an integral part of it. What would his housekeeper
say? But now that he had actually removed it
from the wall he could not replace it, so he opened
the closet door and thrust it into a corner among relics
which had found refuge there. He had put his
past in the closet; yet the relief he felt was mingled
with the peculiar qualm that follows the discovery
of symptoms never before remarked. Why should
this woman have this extraordinary effect of making
him dissatisfied with himself? He sat down again
and tried to review the affair from that first day
when he had surprised in her eyes the flame dwelling
in her. She had completely upset his life, increasingly
distracted his mind until now he could imagine no
peace unless he possessed her. Hitherto he had
recognized in his feeling for her nothing but that
same desire he had had for other women, intensified
to a degree never before experienced. But this
sudden access of morality—he did not actually
define it as such—was disquieting.
And in the feverish, semi-objective survey he was
now making of his emotional tract he was discovering
the presence of other disturbing symptoms such as
an unwonted tenderness, a consideration almost amounting
to pity which at times he had vaguely sensed yet never
sought imaginatively to grasp. It bewildered
him by hampering a ruthlessness hitherto absolute.
The fierceness of her inflamed his passion, yet he
recognized dimly behind this fierceness an instinct
of self-protection—and he thought of her
in this moment as a struggling bird that fluttered
out of his hands when they were ready to close over
her. So it had been to-night. He might have
kept her, prevented her from taking the car. Yet
he had let her go! There came again, utterly
to blot this out, the memory of her lips.
Even then, there had been something sorrowful in that
kiss, a quality he resented as troubling, a flavour
that came to him after the wildness was spent.
What was she struggling against? What was behind
her resistance? She loved him! It had never
before occurred to him to enter into the nature of
her feelings, having been so preoccupied with and tortured
by his own. This realization, that she loved
him, as it persisted, began to make him uneasy, though
it should, according to all experience, have been
a reason for sheer exultation. He began to see
that with her it involved complications, responsibilities,
disclosures, perhaps all of those things he had formerly
avoided and resented in woman. He thought of certain
friends of his who had become tangled up—of
one in particular whose bank account had been powerless
to extricate him.... And he was ashamed of himself.