unprecedented lustre.
It was the central voice of the choir, the glowing heart of the
brightness, and on this occasion it seemed to expand, to spread
great wings of flame. The whole altar flared—dazzling
and blinding; but the source of the vast radiance burned clearer
than the rest, gathering itself into form, and the form was human
beauty and human charity, was the far-off face of Mary
Antrim. She smiled at him from the glory of
heaven—she brought the glory down with her to take
him. He bowed his head in submission and at the same moment
another wave rolled over him. Was it the quickening of joy
to pain? In the midst of his joy at any rate he felt his
buried face grow hot as with some communicated knowledge that had
the force of a reproach. It suddenly made him contrast that
very rapture with the bliss he had refused to another. This
breath of the passion immortal was all that other had asked; the
descent of Mary Antrim opened his spirit with a great
compunctious throb for the descent of Acton Hague. It was
as if Stransom had read what her eyes said to him.</p>
<p>After a moment he looked round in a despair that made him feel
as if the source of life were ebbing. The church had been
empty—he was alone; but he wanted to have something done,
to make a last appeal. This idea gave him strength for an
effort; he rose to his feet with a movement that made him turn,
supporting himself by the back of a bench. Behind him was a
prostrate figure, a figure he had seen before; a woman in deep
mourning, bowed in grief or in prayer. He had seen her in
other days—the first time of his entrance there, and he now
slightly wavered, looking at her again till she seemed aware he
had noticed her. She raised her head and met his eyes: the
partner of his long worship had come back. She looked
across at him an instant with a face wondering and scared; he saw
he had made her afraid. Then quickly rising she came
straight to him with both hands out.</p>
<p>“Then you <i>could</i> come? God sent you!”
he murmured with a happy smile.</p>
<p>“You’re very ill—you shouldn’t be
here,” she urged in anxious reply.</p>
<p>“God sent me too, I think. I was ill when I came,
but the sight of you does wonders.” He held her
hands, which steadied and quickened him. “I’ve
something to tell you.”</p>
<p>“Don’t tell me!” she tenderly pleaded;
“let me tell you. This afternoon, by a miracle, the
sweetest of miracles, the sense of our difference left me.
I was out—I was near, thinking, wandering alone, when, on
the spot, something changed in my heart. It’s my
confession—there it is. To come back, to come back on
the instant—the idea gave me wings. It was as if I
suddenly saw something—as if it all became possible.
I could come for what you yourself came for: that was
enough. So here I am. It’s not for my
own—that’s over. But I’m here for
<i>them</i>.” And breathless, infinitely relieved by
her low precipitate explanation, she looked with eyes that
reflected all its splendour at the magnificence of their
altar.</p>
<p>“They’re here for you,” Stransom said,
“they’re present to-night as they’ve never
been. They speak for you—don’t you
see?—in a passion of light; they sing out like a choir of
angels. Don’t you hear what they say?—they
offer the very thing you asked of me.”</p>
<p>“Don’t talk of it—don’t think of it;
forget it!” She spoke in hushed supplication, and
while the alarm deepened in her eyes she disengaged one of her
hands and passed an arm round him to support him better, to help
him to sink into a seat.</p>
<p>He let himself go, resting on her; he dropped upon the bench
and she fell on her knees beside him, his own arm round her
shoulder. So he remained an instant, staring up at his
shrine. “They say there’s a gap in the
array—they say it’s not full, complete. Just
one more,” he went on, softly—“isn’t that
what you wanted? Yes, one more, one more.”</p>
<p>“Ah no more—no more!” she wailed, as with a
quick new horror of it, under her breath.</p>
<p>“Yes, one more,” he repeated, simply; “just
one!” And with this his head dropped on her shoulder;
she felt that in his weakness he had fainted. But alone
with him in the dusky church a great dread was on her of what
might still happen, for his face had the whiteness of death.</p>
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