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<h2> CHAPTER XXIV </h2>
<p>Mr Farquharson was to retain his seat until the early spring, for the
double purpose of maintaining his influence upon an important commission
of which he was chairman until the work should be done, and of giving the
imperial departure championed by his successor as good a chance as
possible of becoming understood in the constituency. It was understood
that the new writ would issue for a date in March; Elgin referred all
interest to that point, and prophesied for itself a lively winter. Another
event, of importance less general, was arranged for the end of February—the
arrival of Miss Cameron and Mrs Kilbannon from Scotland. Finlay had
proposed an earlier date, but matters of business connected with her
mother’s estate would delay Miss Cameron’s departure. Her arrival would be
the decisive point of another campaign. He and Advena faced it without
misgiving, but there were moments when Finlay greatly wished the moment
past.</p>
<p>Their intimacy had never been conspicuous, and their determination to make
no change in it could be carried out without attracting attention. It was
very dear to them, that determination. They saw it as a test, as an ideal.
Last of all, perhaps, as an alleviation. They were both too much
encumbered with ideas to move simply, quickly, on the impulse of passion.
They looked at it through the wrong end of the glass, and thought they put
it farther away. They believed that their relation comprised, would always
comprise, the best of life. It was matter for discussion singularly
attractive; they allowed themselves upon it wide scope in theory. They
could speak of it in the heroic temper, without sadness or bitterness; the
thing was to tear away the veil and look fate in the face. The great
thing, perhaps, was to speak of it while still they could give themselves
leave; a day would arrive, they acknowledged with averted eyes, when
dumbness would be more becoming. Meanwhile, Mrs Murchison would have found
it hard to sustain her charge against them that they talked of nothing but
books and authors; the philosophy of life, as they were intensely creating
it, was more entrancing than any book or any author. Simply and
definitely, and to their own satisfaction, they had abandoned the natural
demands of their state; they lived in its exaltation and were far from
accidents. Deep in both of them was a kind of protective nobility; I will
not say it cost them nothing, but it turned the scenes between them into
comedy of the better sort, the kind that deserves the relief of stone or
bronze. Advena, had she heard it, would have repelled Dr Drummond’s
warning with indignation. If it were so possible to keep their friendship
on an unfaltering level then, with the latitude they had, what danger
could attend them later, when the social law would support them, divide
them, protect them? Dr Drummond, suspecting all, looked grimly on, and
from November to March found no need to invite Mr Finlay to occupy the
pulpit of Knox Church.</p>
<p>They had come to full knowledge that night of their long walk in the dark
together; but even then, in the rush and shock and glory of it, they had
held apart; and their broken avowals had crossed with difficulty from one
to the other. The whole fabric of circumstance was between them, to
realize and to explore; later surveys, as we know, had not reduced it.
They gave it great credit as a barrier; I suppose because it kept them out
of each other’s arms. It had done that.</p>
<p>It was Advena, I fear, who insisted most that they should continue upon
terms of happy debt to one another, the balance always changing, the
account never closed and rendered. She no doubt felt that she might impose
the terms; she had unconsciously the sense of greater sacrifice, and knew
that she had been mistress of the situation long before he was aware of
it. He agreed with joy and with misgiving; he saw with enthusiasm her high
conception of their alliance, but sometimes wondered, poor fellow, whether
he was right in letting it cover him. He came to the house as he had done
before, as often as he could, and reproached himself that he could not,
after all, come very often.</p>
<p>That they should discuss their relation as candidly as they sustained it
was perhaps a little peculiar to them, so I have laid stress on it; but it
was not by any means their sole preoccupation. They talked like tried
friends of their every-day affairs. Indeed, after the trouble and
intoxication of their great understanding had spent itself, it was the
small practical interests of life that seemed to hold them most. One might
think that Nature, having made them her invitation upon the higher plane,
abandoned them in the very scorn of her success to the warm human
commonplaces that do her work well enough with the common type. Mrs
Murchison would have thought better of them if she had chanced again to
overhear.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t advise you to have it lined with fur,” Advena was saying. The
winter had sharply announced itself, and Finlay, to her reproach about his
light overcoat, had declared his intention of ordering a buffalo-skin the
following day. “And the buffaloes are all gone, you know—thirty
years ago,” she laughed. “You really are not modern in practical matters.
Does it ever surprise you that you get no pemmican for dinner, and hardly
ever meet an Indian in his feathers?”</p>
<p>He looked at her with delight in his sombre eyes. It was a new discovery,
her capacity for happily chaffing him, only revealed since she had come
out of her bonds to love; it was hard to say which of them took the
greater pleasure in it.</p>
<p>“What is the use of living in Canada if you can’t have fur on your
clothes?” he demanded.</p>
<p>“You may have a little—astrakhan, I would—on the collar and
cuffs,” she said. “A fur lining is too hot if there happens to be a thaw,
and then you would leave it off and take cold. You have all the look,” she
added, with a gravely considering glance at him, “of a person who ought to
take care of his chest.”</p>
<p>He withdrew his eyes hurriedly, and fixed them instead on his pipe. He
always brought it with him, by her order, and Advena usually sewed. He
thought as he watched her that it made the silences enjoyable.</p>
<p>“And expensive, I dare say, too,” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes, more or less. Alec paid fifty dollars for his, and never liked it.”</p>
<p>“Fifty dollars—ten pounds! No vair for me!” he declared. “By the
way, Mrs Firmin is threatening to turn me out of house and home. A married
daughter is coming to live with her, and she wants my rooms.”</p>
<p>“When does she come—the married daughter?”</p>
<p>“Oh, not till the early spring! There’s no immediate despair,” said
Finlay, “but it is dislocating. My books and I had just succeeded in
making room for one another.”</p>
<p>“But you will have to move, in any case, in the early spring.”</p>
<p>“I suppose I will. I had—I might have remembered that.”</p>
<p>“Have you found a house yet?” Advena asked him.</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Have you been looking?” It was a gentle, sensible reminder.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I haven’t.” He moved in his chair as if in physical
discomfort. “Do you think I ought—so soon? There are always plenty
of—houses, aren’t there?”</p>
<p>“Not plenty of desirable ones. Do you think you must live in East Elgin?”</p>
<p>“It would be rather more convenient.”</p>
<p>“Because there are two semidetached in River Street, just finished, that
look very pretty and roomy. I thought when I saw them that one of them
might be what you would like.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” he said, and tried not to say it curtly.</p>
<p>“They belong to White, the grocer. River Street isn’t East Elgin, but it
is that way, and it would be a great deal pleasanter for—for her.”</p>
<p>“I must consider that, of course. You haven’t been in them? I should hope
for a bright sitting-room, and a very private study.”</p>
<p>If Advena was aware of any unconscious implication, the pair of eyes she
turned upon him showed no trace of satisfaction in it.</p>
<p>“No, I haven’t. But if I could be of any use I should be very glad to go
over them with you, and—”</p>
<p>She stopped involuntarily, checked by the embarrassment in his face,
though she had to wait for his words to explain it.</p>
<p>“I should be most grateful. But—but might it not be misunderstood?”</p>
<p>She bent her head over her work, and one of those instants passed between
them which he had learned to dread. They were so completely the human pair
as they sat together, withdrawn in comfort and shelter, absorbed in homely
matters and in each other; it was easy to forget that they were only a
picture, a sham, and that the reality lay further on, in the early spring.
It must have been hard for him to hear without resentment that she was
ready to help him to make a home for that reality. He was fast growing
instructed in women, although by a post-graduate course.</p>
<p>Advena looked up. “Possibly,” she said, calmly, and their agitation lay
still between them. He was silently angry; the thing that stirred without
their leave had been sweet.</p>
<p>“No,” said Advena, “I can’t go, I suppose. I’m sorry. I should have liked
so much to be of use.” She looked up at him appealingly, and sudden tears
came and stood in her eyes, and would perhaps have undone his hurt but
that he was staring into the fire.</p>
<p>“How can you be of use,” he said, almost irritably, “in such ways as
those? They are not important, and I am not sure that for us they are
legitimate. If you were about to be—married”—he seemed to
plunge at the word—“I should not wish either to hasten you or to
house you. I should turn my back on it all. You should have nothing from
me,” he went on, with a forced smile, “but my blessing, delivered over my
shoulder.”</p>
<p>“I am sure they are not important,” she said humbly—privately all
unwilling to give up her martyrdom, “but surely they are legitimate. I
would like to help you in every little way I can. Don’t you like me in
your life? You have said that I may stay.”</p>
<p>“I believe you think that by taking strong measures one can exorcise
things,” he said. “That if we could only write out this history of ours in
our hearts’ blood it would somehow vanish.”</p>
<p>“No,” she said, “but I should like to do it all the same.”</p>
<p>“You must bear with me if I refuse the heroic in little. It is even harder
than the other.” He broke off, leaning back and looking at her from under
his shading hand as if that might protect him from too complete a vision.
The firelight was warm on her cheek and hair, her needle once again
completed the dear delusion: she sat there, his wife. This was an aspect
he forbade, but it would return; here it was again.</p>
<p>“It is good to have you in my life,” he said. “It is also good to
recognize one’s possibilities.”</p>
<p>“How can you definitely lose me?” she asked, and he shook his head.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. Now that I have found you it is as if you and I had been
rocked together on the tide of that inconceivable ocean that casts us
half-awake upon life,” he said dreamily. “It isn’t friendship of ideas,
it’s a friendship of spirit. Indeed, I hope and pray never wholly to lose
that.”</p>
<p>“You never will,” she told him. “How many worlds one lives in as the day
goes by with the different people one cares for—one beyond the
other, concentric, ringing from the heart! Yours comprises all the others;
it lies the farthest out—and alas! at present, the closest in,” she
added irresistibly to the asking of his eyes.</p>
<p>“But,” she hurried on, taking high ground to remedy her indiscretion, “I
look forward to the time when this—other feeling of ours will become
just an idea, as it is now just an emotion, at which we should try to
smile. It is the attitude of the gods.”</p>
<p>“And therefore not becoming to men. Why should we, not being gods. borrow
their attitude?” said Finlay.</p>
<p>“I could never kill it,” she put her work in her lap to say, “by any
sudden act of violence. It would seem a kind of suicide. While it rules it
is like one’s life—absolute. But to isolate it—to place it
beyond the currents from the heart—to look at it, and realize it,
and conquer it for what it is—I don’t think it need take so very
long. And then our friendship will be beautiful without reproach.”</p>
<p>“I sometimes fear there may not be time enough in life,” he said. “And if
I find that I must simply go—to British Columbia, I think—those
mining missions would give a man his chance against himself. There is
splendid work to be done there, of a rough-and-ready kind that would make
it puerile to spend time in self-questioning.”</p>
<p>She smiled as if at a violent boy. “We can do it. We can do it here,” she
said. “May I quote another religion to you? ‘From purification there
arises in the Yogi a thorough discernment of the cause and nature of the
body, whereupon he loses that regard which others have for the bodily
form.’ Then, if he loves, he loves in spirit and in truth. I look forward
to the time,” she went on calmly, “when the best that I can give you or
you can give me will ride upon a glance.”</p>
<p>“I used to feel more drawn to the ascetic achievement and its rewards,” he
remarked thoughtfully, “than I do now.”</p>
<p>“If I were not a Presbyterian in Canada,” she told him, “I would be a
Buddhist in Burma. But I have inherited the Shorter Catechism; I must
remain without the Law.”</p>
<p>Finlay smiled. “They are the simple,” he said. “Our Law makes wise the
simple.”</p>
<p>Advena looked for a moment into the fire. She was listening, with
admiration, to her heart; she would not be led to consider esoteric
contrasts of East and West.</p>
<p>“Isn’t there something that appeals to you,” she said, “in the thought of
just leaving it, all unsaid and all undone, a dear and tender projection
upon the future that faded—a lovely thing we turned away from, until
one day it was no longer there?”</p>
<p>“Charming,” he said, averting his eyes so that she should not see the
hunger in them. “Charming—literature!”</p>
<p>She smiled and sighed, and he wrenched his mind to the consideration of
the Buddhism of Browning. She followed him obediently, but the lines they
wanted did not come easily; they were compelled to search and verify.
Something lately seemed lost to them of that kind of glad activity; he was
more aware of it than she, since he was less occupied in the aesthetic
ecstasy of self-torture. In the old time before the sun rose they had been
so conscious of realms of idea lying just beyond the achievement of
thought, approachable, visible by phrases, brokenly, realms which they
could see closer when they essayed together. He constantly struggled to
reach those enchanted areas again, but they seemed to have gone down
behind the horizon; and the only inspiration that carried them far drew
its impetus from the poetry of their plight. They looked for verses to
prove that Browning’s imagination carried him bravely through lives and
lives to come, and found them to speculate whether in such chances they
might hope to meet again.</p>
<p>And the talk came back to his difficulties with his Board of Management,
and to her choice of a frame for the etching he had given her, by his
friend the Glasgow impressionist, and to their opinion of a common
acquaintance, and to Lorne and his prospects. He told her how little she
resembled her brother, and where they diverged, and how; and she listened
with submission and delight, enchanted to feel his hand upon her intimate
nature. She lingered in the hall while he got into his overcoat, and saw
that a glove was the worse for wear. “Would it be the heroic-in-little,”
she begged, “to let me mend that?”</p>
<p>As he went out alone into the winter streets he too drew upon a pagan for
his admonition. “‘What then art thou doing here, O imagination?’” he
groaned in his private heart. “‘Go away, I entreat thee by the gods, for I
want thee not. But thou art come again according to thy old fashion. I am
not angry with thee, only go away!’”</p>
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