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<h2> XI </h2>
<p>As Glennard, in the raw February sunlight, mounted the road to the
cemetery, he felt the beatitude that comes with an abrupt cessation of
physical pain. He had reached the point where self-analysis ceases; the
impulse that moved him was purely intuitive. He did not even seek a reason
for it, beyond the obvious one that his desire to stand by Margaret
Aubyn's grave was prompted by no attempt at a sentimental reparation, but
rather by the vague need to affirm in some way the reality of the tie
between them.</p>
<p>The ironical promiscuity of death had brought Mrs. Aubyn back to share the
narrow hospitality of her husband's last lodging; but though Glennard knew
she had been buried near New York he had never visited her grave. He was
oppressed, as he now threaded the long avenues, by a chilling vision of
her return. There was no family to follow her hearse; she had died alone,
as she had lived; and the "distinguished mourners" who had formed the
escort of the famous writer knew nothing of the woman they were committing
to the grave. Glennard could not even remember at what season she had been
buried; but his mood indulged the fancy that it must have been on some
such day of harsh sunlight, the incisive February brightness that gives
perspicuity without warmth. The white avenues stretched before him
interminably, lined with stereotyped emblems of affliction, as though all
the platitudes ever uttered had been turned to marble and set up over the
unresisting dead. Here and there, no doubt, a frigid urn or an insipid
angel imprisoned some fine-fibred grief, as the most hackneyed words may
become the vehicle of rare meanings; but for the most part the endless
alignment of monuments seemed to embody those easy generalizations about
death that do not disturb the repose of the living. Glennard's eye, as he
followed the way indicated to him, had instinctively sought some low mound
with a quiet headstone. He had forgotten that the dead seldom plan their
own houses, and with a pang he discovered the name he sought on the
cyclopean base of a granite shaft rearing its aggressive height at the
angle of two avenues.</p>
<p>"How she would have hated it!" he murmured.</p>
<p>A bench stood near and he seated himself. The monument rose before him
like some pretentious uninhabited dwelling; he could not believe that
Margaret Aubyn lay there. It was a Sunday morning and black figures moved
among the paths, placing flowers on the frost-bound hillocks. Glennard
noticed that the neighboring graves had been thus newly dressed; and he
fancied a blind stir of expectancy through the sod, as though the bare
mounds spread a parched surface to that commemorative rain. He rose
presently and walked back to the entrance of the cemetery. Several
greenhouses stood near the gates, and turning in at the first he asked for
some flowers.</p>
<p>"Anything in the emblematic line?" asked the anaemic man behind the
dripping counter.</p>
<p>Glennard shook his head.</p>
<p>"Just cut flowers? This way, then." The florist unlocked a glass door and
led him down a moist green aisle. The hot air was choked with the scent of
white azaleas, white lilies, white lilacs; all the flowers were white;
they were like a prolongation, a mystical efflorescence, of the long rows
of marble tombstones, and their perfume seemed to cover an odor of decay.
The rich atmosphere made Glennard dizzy. As he leaned in the doorpost,
waiting for the flowers, he had a penetrating sense of Margaret Aubyn's
nearness—not the imponderable presence of his inner vision, but a
life that beat warm in his arms....</p>
<p>The sharp air caught him as he stepped out into it again. He walked back
and scattered the flowers over the grave. The edges of the white petals
shrivelled like burnt paper in the cold; and as he watched them the
illusion of her nearness faded, shrank back frozen.</p>
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