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    Chapter 7 - Page 2

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    smiling still.

    At this he could smile back at her. "You'll see - when it comes."

    She thought of that. "This is better perhaps; but as we were - it
    was good."

    He put her the question. "Did it never happen that he spoke of
    me?"

    Considering more intently she made no answer, and he then knew he
    should have been adequately answered by her asking how often he
    himself had spoken of their terrible friend. Suddenly a brighter
    light broke in her face and an excited idea sprang to her lips in
    the appeal: "You HAVE forgiven him?"

    "How, if I hadn't, could I linger here?"

    She visibly winced at the deep but unintended irony of this; but
    even while she did so she panted quickly: "Then in the lights on
    your altar - ?"

    "There's never a light for Acton Hague!"

    She stared with a dreadful fall, "But if he's one of your Dead?"

    "He's one of the world's, if you like - he's one of yours. But
    he's not one of mine. Mine are only the Dead who died possessed of
    me. They're mine in death because they were mine in life."

    "HE was yours in life then, even if for a while he ceased to be.
    If you forgave him you went back to him. Those whom we've once
    loved - "

    "Are those who can hurt us most," Stransom broke in.

    "Ah it's not true - you've NOT forgiven him!" she wailed with a
    passion that startled him.

    He looked at her as never yet. "What was it he did to you?"

    "Everything!" Then abruptly she put out her hand in farewell.
    "Good-bye."

    He turned as cold as he had turned that night he read the man's
    death. "You mean that we meet no more?"

    "Not as we've met - not THERE!"

    He stood aghast at this snap of their great bond, at the
    renouncement that rang out in the word she so expressively sounded.
    "But what's changed - for you?"

    She waited in all the sharpness of a trouble that for the first
    time since he had known her made her splendidly stern. "How can
    you understand now when you didn't understand before?"

    "I didn't understand before only because I didn't know. Now that I
    know, I see what I've been living with for years," Stransom went on
    very gently.


    She looked at him with a larger allowance, doing this gentleness
    justice. "How can I then, on this new knowledge of my own, ask you
    to continue to live with it?"

    "I set up my altar, with its multiplied meanings," Stransom began;
    but she quietly interrupted him.

    "You set up your altar, and when I wanted one most I found it
    magnificently ready. I used it with the gratitude I've always
    shown you, for I knew it from of old to be dedicated to Death. I
    told you long ago that my Dead weren't many. Yours were, but all
    you had done for them was
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