[The Golden Bowl by Henry James]@TWC D-Link bookThe Golden Bowl PART FOURTH 88/263
There had been no prompt sequel to the Prince's equivocal light, and that made for patience; yet she was none the less to have to admit, after delay, that the bread he had cast on the waters had come home, and that she should thus be justified of her old apprehension.
The consequence of this, in turn, was a renewed pang in presence of his remembered ingenuity.
To be ingenious with HER--what DIDN'T, what mightn't that mean, when she had so absolutely never, at any point of contact with him, put him, by as much as the value of a penny, to the expense of sparing, doubting, fearing her, of having in any way whatever to reckon with her? The ingenuity had been in his simply speaking of their use of Charlotte as if it were common to them in an equal degree, and his triumph, on the occasion, had been just in the simplicity.
She couldn't--and he knew it--say what was true: "Oh, you 'use' her, and I use her, if you will, yes; but we use her ever so differently and separately--not at all in the same way or degree. There's nobody we really use together but ourselves, don't you see ?--by which I mean that where our interests are the same I can so beautifully, so exquisitely serve you for everything, and you can so beautifully, so exquisitely serve me.
The only person either of us needs is the other of us; so why, as a matter of course, in such a case as this, drag in Charlotte ?" She couldn't so challenge him, because it would have been--and there she was paralysed--the NOTE.
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