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The Beast in the Jungle
by
“Well, you’re really so in with me, you know–as a sort of result of my being so in with yourself. I mean of my having such an immense regard for you, being so tremendously mindful of all you’ve done for me. I sometimes ask myself if it’s quite fair. Fair I mean to have so involved and–since one may say it–interested you. I almost feel as if you hadn’t really had time to do anything else.”
“Anything else but be interested?” she asked.”Ah what else does one ever want to be?If I’ve been ‘watching’ with you, as we long ago agreed I was to do, watching’s always in itself an absorption.”
“Oh certainly,” John Marcher said, “if you hadn’t had your curiosity -!Only doesn’t it sometimes come to you as time goes on that your curiosity isn’t being particularly repaid?”
May Bartram had a pause.”Do you ask that, by any chance, because you feel at all that yours isn’t?I mean because you have to wait so long.”
Oh he understood what she meant!”For the thing to happen that never does happen?For the Beast to jump out?No, I’m just where I was about it. It isn’t a matter as to which I can choose, I can decide for a change. It isn’t one as to which there canbe a change. It’s in the lap of the gods. One’s in the hands of one’s law–there one is. As to the form the law will take, the way it will operate, that’s its own affair.”
“Yes,” Miss Bartram replied; “of course one’s fate’s coming, of course it hascome in its own form and its own way, all the while. Only, you know, the form and the way in your case were to have been–well, something so exceptional and, as one may say, so particularly yourown.”
Something in this made him look at her with suspicion.”You say ‘were to havebeen,’ as if in your heart you had begun to doubt.”
“Oh!” she vaguely protested.
“As if you believed,” he went on, “that nothing will now take place.”
She shook her head slowly but rather inscrutably.”You’re far from my thought.”
He continued to look at her.”What then is the matter with you?”
“Well,” she said after another wait, “the matter with me is simply that I’m more sure than ever my curiosity, as you call it, will be but too well repaid.”
They were frankly grave now; he had got up from his seat, had turned once more about the little drawing-room to which, year after year, he brought his inevitable topic; in which he had, as he might have said, tasted their intimate community with every sauce, where every object was as familiar to him as the things of his own house and the very carpets were worn with his fitful walk very much as the desks in old counting-houses are worn by the elbows of generations of clerks. The generations of his nervous moods had been at work there, and the place was the written history of his whole middle life. Under the impression of what his friend had just said he knew himself, for some reason, more aware of these things; which made him, after a moment, stop again before her.”Is it possibly that you’ve grown afraid?”
“Afraid?”He thought, as she repeated the word, that his question had made her, a little, change colour; so that, lest he should have touched on a truth, he explained very kindly:”You remember that that was what you asked melong ago–that first day at Weatherend.”
“Oh yes, and you told me you didn’t know–that I was to see for myself. We’ve said little about it since, even in so long a time.”