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BOOK TENTH I
 "Then it has been—what do you say? a whole fortnight?—without your making a sign?"  
Kate put that to him distinctly, in the December dusk of Lancaster Gate and on the matter of the time he had been back; but he saw with it straightway that she was as admirably true as ever to her instinct—which was a system as well—of not admitting the possibility between them of small , of trifles to trip up their general trust. That by itself, the renewed beauty of it, would at this fresh sight of her have stirred him to his depths if something else, something no less vivid but quite separate, hadn't stirred him still more. It was in seeing her that he felt what their interruption had been, and that they met across it even as persons whose adventures, on either side, in time and space, of the nature of and exiles, had had a strangeness. He wondered if he were as different for her as she herself had immediately appeared: which was but his way indeed of taking in, with his thrill, that—even going by the first look—she had never been so handsome. That fact bloomed for him, in the firelight and lamplight that glowed their welcome through the London fog, as the flower of her difference; just as her difference itself—part of which was her striking him as older in a degree for which no mere couple of months could account—was the fruit of their intimate relation. If she was different it was because they had chosen together that she should be, and she might now, as a proof of their wisdom, their success, of the reality of what had happened—of what in fact, for the spirit of each, was still happening—been showing it to him for pride. His having returned and yet kept, for numbered days, so still, had been, he was quite aware, the first point he should have to tackle; with which consciousness indeed he had made a clean breast of it in finally addressing Mrs. Lowder a note that had led to his present visit. He had written to Aunt Maud as the finer way; and it would doubtless have been to be that he needed no effort not to write to Kate. Venice was three weeks behind him—he had come up slowly; but it was still as if even in London he must conform to her law. That was exactly how he was able, with his faith in her steadiness, to appeal to her feeling for the situation and explain his stretched . He had come to tell her everything, so far as occasion would serve them; and if nothing was more distinct than that his slow journey, his waits, his delay to reopen communication had kept pace with this resolve, so the inconsequence was doubtless at bottom but one of the elements of . He was everything up, everything he should tell her. That took time, and the proof was that, as he felt on the spot, he couldn't have brought it all with him before this afternoon. He had brought it, to the last , and, out of the quantity it wouldn't be hard—as he in fact found—to produce, for Kate's understanding, his first reason.
 
"A fortnight, yes—it was a fortnight Friday; but I've only been keeping in, you see, with our wonderful system." He was so easily as that this of itself plainly enough prevented her saying she didn't see. Their wonderful system was accordingly still vivid for her; and such a of its equal vividness for himself was what she must have asked. He hadn't even to dot his i's beyond the remark that on the very face of it, she would remember, their wonderful system attached no to rapidities of transition. "I couldn't quite—don't you know?—take my with a rush; and I suppose I've been hanging off to minimise, for you as well as for myself, the appearances of rushing. There's a sort of fitness. But I knew you'd understand." It was presently as if she really understood so well that she almost appealed from his insistence—yet looking at him too, he was not unconscious, as if this mastery of fitnesses was a strong sign for her of what she had done to him. He might have struck her as expert for in the very degree of her having in Venice struck him as expert. He smiled over his plea for a with stages and steps, a thing shaded, as they might say, and graduated; though—finely as she must respond—she met the smile but as she had met his entrance five minutes before. Her soft gravity at that moment—which was yet not solemnity, but the look of a consciousness charged with life to the brim and wishing not to overflow—had not her welcome; what had done this being much more the presence in the room, for a couple of minutes, of the footman who had introduced him and who had been interrupted in preparing the tea-table.
 
Mrs. Lowder's reply to Densher's note had been to appoint the tea-hour, five o'clock on Sunday, for his seeing them. Kate had thereafter wired him, without a signature, "Come on Sunday before tea—about a quarter of an hour, which will help us"; and he had arrived therefore at twenty minutes to five. Kate was alone in the room and hadn't delayed to tell him that Aunt Maud, as she had happily gathered, was to be, for the interval—not long but precious—engaged with an old servant, and pensioned, who had been paying her a visit and who was within the hour to depart again for the suburbs. They were to have the of time, after the of the footman, to themselves, and there was a moment when, in spite of their wonderful system, in spite of the of rushes and the of shades, it proclaimed itself indeed precious. And all without prejudice—that was what kept it noble—to Kate's high sobriety and her beautiful self-command. If he had his she had her perfect manner, which was her decorum. Mrs. Stringham, he had, to finish with the question of his delay, furthermore observed, Mrs. Stringham would have written to Mrs. Lowder of his having quitted the place; so that it wasn't as if he were hoping to cheat them. They'd know he was no longer there.
 
"Yes, we've known it."
 
"And you continue to hear?"
 
"From Mrs. Stringham? Certainly. By which I mean Aunt Maud does."
 
"Then you've recent news?"
 
Her face showed a wonder. "Up to within a day or two I believe. But haven't you?"
 
"No—I've heard nothing." And it was now that he felt how much he had to tell her. "I don't get letters. But I've been sure Mrs. Lowder does." With which he added: "Then of course you know." He waited as if she would show what she knew; but she only showed in silence the dawn of a surprise that she couldn't control. There was nothing but for him to ask what he wanted. "Is Miss Theale alive?"
 
Kate's look at this was large. "Don't you know?"
 
"How should I, my dear—in the absence of everything?" And he himself stared as for light. "She's dead?" Then as with her eyes on him she slowly shook her head he uttered a strange "Not yet?"
 
It came out in Kate's face that there were several questions on her lips, but the one she presently put was: "Is it very terrible?"
 
"The manner of her so consciously and helplessly dying?" He had to think a moment. "Well, yes—since you ask me: very terrible to me—so far as, before I came away, I had any sight of it. But I don't think," he went on, "that—though I'll try—I can quite tell you what it was, what it is, for me. That's why I probably just sounded to you," he explained, "as if I hoped it might be over."
 
She gave him her quietest attention, but he by this time saw that, so far as telling her all was concerned, she would be divided between the wish and the to hear it; between the curiosity that, not , would consume her and the opposing of a respect for misfortune. The more she studied him too—and he had never so felt her closely attached to his face—the more the choice of an attitude would become impossible to her. There would simply be a feeling uppermost, and the feeling wouldn't be eagerness. This perception grew in him fast, and he even, with his imagination, had for a moment the quick forecast of her possibly breaking out at him, should he go too far, with a wonderful: "What horrors are you telling me?" It would have the sound—wouldn't it be open to him fairly to bring that out himself?—of a , for pity and almost for shame, of everything that in Venice had passed between them. Not that she would confess to any return upon herself; not that she would let compunction or horror give her away; but it was in the air for him—yes—that she wouldn't want details, that she wouldn't take them, and that, if he would generously understand it from her, she would prefer to keep him down. Nothing, however, was more definite for him than that at the same time he must remain down but so far as it suited him. Something rose strong within him against his not being free with her. She had been free enough about it all, three months before, with him. That was what she was at present only in the sense of treating him handsomely. "I can believe," she said with perfect consideration, "how dreadful for you much of it must have been."
 
He didn't however take this up; there were things about which he wished first to be clear. "There's no other possibility, by what you now know? I mean for her life." And he had just to insist—she would say as little as she could. "She is dying?"
 
"She's dying."
 
It was strange to him, in the matter of Milly, that Lancaster Gate could make him any surer; yet what in the world, in the matter of Milly, wasn't strange? Nothing was so much so as his own behaviour—his present as well as his past. He could but do as he must. "Has Sir Luke Strett," he asked, "gone back to her?"
 
"I believe he's there now."
 
"Then," said Densher, "it's the end."
 
She took it in silence for whatever he deemed it to be; but she otherwise after a minute. "You won't know, unless you've perhaps seen him yourself, that Aunt Maud has been to him."
 
"Oh!" Densher exclaimed, with nothing to add to it.
 
"For real news," Kate herself after an instant added.
 
"She hasn't thought Mrs. Stringham's real?"
 
"It's perhaps only I who haven't. It was on Aunt Maud's trying again three days ago to see him that she heard at his house of his having gone. He had started I believe some days before."
 
"And won't then by this time be back?"
 
Kate shook her head. "She sent yesterday to know."
 
"He won't leave her then"—Densher had turned it over—"while she lives. He'll stay to the end. He's magnificent."
 
"I think she is," said Kate.
 
It had made them again look at each other long; and what it drew from him rather oddly was: "Oh you don't know!"
 
"Well, she's after all my friend."
 
It was somehow, with her handsome , the answer he had least expected of her; and it fanned with its breath, for a brief instant, his old sense of her variety. "I see. You would have been sure of it. You were sure of it."
 
"Of course I was sure of it."
 
And a pause again, with this, fell upon them; which Densher, however, presently broke. "If you don't think Mrs. Stringham's news 'real' what do you think of Lord Mark's?"
 
She didn't think anything. "Lord Mark's?"
 
"You haven't seen him?"
 
"Not since he saw her."
 
"You've known then of his seeing her?"
 
"Certainly. From Mrs. Stringham."
 
"And have you known," Densher went on, "the rest?"
 
Kate wondered. "What rest?"
 
"Why everything. It was his visit that she couldn't stand—it was what then took place that simply killed her."
 
"Oh!" Kate seriously breathed. But she had turned pale, and he saw that, whatever her degree of ignorance of these connexions, it wasn't put on. "Mrs. Stringham hasn't said that."
 
He observed none the less that she didn't ask what had then taken place; and he went on with his contribution to her knowledge. "The way it her was that it made her give up. She has given up beyond all power to care again, and that's why she's dying."
 
"Oh!" Kate once more slowly sighed, but with a vagueness that made him pursue.
 
"One can see now that she was living by will—which was very much what you originally told me of her."
 
"I remember. That was it."
 
"Well then her will, at a given moment, broke down, and the was by that fellow's dastardly stroke. He told her, the scoundrel, that you and I are secretly engaged."
 
Kate gave a quick glare. "But he doesn't know it!"
 
"That doesn't matter. She did by the time he had left her. Besides," Densher added, "he does know it. When," he continued, "did you last see him?"
 
But she was lost now in the picture before her. "That was what made her worse?"
 
He watched her take it in—it so added to her sombre beauty. Then he spoke as Mrs. Stringham had spoken. "She turned her face to the wall."
 
"Poor Milly!" said Kate.
 
Slight as it was, her beauty somehow gave it style; so that he continued consistently: "She learned it, you see, too soon—since of course one's idea had been that she might never even learn it at all. And she had felt sure—through everything we had done—of there not being between us, so far at least as you were concerned, anything she need regard as a warning."
 
She took another moment for thought. "It wasn't through anything you did—whatever that may have been—that she gained her certainty. It was by the conviction she got from me."
 
"Oh it's very handsome," Densher said, "for you to take your share!"
 
"Do you suppose," Kate asked, "that I think of denying it?"
 
Her look and her tone made him for the instant regret his comment, which indeed had been the first that rose to his lips as an effect absolutely of what they would have called between them her straightness. Her straightness, visibly, was all his own could ask. Still, that was comparatively beside the mark. "Of course I don't suppose anything but that we're together in our recognitions, our responsibilities—whatever we choose to call them. It isn't a question for us of shares or distinguishing invidiously among such impressions as it was our idea to give."
 
"It wasn't your idea to give impressions," said Kate.
 
He met this with a smile that he himself felt, in its strained character, as queer. "Don't go into that!"
 
It was perhaps not as going into it that she had another idea—an idea born, she showed, of the vision he had just . "Wouldn't it have been possible then to deny the truth of the information? I mean of Lord Mark's."
 
Densher wondered. "Possible for whom?"
 
"Why for you."
 
"To tell her he lied?"
 
"To tell her he's mistaken."
 
Densher stared—he was stupefied; the "possible" thus glanced at by Kate being exactly the alternative he had had to face in Venice and to put away from him. Nothing was stranger than such a difference in their view of it. "And to lie myself, you mean, to do it? We are, my dear child," he said, "I suppose, still engaged."
 
"Of course we're still engaged. But to save her life—!"
 
He took in for a little the way she talked of it. Of course, it was to be remembered, she had always simplified, and it brought back his sense of the degree in which, to her energy as compared with his own, many things were easy; the very sense that so often before had moved him to
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