"Tell me, Fyne," I cried, "you don't think the girl was mad--do you?"

He answered nothing. Soon the lighted beacon-like window of the cottage

came into view. Then Fyne uttered a solemn: "Certainly not," with

profound assurance. But immediately after he added a "Very highly strung

young person indeed," which unsettled me again. Was it a tragedy?

"Nobody ever got up at six o'clock in the morning to commit suicide," I

declared crustily. "It's unheard of! This is a farce."

As a matter of fact it was neither farce nor tragedy.

Coming up to the cottage we had a view of Mrs. Fyne inside still sitting

in the strong light at the round table with folded arms. It looked as

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though she had not moved her very head by as much as an inch since we

went away. She was amazing in a sort of unsubtle way; crudely amazing--I

thought. Why crudely? I don't know. Perhaps because I saw her then in

a crude light. I mean this materially--in the light of an unshaded lamp.

Our mental conclusions depend so much on momentary physical

sensations--don't they? If the lamp had been shaded I should perhaps

have gone home after expressing politely my concern at the Fynes'

unpleasant predicament.

Losing a girl-friend in that manner is unpleasant. It is also

mysterious. So mysterious that a certain mystery attaches to the people

to whom such a thing does happen. Moreover I had never really understood

the Fynes; he with his solemnity which extended to the very eating of

bread and butter; she with that air of detachment and resolution in

breasting the common-place current of their unexciting life, in which the

cutting of bread and butter appeared to me, by a long way, the most

dangerous episode. Sometimes I amused myself by supposing that to their

minds this world of ours must be wearing a perfectly overwhelming aspect,

and that their heads contained respectively awfully serious and extremely

desperate thoughts--and trying to imagine what an exciting time they must

be having of it in the inscrutable depths of their being. This last was

difficult to a volatile person (I am sure that to the Fynes I was a

volatile person) and the amusement in itself was not very great; but

still--in the country--away from all mental stimulants! . . . My efforts

had invested them with a sort of amusing profundity.

But when Fyne and I got back into the room, then in the searching,

domestic, glare of the lamp, inimical to the play of fancy, I saw these

two stripped of every vesture it had amused me to put on them for fun.

Queer enough they were. Is there a human being that isn't that--more or

less secretly? But whatever their secret, it was manifest to me that it

was neither subtle nor profound. They were a good, stupid, earnest

couple and very much bothered. They were that--with the usual unshaded

crudity of average people. There was nothing in them that the lamplight

might not touch without the slightest risk of indiscretion.




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