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"Well, what?"
"My--it's my inspiration!"
"That comes"; she spoke slowly. "Every night when you look out of the window. That's how it comes, Jasper."
"Look out of the window? Why shouldn't I look out of the window?"
"What is it you see? Over there; in that house; in that one window?"
He looked across the way at the shadow moving to and fro against the window blind.
He started to his feet so suddenly that his chair crashed to the floor behind him. He faced her angrily.
"What under the sun's the matter with you?"
"Nothing."
"Then why can't you leave me alone?"
"I want to know, Jasper."
"You don't know what you want."
"Yes, Jasper; I--want--to--know--"
"Leave the room," he said furiously. "Leave the room! I've got to write!"
She started for the door.
"You've got to write?" Her words came back to him across the length of the room with a curious insistence. "_You've_--got--to--write, Jasper?"
He waited until the door closed behind her and then he went back to his desk.
What had she meant by that last question of hers? Didn't she know that he had to write? Didn't she realize that he had to write?
And this book of his; this book that was to be the biggest thing that he had yet done.
"Ellen," he called. "Ellen!"
He heard her feet coming toward him along the pa.s.sageway.
She came back into the room as though nothing had happened.
"Yes, Jasper?"
"What--what did you mean by that, Ellen? By what you just said?"
She faced him in the center of the room.
"I've been wanting to tell you, Jasper."
"Well?"
Her hands hung quite quietly at her sides.
"I've put up with you for a long time, Jasper. I haven't said very much, you know."
"What?" He stuttered.
"Oh, yes," she went on evenly. "If it weren't for your vanity you'd have realized long ago what a contemptible little man you really are."
He interrupted her.
"Ellen!"
His tone was astonished.
"You're so full of yourself that you can't see anything else. You're so full of that genius--; of--yours--"
"You don't have to speak of that--; you can leave that out of it--; you've nothing to do with it--; with my genius."
"Your genius." She laughed then. "It's your genius, Jasper, that has nothing to do with you!"
"Nothing--to--do--with--me?"
"No, Jasper. I haven't been blind."
"Blind?"
"I've seen, Jasper; sitting here night after night in this room with you; I've seen."
"What?"
"Over there--; in the house opposite."
"You mean--"
"And you can't write without it, Jasper! You couldn't write before and you can't write now without it. It isn't you. It isn't you who writes.
It's something--something working through you. And you call it your own.
Jasper, you're a fool!"
"Ellen, how dare you!"
"Dare!"
She spoke the word disdainfully. He had never in his whole life seen her this way; he had never thought to see her like this; but then, he had never given Ellen much thought of any kind.
"It's you who're the fool." He was furious. "It's I who've always been the brains; if you could you'd have hampered me with your stupidity. But you couldn't. I shut you quite outside. I nurtured my own genius. If I'd have left things to you, I'd have been down and out by now; and that's all there is to it."