'I don't want you to remember it--if you don't want to,' she struggled
to say, through the dark mist that covered her.
There was silence for some moments.
'No,' he said. 'It isn't that. Only--if we are going to know each
other, we must pledge ourselves for ever. If we are going to make a
relationship, even of friendship, there must be something final and
infallible about it.' There was a clang of mistrust and almost anger in his voice. She did
not answer. Her heart was too much contracted. She could not have
spoken.
Seeing she was not going to reply, he continued, almost bitterly,
giving himself away: 'I can't say it is love I have to offer--and it isn't love I want. It
is something much more impersonal and harder--and rarer.' There was a silence, out of which she said: 'You mean you don't love me?' She suffered furiously, saying that.
'Yes, if you like to put it like that. Though perhaps that isn't true.
I don't know. At any rate, I don't feel the emotion of love for
you--no, and I don't want to. Because it gives out in the last issues.' 'Love gives out in the last issues?' she asked, feeling numb to the
lips.
'Yes, it does. At the very last, one is alone, beyond the influence of
love. There is a real impersonal me, that is beyond love, beyond any
emotional relationship. So it is with you. But we want to delude
ourselves that love is the root. It isn't. It is only the branches. The
root is beyond love, a naked kind of isolation, an isolated me, that
does NOT meet and mingle, and never can.' She watched him with wide, troubled eyes. His face was incandescent in
its abstract earnestness.
'And you mean you can't love?' she asked, in trepidation.
'Yes, if you like. I have loved. But there is a beyond, where there is
not love.' She could not submit to this. She felt it swooning over her. But she
could not submit.
'But how do you know--if you have never REALLY loved?' she asked.
'It is true, what I say; there is a beyond, in you, in me, which is
further than love, beyond the scope, as stars are beyond the scope of
vision, some of them.' 'Then there is no love,' cried Ursula.
'Ultimately, no, there is something else. But, ultimately, there IS no
love.' Ursula was given over to this statement for some moments. Then she half
rose from her chair, saying, in a final, repellent voice: 'Then let me go home--what am I doing here?' 'There is the door,' he said. 'You are a free agent.' He was suspended finely and perfectly in this extremity. She hung
motionless for some seconds, then she sat down again.