The Golden Bowl — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 166 pages of information about The Golden Bowl — Volume 2.

The Golden Bowl — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 166 pages of information about The Golden Bowl — Volume 2.

“Oh, all right’s a good deal to say.  But I seem at least to see, as I haven’t before, where I am with it.”

Fanny bountifully brooded; there was a point left vague.  “And you have it from him?—­your husband himself has told you?”

“‘Told’ me—?”

“Why, what you speak of.  It isn’t of an assurance received from him then that you do speak?”

At which Maggie had continued to stare.  “Dear me, no.  Do you suppose I’ve asked him for an assurance?”

“Ah, you haven’t?” Her companion smiled.  “That’s what I supposed you might mean.  Then, darling, what have you—?”

“Asked him for?  I’ve asked him for nothing.”

But this, in turn, made Fanny stare.  “Then nothing, that evening of the Embassy dinner, passed between you?”

“On the contrary, everything passed.”

“Everything—?”

“Everything.  I told him what I knew—­and I told him how I knew it.”

Mrs. Assingham waited.  “And that was all?”

“Wasn’t it quite enough?”

“Oh, love,” she bridled, “that’s for you to have judged!”

“Then I have judged,” said Maggie—­“I did judge.  I made sure he understood—­then I let him alone.”

Mrs. Assingham wondered.  “But he didn’t explain—?”

“Explain?  Thank God, no!” Maggie threw back her head as with horror at the thought, then the next moment added:  “And I didn’t, either.”

The decency of pride in it shed a cold little light—­yet as from heights at the base of which her companion rather panted.  “But if he neither denies nor confesses—?”

“He does what’s a thousand times better—­he lets it alone.  He does,” Maggie went on, “as he would do; as I see now that I was sure he would.  He lets me alone.”

Fanny Assingham turned it over.  “Then how do you know so where, as you say, you ’are’?”

“Why, just by that.  I put him in possession of the difference; the difference made, about me, by the fact that I hadn’t been, after all—­though with a wonderful chance, I admitted, helping me—­too stupid to have arrived at knowledge.  He had to see that I’m changed for him—­quite changed from the idea of me that he had so long been going on with.  It became a question then of his really taking in the change—­and what I now see is that he is doing so.”

Fanny followed as she could.  “Which he shows by letting you, as you say, alone?”

Maggie looked at her a minute.  “And by letting her.”

Mrs. Assingham did what she might to embrace it—­checked a little, however, by a thought that was the nearest approach she could have, in this almost too large air, to an inspiration.  “Ah, but does Charlotte let him?”

“Oh, that’s another affair—­with which I’ve practically nothing to do.  I dare say, however, she doesn’t.”  And the Princess had a more distant gaze for the image evoked by the question.  “I don’t in fact well see how she can.  But the point for me is that he understands.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Golden Bowl — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.