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<h2> XII </h2>
<p>Carl came into the sitting-room while Alexandra was lighting the lamp. She
looked up at him as she adjusted the shade. His sharp shoulders stooped as
if he were very tired, his face was pale, and there were bluish shadows
under his dark eyes. His anger had burned itself out and left him sick and
disgusted.</p>
<p>"You have seen Lou and Oscar?" Alexandra asked.</p>
<p>"Yes." His eyes avoided hers.</p>
<p>Alexandra took a deep breath. "And now you are going away. I thought so."</p>
<p>Carl threw himself into a chair and pushed the dark lock back from his
forehead with his white, nervous hand. "What a hopeless position you are
in, Alexandra!" he exclaimed feverishly. "It is your fate to be always
surrounded by little men. And I am no better than the rest. I am too
little to face the criticism of even such men as Lou and Oscar. Yes, I am
going away; to-morrow. I cannot even ask you to give me a promise until I
have something to offer you. I thought, perhaps, I could do that; but I
find I can't."</p>
<p>"What good comes of offering people things they don't need?" Alexandra
asked sadly. "I don't need money. But I have needed you for a great many
years. I wonder why I have been permitted to prosper, if it is only to
take my friends away from me."</p>
<p>"I don't deceive myself," Carl said frankly. "I know that I am going away
on my own account. I must make the usual effort. I must have something to
show for myself. To take what you would give me, I should have to be
either a very large man or a very small one, and I am only in the middle
class."</p>
<p>Alexandra sighed. "I have a feeling that if you go away, you will not come
back. Something will happen to one of us, or to both. People have to
snatch at happiness when they can, in this world. It is always easier to
lose than to find. What I have is yours, if you care enough about me to
take it."</p>
<p>Carl rose and looked up at the picture of John Bergson. "But I can't, my
dear, I can't! I will go North at once. Instead of idling about in
California all winter, I shall be getting my bearings up there. I won't
waste another week. Be patient with me, Alexandra. Give me a year!"</p>
<p>"As you will," said Alexandra wearily. "All at once, in a single day, I
lose everything; and I do not know why. Emil, too, is going away." Carl
was still studying John Bergson's face and Alexandra's eyes followed his.
"Yes," she said, "if he could have seen all that would come of the task he
gave me, he would have been sorry. I hope he does not see me now. I hope
that he is among the old people of his blood and country, and that tidings
do not reach him from the New World."</p>
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