<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
<p>It was repeated the next day; it went on for three days; and at the
end of that time she knew what to think. When, at the beginning,
she had emerged from her temporary shelter Captain Everard had quitted
the shop; and he had not come again that evening, as it had struck her
he possibly might—might all the more easily that there were numberless
persons who came, morning and afternoon, numberless times, so that he
wouldn’t necessarily have attracted attention. The second
day it was different and yet on the whole worse. His access to
her had become possible—she felt herself even reaping the fruit
of her yesterday’s glare at Mr. Buckton; but transacting his business
with him didn’t simplify—it could, in spite of the rigour
of circumstance, feed so her new conviction. The rigour was tremendous,
and his telegrams—not now mere pretexts for getting at her—were
apparently genuine; yet the conviction had taken but a night to develop.
It could be simply enough expressed; she had had the glimmer of it the
day before in her idea that he needed no more help than she had already
given; that it was help he himself was prepared to render. He
had come up to town but for three or four days; he had been absolutely
obliged to be absent after the other time; yet he would, now that he
was face to face with her, stay on as much longer as she liked.
Little by little it was thus clarified, though from the first flash
of his re-appearance she had read into it the real essence.</p>
<p>That was what the night before, at eight o’clock, her hour
to go, had made her hang back and dawdle. She did last things
or pretended to do them; to be in the cage had suddenly become her safety,
and she was literally afraid of the alternate self who might be waiting
outside. <i>He</i> might be waiting; it was he who was her alternate
self, and of him she was afraid. The most extraordinary change
had taken place in her from the moment of her catching the impression
he seemed to have returned on purpose to give her. Just before
she had done so, on that bewitched afternoon, she had seen herself approach
without a scruple the porter at Park Chambers; then as the effect of
the rush of a consciousness quite altered she had on at last quitting
Cocker’s, gone straight home for the first time since her return
from Bournemouth. She had passed his door every night for weeks,
but nothing would have induced her to pass it now. This change
was the tribute of her fear—the result of a change in himself
as to which she needed no more explanation than his mere face vividly
gave her; strange though it was to find an element of deterrence in
the object that she regarded as the most beautiful in the world.
He had taken it from her in the Park that night that she wanted him
not to propose to her to sup; but he had put away the lesson by this
time—he practically proposed supper every time he looked at her.
This was what, for that matter, mainly filled the three days.
He came in twice on each of these, and it was as if he came in to give
her a chance to relent. That was after all, she said to herself
in the intervals, the most that he did. There were ways, she fully
recognised, in which he spared her, and other particular ways as to
which she meant that her silence should be full to him of exquisite
pleading. The most particular of all was his not being outside,
at the corner, when she quitted the place for the night. This
he might so easily have been—so easily if he hadn’t been
so nice. She continued to recognise in his forbearance the fruit
of her dumb supplication, and the only compensation he found for it
was the harmless freedom of being able to appear to say: “Yes,
I’m in town only for three or four days, but, you know, I <i>would</i>
stay on.” He struck her as calling attention each day, each
hour, to the rapid ebb of time; he exaggerated to the point of putting
it that there were only two days more, that there was at last, dreadfully,
only one.</p>
<p>There were other things still that he struck her as doing with a
special intention; as to the most marked of which—unless indeed
it were the most obscure—she might well have marvelled that it
didn’t seem to her more horrid. It was either the frenzy
of her imagination or the disorder of his baffled passion that gave
her once or twice the vision of his putting down redundant money—sovereigns
not concerned with the little payments he was perpetually making—so
that she might give him some sign of helping him to slip them over to
her. What was most extraordinary in this impression was the amount
of excuse that, with some incoherence, she found for him. He wanted
to pay her because there was nothing to pay her for. He wanted
to offer her things he knew she wouldn’t take. He wanted
to show her how much he respected her by giving her the supreme chance
to show <i>him</i> she was respectable. Over the dryest transactions,
at any rate, their eyes had out these questions. On the third
day he put in a telegram that had evidently something of the same point
as the stray sovereigns—a message that was in the first place
concocted and that on a second thought he took back from her before
she had stamped it. He had given her time to read it and had only
then bethought himself that he had better not send it. If it was
not to Lady Bradeen at Twindle—where she knew her ladyship then
to be—this was because an address to Doctor Buzzard at Brickwood
was just as good, with the added merit of its not giving away quite
so much a person whom he had still, after all, in a manner to consider.
It was of course most complicated, only half lighted; but there was,
discernibly enough, a scheme of communication in which Lady Bradeen
at Twindle and Dr. Buzzard at Brickwood were, within limits, one and
the same person. The words he had shown her and then taken back
consisted, at all events, of the brief but vivid phrase “Absolutely
impossible.” The point was not that she should transmit
it; the point was just that she should see it. What was absolutely
impossible was that before he had setted something at Cocker’s
he should go either to Twindle or to Brickwood.</p>
<p>The logic of this, in turn, for herself, was that she could lend
herself to no settlement so long as she so intensely knew. What
she knew was that he was, almost under peril of life, clenched in a
situation: therefore how could she also know where a poor girl in the
P.O. might really stand? It was more and more between them that
if he might convey to her he was free, with all the impossible locked
away into a closed chapter, her own case might become different for
her, she might understand and meet him and listen. But he could
convey nothing of the sort, and he only fidgeted and floundered in his
want of power. The chapter wasn’t in the least closed, not
for the other party; and the other party had a pull, somehow and somewhere:
this his whole attitude and expression confessed, at the same time that
they entreated her not to remember and not to mind. So long as
she did remember and did mind he could only circle about and go and
come, doing futile things of which he was ashamed. He was ashamed
of his two words to Dr. Buzzard; he went out of the shop as soon as
he had crumpled up the paper again and thrust it into his pocket.
It had been an abject little exposure of dreadful impossible passion.
He appeared in fact to be too ashamed to come back. He had once
more left town, and a first week elapsed, and a second. He had
had naturally to return to the real mistress of his fate; she had insisted—she
knew how to insist, and he couldn’t put in another hour.
There was always a day when she called time. It was known to our
young friend moreover that he had now been dispatching telegrams from
other offices. She knew at last so much that she had quite lost
her earlier sense of merely guessing. There were no different
shades of distinctness—it all bounced out.</p>
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