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"Oh, at aspiring he beats Sh.e.l.ley into apoplexy."
"He stands for the imperishable illusion----"
"The stupendous hope----"
"And, after all, he adores _you_."
"And n.o.body else does," said Tanqueray.
"That's Nicky's achievement. He _does_ see what you are. It's his little claim to immortality. Just think, George, when Nicky dies and goes to heaven he'll turn up at the gates of the poets' paradise, and they'll let him in on the strength of that. The angel of the singing stars will come up to him and say, 'Nicky, you sing abominably, but you can see.
You saw George Tanqueray when n.o.body else could. Your sonnets and your ballads are forgiven you; and we've got a nice place for you, Nicky, near Keats and Sh.e.l.ley.' Because it wouldn't be heaven for Nicky if he wasn't near them."
"How about _them_, though?"
"Oh, up in heaven you won't see anything of Nicky except his heart."
"I suppose he'll be stuck somewhere near you, too. It won't be heaven for him if he isn't. The first thing he'll ask is, 'Where's Jane?'"
"And then they'll break it to him very gently--'Jane's in the other place, Nicky, where Mr. Tanqueray is. We had to send her down, because if she wasn't there it wouldn't be h.e.l.l for Mr. Tanqueray.'"
"But why am _I_ down there?"
"Because you didn't see what Nicky was."
"If you don't take care, Jinny, he'll 'have' you like the rest. You're laying up sorrow for yourself in the day when Nicky publishes his poems."
"It's you he'll turn to."
"No. I'm not celebrated," said he grimly. "There, do you see the full horror of it?"
"I do," she moaned.
Tanqueray's devil came back to him.
"Do you think he'll fall in love with Laura?"
"No, I don't." She said it coolly, though his gaze was upon her, and they were both of them aware of Nicky's high infatuation.
"Why not?" he said lightly.
"Because Nicky'll never be in love with any woman as she is; and n.o.body could be in love with Laura as she isn't."
She faced him in her courage. He might take it, if he liked, that she knew Nicky was in love with her as she was not; that she knew Tanqueray would never, like Nicky, see her as she was not, to be in love with that.
"Oh, you're too subtle," he said. But he understood her subtlety.
He must tell her about Rose. Before the others could come up with them he must tell her. And then he must tell Nicky.
"Jane," he said, "will you forgive me for never coming to see you? I simply couldn't come."
"I know, George, I know."
"You don't. You don't know what I felt like."
"Perhaps not. And yet, I think, you might----"
But what she thought he might have done she would not tell him.
"At any rate," said he, "you'll let me come and see you now? Often; I want to come often."
He meant to tell her that his marriage was to make no difference.
"Come as often as you want. Come as often as you used to."
"Was it so very often?"
"Not too often."
"I say, those were glorious times we had. We'll have them again, Jinny.
There are things we've got to talk about. Things we've got to do. Why, we're hardly beginning."
"Do you remember saying, 'When you've made yourself an absolutely clear medium, then you can begin'?"
"I remember."
He was content now to join her in singing the duet of remembrance.
She dismissed herself. "What have _you_ been doing?"
"Not much. It looks as if I couldn't do things without you."
A look of heavenly happiness came upon her face, and pa.s.sed.
"That isn't so, George. There never was anybody less dependent on other people. That's why nothing has ever stopped you. Nothing ever will.
Whereas--you're right about me. Anything might stop me."
"Could _I_ stop you?"
Not for his life could he have told what made him ask her that question, whether an insane impulse, or a purely intellectual desire to complete his knowledge of her, to know how deep she had gone in and what his power was, whether he could, indeed, "stop" her.
"You?" she said, and her voice had a long, profound and pa.s.sionate vibration. He had not dreamed that such a tone could have been wrung from Jane.
Her eyes met his. Steady they were and deep, under their level brows; but in them, too, was that sudden, unexpected quality. Something in her startled him with its intensity.
Her voice, her look, had made it impossible for him to tell her about Rose. It was not the moment.
"I didn't know she was like that," he thought.