Flames | Page 4

Robert Hichens
than I have to be vulgar."
"Hang it, Val, you don't want to have the temptation, do you?"
Valentine looked at Julian curiously.
"You have the temptation, Julian?" he said.
"You know I have--horribly."
"But you fight it and conquer it?"
"I fight it, and now I am beginning to conquer it, to get it under."
"Now? Since when?"
Julian replied by asking another question.
"Look here, how long have we known each other?"
"Let me see. I'm twenty-four, you twenty-three. Just five years."

"Ah! For just five years I've fought, Val, been able to fight."
"And before then?"
"I didn't fight; I revelled in the enemy's camp."
"You have never told me this before. Did you suddenly get conversion,
as Salvationists say?"
"Something like it. But my conversion had nothing to do with trumpets
and tambourines."
"What then? This is interesting."
A certain confusion had come into Julian's expression, even a certain
echoing awkwardness into his attitude. He looked away into the fire
and lighted another cigarette before he answered. Then he said rather
unevenly:
"I dare say you'll be surprised when I tell you. But I never meant to tell
you at all."
"Don't, if you would rather not."
"Yes, I think I will. I must stop you from disliking yourself at any cost,
dear old boy. Well, you converted me, so far as I am converted; and
that's not very far, I'm afraid."
"I?" said Valentine, with genuine surprise. "Why, I never tried to."
"Exactly. If you had, no doubt you'd have failed."
"But explain."
"I've never told you all you do for me, Val. You are my armour against
all these damned things. When I'm with you, I hate the notion of being
a sinner. I never hated it before I met you. In fact, I loved it. I wanted
sin more than I wanted anything in heaven or earth. And then--just at
the critical moment when I was passing from boyhood into manhood, I

met you."
He stopped. His brown cheeks were glowing, and he avoided
Valentine's gaze.
"Go on, Julian," Valentine said. "I want to hear this."
"All right, I'll finish now, but I don't know why I ever began. Perhaps
you'll think me a fool, or a sentimentalist."
"Nonsense!"
"Well, I don't know how it is, but when I saw you I first understood that
there is a good deal in what the parsons say, that sin is beastly in itself,
don't you know, even apart from one's religious convictions, or the
injury one may do to others. When I saw you, I understood that sin
degrades one's self, Valentine. For you had never sinned as I had, and
you were so different from me. You are the only sinless man I know,
and you have made me know what beasts we men are. Why can't we be
what we might be?"
Valentine did not reply. He seemed lost in thought, and Julian
continued, throwing off his original shamefacedness:
"Ever since then you've kept me straight. If I feel inclined to throw
myself down in the gutter, one look at you makes me loathe the notion.
Preaching often drives one wrong out of sheer 'cussedness,' I suppose.
But you don't preach and don't care. You just live beautifully, because
you're made differently from all of us. So you do for me what no
preachers could ever do. There--now you know."
He lay back, puffing violently at his cigarette.
"It is strange," Valentine said, seeing he had finished. "You know, to
live as I do is no effort to me, and so it is absurd to praise me."
"I won't praise you, but it's outrageous of you to want to feel as I and
other men feel."

"Is it? I don't think so. I think it is very natural. My life is a dead calm,
and a dead calm is monotonous."
"It's better than an everlasting storm."
"I wonder!" Valentine said. "How curious that I should protect you. I
am glad it is so. And yet, Julian, in spite of what you say, I would give
a great deal to change souls with you, if only for a day or two. You will
laugh at me, but I do long to feel a real, keen temptation. Those
agonizing struggles of holy men that one reads of, what can they be like?
I can hardly imagine. There have been ascetics who have wept, and
dashed themselves down on the ground, and injured, wounded their
bodies to distract their thoughts from vice. To me they seem as
madmen. You know the story of the monk who rescued a great
courtesan from her life of shame. He placed her in a convent and went
into the desert. But her image haunted him, maddened him. He slunk
back to the convent,
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