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    Chapter 31 - Page 2

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    for three days?"

    "No more," she simply went on, "than if it were all over. Not even by the faintest allusion."

    "Oh," said Densher with more light, "you mean you haven't spoken about ME?"

    "About what else? No more than if you were dead."

    "Well," he answered after a moment, "I AM dead."

    "Then i am," said Susan Shepherd with a drop of her arms on her waterproof.

    It was a tone that, for the minute, imposed itself in its dry despair; it represented, in the bleak place, which had no life of its own, none but the life Kate had left--the sense of which, for that matter, by mystic channels, might fairly be reaching the visitor--the very impotence of their extinction. And Densher had nothing to oppose it withal, nothing but again: "Is she dying?"

    It made her, however, as if these were crudities, almost material pangs, only say as before: "Then you know?"

    "Yes," he at last returned, "I know. But the marvel to me is that YOU do. I've no right in fact to imagine or to assume that you do."

    "You may," said Susan Shepherd, "all the same. I know."

    "Everything?"

    Her eyes, through her veil, kept pressing him. "No--not everything. That's why I've come."

    "That I shall really tell you?" With which, as she hesitated and it affected him, he brought out in a groan a doubting "Oh, oh!" It turned him from her to the place itself, which was a part of what was in him, was the abode, the worn shrine more than ever, of the fact in possession, the fact, now a thick association, for which he had hired it. THAT was not for telling, but Susan Shepherd was, none the less, so decidedly wonderful that the sense of it might really have begun, by an effect already operating, to be a part of her knowledge. He saw, and it stirred him, that she hadn't come to judge him; had come rather, so far as she might dare, to pity. This showed him her own abasement--that, at any rate, of grief; and made him feel with a rush of friendliness that he liked to be with her. The rush had quickened when she met his groan with an attenuation.


    "We shall at all events--if that's anything--be together."

    It was his own good impulse in herself. "It's what I've ventured to feel. It's much." She replied in effect, silently, that it was whatever he liked; on which, so far as he had been afraid for anything, he knew his fear had dropped. The comfort was huge, for it gave back to him something precious, over which, in the effort of recovery, his own hand had too imperfectly closed. Kate, he remembered, had said to him, with her sole and single boldness--and also on grounds he hadn't then measured--that Mrs. Stringham was a person who WOULDN'T, at a pinch, in a stretch of confidence, wince. It was but another of the cases in which Kate was always showing. "You don't think then very horridly of me?"

    And her answer was the more valuable that it came without
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