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<h2> XIV </h2>
<p>The great renewals take effect as imperceptibly as the first workings of
spring. Glennard, though he felt himself brought nearer to his wife, was
still, as it were, hardly within speaking distance. He was but laboriously
acquiring the rudiments of their new medium of communication; and he had
to grope for her through the dense fog of his humiliation, the distorting
vapor against which his personality loomed grotesque and mean.</p>
<p>Only the fact that we are unaware how well our nearest know us enables us
to live with them. Love is the most impregnable refuge of self-esteem, and
we hate the eye that reaches to our nakedness. If Glennard did not hate
his wife it was slowly, sufferingly, that there was born in him that
profounder passion which made his earlier feeling seem a mere commotion of
the blood. He was like a child coming back to the sense of an enveloping
presence: her nearness was a breast on which he leaned.</p>
<p>They did not, at first, talk much together, and each beat a devious track
about the outskirts of the subject that lay between them like a haunted
wood. But every word, every action, seemed to glance at it, to draw toward
it, as though a fount of healing sprang in its poisoned shade. If only
they might cut away through the thicket to that restoring spring!</p>
<p>Glennard, watching his wife with the intentness of a wanderer to whom no
natural sign is negligible, saw that she had taken temporary refuge in the
purpose of renouncing the money. If both, theoretically, owned the
inefficacy of such amends, the woman's instinctive subjectiveness made her
find relief in this crude form of penance. Glennard saw that she meant to
live as frugally as possible till what she deemed their debt was
discharged; and he prayed she might not discover how far-reaching, in its
merely material sense, was the obligation she thus hoped to acquit. Her
mind was fixed on the sum originally paid for the letters, and this he
knew he could lay aside in a year or two. He was touched, meanwhile, by
the spirit that made her discard the petty luxuries which she regarded as
the signs of their bondage. Their shared renunciations drew her nearer to
him, helped, in their evidence of her helplessness, to restore the full
protecting stature of his love. And still they did not speak.</p>
<p>It was several weeks later that, one afternoon by the drawing-room fire,
she handed him a letter that she had been reading when he entered.</p>
<p>"I've heard from Mr. Flamel," she said.</p>
<p>Glennard turned pale. It was as though a latent presence had suddenly
become visible to both. He took the letter mechanically.</p>
<p>"It's from Smyrna," she said. "Won't you read it?"</p>
<p>He handed it back. "You can tell me about it—his hand's so
illegible." He wandered to the other end of the room and then turned and
stood before her. "I've been thinking of writing to Flamel," he said.</p>
<p>She looked up.</p>
<p>"There's one point," he continued, slowly, "that I ought to clear up. I
told him you'd known about the letters all along; for a long time, at
least; and I saw it hurt him horribly. It was just what I meant to do, of
course; but I can't leave him to that false impression; I must write him."</p>
<p>She received this without outward movement, but he saw that the depths
were stirred. At length she returned, in a hesitating tone, "Why do you
call it a false impression? I did know."</p>
<p>"Yes, but I implied you didn't care."</p>
<p>"Ah!"</p>
<p>He still stood looking down on her. "Don't you want me to set that right?"
he tentatively pursued.</p>
<p>She lifted her head and fixed him bravely. "It isn't necessary," she said.</p>
<p>Glennard flushed with the shock of the retort; then, with a gesture of
comprehension, "No," he said, "with you it couldn't be; but I might still
set myself right."</p>
<p>She looked at him gently. "Don't I," she murmured, "do that?"</p>
<p>"In being yourself merely? Alas, the rehabilitation's too complete! You
make me seem—to myself even—what I'm not; what I can never be.
I can't, at times, defend myself from the delusion; but I can at least
enlighten others."</p>
<p>The flood was loosened, and kneeling by her he caught her hands. "Don't
you see that it's become an obsession with me? That if I could strip
myself down to the last lie—only there'd always be another one left
under it!—and do penance naked in the market-place, I should at
least have the relief of easing one anguish by another? Don't you see that
the worst of my torture is the impossibility of such amends?"</p>
<p>Her hands lay in his without returning pressure. "Ah, poor woman, poor
woman," he heard her sigh.</p>
<p>"Don't pity her, pity me! What have I done to her or to you, after all?
You're both inaccessible! It was myself I sold."</p>
<p>He took an abrupt turn away from her; then halted before her again. "How
much longer," he burst out, "do you suppose you can stand it? You've been
magnificent, you've been inspired, but what's the use? You can't wipe out
the ignominy of it. It's miserable for you and it does HER no good!"</p>
<p>She lifted a vivid face. "That's the thought I can't bear!" she cried.</p>
<p>"What thought?"</p>
<p>"That it does her no good—all you're feeling, all you're suffering.
Can it be that it makes no difference?"</p>
<p>He avoided her challenging glance. "What's done is done," he muttered.</p>
<p>"Is it ever, quite, I wonder?" she mused. He made no answer and they
lapsed into one of the pauses that are a subterranean channel of
communication.</p>
<p>It was she who, after awhile, began to speak with a new suffusing
diffidence that made him turn a roused eye on her.</p>
<p>"Don't they say," she asked, feeling her way as in a kind of tender
apprehensiveness, "that the early Christians, instead of pulling down the
heathen temples—the temples of the unclean gods—purified them
by turning them to their own uses? I've always thought one might do that
with one's actions—the actions one loathes but can't undo. One can
make, I mean, a wrong the door to other wrongs or an impassable wall
against them...." Her voice wavered on the word. "We can't always tear
down the temples we've built to the unclean gods, but we can put good
spirits in the house of evil—the spirits of mercy and shame and
understanding, that might never have come to us if we hadn't been in such
great need...."</p>
<p>She moved over to him and laid a hesitating hand on his. His head was bent
and he did not change his attitude. She sat down beside him without
speaking; but their silences now were fertile as rain-clouds—they
quickened the seeds of understanding.</p>
<p>At length he looked up. "I don't know," he said, "what spirits have come
to live in the house of evil that I built—but you're there and
that's enough for me. It's strange," he went on after another pause, "she
wished the best for me so often, and now, at last, it's through her that
it's come to me. But for her I shouldn't have known you—it's through
her that I've found you. Sometimes, do you know?—that makes it
hardest—makes me most intolerable to myself. Can't you see that it's
the worst thing I've got to face? I sometimes think I could have borne it
better if you hadn't understood! I took everything from her—everything—even
to the poor shelter of loyalty she'd trusted in—the only thing I
could have left her!—I took everything from her, I deceived her, I
despoiled her, I destroyed her—and she's given me YOU in return!"</p>
<p>His wife's cry caught him up. "It isn't that she's given ME to you—it
is that she's given you to yourself." She leaned to him as though swept
forward on a wave of pity. "Don't you see," she went on, as his eyes hung
on her, "that that's the gift you can't escape from, the debt you're
pledged to acquit? Don't you see that you've never before been what she
thought you, and that now, so wonderfully, she's made you into the man she
loved? THAT'S worth suffering for, worth dying for, to a woman—that's
the gift she would have wished to give!"</p>
<p>"Ah," he cried, "but woe to him by whom it cometh. What did I ever give
her?"</p>
<p>"The happiness of giving," she said.</p>
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