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"We're parting," I said.

"We're parting-as people part in a play. It's distressing. But I

don't feel as though you and I were really never to see each other

again for years. Do you?"

I thought. "No," I said.

"After we've parted I shall look to talk it over with you."

"So shall I."

"That's absurd."

"Absurd."

"I feel as if you'd always he there, just about where you are now.

Invisible perhaps, but there. We've spent so much of our lives

joggling elbows."…

"Yes. Yes. I don't in the least realise it. I suppose I shall

begin to when the train goes out of the station. Are we wanting in

imagination, Isabel?"

"I don't know. We've always assumed it was the other way about."

"Even when the train goes out of the station-! I've seen you into

so many trains."

"I shall go on thinking of things to say to you-things to put in

your letters. For years to come. How can I ever stop thinking in

that way now? We've got into each other's brains."

"It isn't real," I said; "nothing is real. The world's no more than

a fantastic dream. Why are we parting, Isabel?"

"I don't know. It seems now supremely silly. I suppose we have to.

Can't we meet?-don't you think we shall meet even in dreams?"

"We'll meet a thousand times in dreams," I said.

"I wish we could dream at the same time," said Isabel… "Dream

walks. I can't believe, dear, I shall never have a walk with you

again."

"If I'd stayed six months in America," I said, "we might have walked

long walks and talked long talks for all our lives."

"Not in a world of Baileys," said Isabel. "And anyhow-"

She stopped short. I looked interrogation.

"We've loved," she said.

I took her ticket, saw to her luggage, and stood by the door of the

compartment. "Good-bye," I said a little stiffly, conscious of the

people upon the platform. She bent above me, white and dusky,

looking at me very steadfastly.

"Come here," she whispered. "Never mind the porters. What can they

know? Just one time more-I must."

She rested her hand against the door of the carriage and bent down

upon me, and put her cold, moist lips to mine.

CHAPTER THE THIRD

THE BREAKING POINT

1

And then we broke down. We broke our faith with both Margaret and

Shoesmith, flung career and duty out of our lives, and went away

together.

It is only now, almost a year after these events, that I can begin

to see what happened to me. At the time it seemed to me I was a

rational, responsible creature, but indeed I had not parted from her

two days before I became a monomaniac to whom nothing could matter

but Isabel. Every truth had to be squared to that obsession, every

duty. It astounds me to think how I forgot Margaret, forgot my

work, forgot everything but that we two were parted. I still

believe that with better chances we might have escaped the

consequences of the emotional storm that presently seized us both.

But we had no foresight of that, and no preparation for it, and our

circumstances betrayed us. It was partly Shoesmith's unwisdom in

delaying his marriage until after the end of the session-partly my

own amazing folly in returning within four days to Westminster. But

we were all of us intent upon the defeat of scandal and the complete

restoration of appearances. It seemed necessary that Shoesmith's

marriage should not seem to be hurried, still more necessary that I

should not vanish inexplicably. I had to be visible with Margaret

in London just as much as possible; we went to restaurants, we

visited the theatre; we could even contemplate the possibility of my

presence at the wedding. For that, however, we had schemed a

weekend visit to Wales, and a fictitious sprained ankle at the last

moment which would justify my absence…

I cannot convey to you the intolerable wretchedness and rebellion of

my separation from Isabel. It seemed that in the past two years all

my thoughts had spun commisures to Isabel's brain and I could think

of nothing that did not lead me surely to the need of the one

intimate I had found in the world. I came back to the House and the

office and my home, I filled all my days with appointments and duty,

and it did not save me in the least from a lonely emptiness such as

I had never felt before in all my life. I had little sleep. In the

daytime I did a hundred things, I even spoke in the House on two

occasions, and by my own low standards spoke well, and it seemed to

me that I was going about in my own brain like a hushed survivor in

a house whose owner lies dead upstairs.

I came to a crisis after that wild dinner of Tarvrille's. Something

in that stripped my soul bare.

It was an occasion made absurd and strange by the odd accident that