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"Are often so odd? Oh yes; but Nanda, you know, allows for that oddity.
And Mrs. Brook, by the same token," Mitchy developed, "knows herself--no one better--what may frequently be thought of it. That's precisely the reason of her desire that you should have on this occasion explanations from a source that she's so good as to p.r.o.nounce, for the immediate purpose, superior. As for Nanda," he wound up, "to be aware that we're here together won't strike her as so bad a sign."
"No," Mr. Longdon attentively a.s.sented; "she'll hardly fear we're plotting her ruin. But what then has happened to her?"
"Well," said Mitchy, "it's you, I think, who will have to give it a name. I know you know what I've known."
Mr. Longdon, his nippers again in place, hesitated. "Yes, I know."
"And you've accepted it."
"How could I help it? To reckon with such cleverness--!"
"Was beyond you? Ah it wasn't my cleverness," Mitchy said. "There's a greater than mine. There's a greater even than Van's. That's the whole point," he went on while his friend looked at him hard. "You don't even like it just a little?"
Mr. Longdon wondered. "The existence of such an element--?"
"No; the existence simply of my knowledge of your idea."
"I suppose I'm bound to keep in mind in fairness the existence of my own knowledge of yours."
But Mitchy gave that the go-by. "Oh I've so many 'ideas'! I'm always getting hold of some new one and for the most part trying it--generally to let it go as a failure. Yes, I had one six months ago. I tried that.
I'm trying it still."
"Then I hope," said Mr. Longdon with a gaiety slightly strained, "that, contrary to your usual rule, it's a success."
It was a gaiety, for that matter, that Mitchy's could match. "It does promise well! But I've another idea even now, and it's just what I'm again trying."
"On me?" Mr. Longdon still somewhat extravagantly smiled.
Mitchy thought. "Well, on two or three persons, of whom you ARE the first for me to tackle. But what I must begin with is having from you that you recognise she trusts us."
Mitchy's idea after an instant had visibly gone further. "Both of them--the two women up there at present so strangely together. Mrs.
Brook must too; immensely. But for that you won't care."
Mr. Longdon had relapsed into an anxiety more natural than his expression of a moment before. "It's about time! But if Nanda didn't trust us," he went on, "her case would indeed be a sorry one. She has n.o.body else to trust."
"Yes." Mitchy's concurrence was grave. "Only you and me."
"Only you and me."
The eyes of the two men met over it in a pause terminated at last by Mitchy's saying: "We must make it all up to her."
"Is that your idea?"
"Ah," said Mitchy gently, "don't laugh at it."
His friend's grey gloom again covered him. "But what CAN--?" Then as Mitchy showed a face that seemed to wince with a silent "What COULD?"
the old man completed his objection. "Think of the magnitude of the loss."
"Oh I don't for a moment suggest," Mitchy hastened to reply, "that it isn't immense."
"She does care for him, you know," said Mr. Longdon.
Mitchy, at this, gave a wide, prolonged glare. "'Know'--?" he ever so delicately murmured.
His irony had quite touched. "But of course you know! You know everything--Nanda and you."
There was a tone in it that moved a spring, and Mitchy laughed out. "I like your putting me with her! But we're all together. With Nanda," he next added, "it IS deep."
His companion took it from him. "Deep."
"And yet somehow it isn't abject."
The old man wondered. "'Abject'?"
"I mean it isn't pitiful. In its way," Mitchy developed, "it's happy."
This too, though rather ruefully, Mr. Longdon could take from him.
"Yes--in its way."
"Any pa.s.sion so great, so complete," Mitchy went on, "is--satisfied or unsatisfied--a life." Mr. Longdon looked so interested that his fellow visitor, evidently stirred by what was now an appeal and a dependence, grew still more bland, or at least more a.s.sured, for affirmation. "She's not TOO sorry for herself."
"Ah she's so proud!"
"Yes, but that's a help."
"Oh--not for US!"
It arrested Mitchy, but his ingenuity could only rebound. "In ONE way: that of reducing us to feel that the desire to 'make up' to her is--well, mainly for OUR relief. If she 'trusts' us, as I said just now, it isn't for THAT she does so." As his friend appeared to wait then to hear, it was presently with positive joy that he showed he could meet the last difficulty. "What she trusts us to do"--oh Mitchy had worked it out!--"is to let HIM off."
"Let him off?" It still left Mr. Longdon dim.
"Easily. That's all."
"But what would letting him off hard be? It seems to me he's--on any terms--already beyond us. He IS off."
Mr. Longdon had given it a sound that suddenly made Mitchy appear to collapse under a sharper sense of the matter. "He IS off," he moodily echoed.
His companion, again a little bewildered, watched him; then with impatience: "Do, please, tell me what has happened."
He quickly pulled himself round. "Well, he was, after a long absence, here a while since as if expressly to see her. But after spending half an hour he went away without it."
Mr. Longdon's watch continued. "He spent the half-hour with her mother instead?"
"Oh 'instead'--it was hardly that. He at all events dropped his idea."
"And what had it been, his idea?"
"You speak as if he had as many as I!" Mitchy replied. "In a manner indeed he has," he continued as if for himself. "But they're of a different kind," he said to Mr. Longdon.