“Oh, don’t swear!” she interrupted. “I know you believe that now, as you did once before. But I know you better than you do yourself, Jim. Your attitude to me is always generous, but it’s always conventional, too. You never would remind me of all this, I know that very well, but always, in your own heart, the reservation would be there, the regret and the pity! I know that I am a better woman and a stronger woman for all this thinking and suffering; you never will believe that. Let us suppose that we began again. Don’t you know that the day would come when my opinion would clash with that of some other woman in society, and you, knowing what you know of me, would feel that I was not qualified to judge in these things as other women are? Let us suppose that I wanted to befriend a maid who had got herself into trouble, or to take some wayward girl into my house for a trial; how patient would you be with me, under the circumstances?”
“Of course, you can always think up perfectly hypothetical circumstances!” Jim said impatiently.
“Marriage is difficult enough,” Julia pursued. “But marriage with a handicap is impossible! To feel that there is something you can’t change, that never will change, and that stands eternally between you! No, marriage isn’t for us, Jim, and we can only make the best of it, having made the original mistake!”
“Don’t ever say that again—it’s not true!” Jim said, with a sort of masterful anger. “Now, listen a moment. That isn’t true, and you don’t believe it. I’ve told you what I think of myself. I was blind, I was a fool. But that’s past. Give me another chance. I’ll make you the happiest woman in the world, Julia. I love you. I’ll be so proud of you! You can have a dozen girls under your wing all the time; you can answer the Queen back, and I’ll never have even a thought but what you’re the finest and sweetest woman in the world!”
The preposterous picture brought a shaky smile to Julia’s lips and a hint of tears to her eyes. She suddenly rose from her seat and went down to the garden.
“Our talking it over does no good, Jim,” she said, as he followed her, and stood looking at her and at Anna. “It’s all too fresh— it’s been too terrible for me—getting adjusted! I stand firm here, I feel the ground under my feet. I don’t want to go back to feeling all wrong, all out of key, helpless to straighten matters!”
“But we were happy!” he said, a passionate regret in his voice. “Think of our day in Chicago, Ju, and the day we took a hansom cab through Central Park—and were afraid the driver wasn’t sober! And do you remember the blue hat that would catch on the electric light, and the day the elevator stuck?”
“I think of it all so often, Jim,” Julia answered, with a smile as sad as tears could have been, and in the tender voice she might have used in speaking of the dead. “Sometimes I fit whole days together, just thinking of those old times. ’Then what did we do after that lunch?’ I think, or ’Where were we going that night that we were in such a hurry?’ and then by degrees it all comes back.” Julia drew a rose toward her on a tall bush, studied its leaves critically. “That was the happiest time, wasn’t it, Jim?” she asked, with her April smile.