THE WINDOW OF THE TOWER
This was as much as this pleasant-looking,
gray-haired man had written. I had been lost
in his story throughout the earlier portions of it,
forgetful of the writer and his gracious room, and
the high tower in which he was sitting. But gradually,
as I drew near the end, the sense of strangeness returned
to me. It was more and more evident to me that
this was a different humanity from any I had known,
unreal, having different customs, different beliefs,
different interpretations, different emotions.
It was no mere change in conditions and institutions
the comet had wrought. It had made a change of
heart and mind. In a manner it had dehumanized
the world, robbed it of its spites, its little intense
jealousies, its inconsistencies, its humor. At
the end, and particularly after the death of his mother,
I felt his story had slipped away from my sympathies
altogether. Those Beltane fires had burnt something
in him that worked living still and unsubdued in me,
that rebelled in particular at that return of Nettie.
I became a little inattentive. I no longer felt
with him, nor gathered a sense of complete understanding
from his phrases. His Lord Eros indeed! He
and these transfigured people—they were
beautiful and noble people, like the people one sees
in great pictures, like the gods of noble sculpture,
but they had no nearer fellowship than these to men.
As the change was realized, with every stage of realization
the gulf widened and it was harder to follow his words.
I put down the last fascicle of all,
and met his friendly eyes. It was hard to dislike
him.
I felt a subtle embarrassment in putting
the question that perplexed me. And yet it seemed
so material to me I had to put it. “And
did you—?” I asked. “Were
you—lovers?”
His eyebrows rose. “Of course.”
“But your wife—?”
It was manifest he did not understand me.
I hesitated still more. I was
perplexed by a conviction of baseness. “But—”
I began. “You remained lovers?”
“Yes.” I had grave doubts if I understood
him. Or he me.
I made a still more courageous attempt.
“And had Nettie no other lovers?”
“A beautiful woman like that!
I know not how many loved beauty in her, nor what
she found in others. But we four from that time
were very close, you understand, we were friends,
helpers, personal lovers in a world of lovers.”
“Four?”
“There was Verrall.”
Then suddenly it came to me that the
thoughts that stirred in my mind were sinister and
base, that the queer suspicions, the coarseness and
coarse jealousies of my old world were over and done
for these more finely living souls. “You
made,” I said, trying to be liberal minded,
“a home together.”
“A home!” He looked at
me, and, I know not why, I glanced down at my feet.
What a clumsy, ill-made thing a boot is, and how hard
and colorless seemed my clothing! How harshly
I stood out amidst these fine, perfected things.
I had a moment of rebellious detestation. I wanted
to get out of all this. After all, it wasn’t
my style. I wanted intensely to say something
that would bring him down a peg, make sure, as it
were, of my suspicions by launching an offensive accusation.
I looked up and he was standing.
“I forgot,” he said.
“You are pretending the old world is still going
on. A home!”
He put out his hand, and quite noiselessly
the great window widened down to us, and the splendid
nearer prospect of that dreamland city was before
me. There for one clear moment I saw it; its galleries
and open spaces, its trees of golden fruit and crystal
waters, its music and rejoicing, love and beauty without
ceasing flowing through its varied and intricate streets.
And the nearer people I saw now directly and plainly,
and no longer in the distorted mirror that hung overhead.
They really did not justify my suspicions, and yet—!
They were such people as one sees on earth—save
that they were changed. How can I express that
change? As a woman is changed in the eyes of
her lover, as a woman is changed by the love of a
lover. They were exalted. . . .
I stood up beside him and looked out.
I was a little flushed, my ears a little reddened,
by the inconvenience of my curiosities, and by my
uneasy sense of profound moral differences. He
was taller than I. . . .
“This is our home,” he
said smiling, and with thoughtful eyes on me.