"Sometimes I have to use three or more coats of new varnish before I can remove the old without endangering the delicate glaze underneath. But sooner or later I get it clean.
"Then I dig out any old patches or restorations and fill in with a composition of putty, white lead, and a drier, and smooth this with a cork. Then when it is sunned for an hour a day for three weeks or more – or less, sometimes – I'm ready to grind my pure colours, mix them, set my palette, and do as honest a piece of restoring as a study of that particular master's methods permits. And that, Ledwith, is only a little part of my fascinating profession.
"Sometimes I lift the entire skin of paint from a canvas – picking out the ancient threads from the rotten texture – and transfer it to a new canvas or panel. Sometimes I cross-saw a panel, then chisel to the plaster that lies beneath the painting, and so transfer it to a new and sound support. Sometimes – " he laughed – "but there are a hundred delicate and interesting surgical operations which I attempt – a thousand exciting problems to solve – experiments without end that tempt me, innovations that allure me – "
He laughed again:
"You ought to take up some fad and make a business and even an art out of it!"
"I?" said Ledwith, dully.
"Why not? Man, you're young yet, if – if – "
"Yes, I know, Quarren… But my mind is too old – very old and very infirm – dying in me of age – the age that comes through those centuries of pain that men sometimes live through in a few months."
Quarren looked at him hopelessly.
"Yet," he said, "if only a man wills it, the world is new again."
"But – if the will fails?"
"I don't know, Ledwith."
"I do." He drew up his cuff a little way, his dead eyes resting on Quarren, then, in silence, he drew the sleeve over the scars.
"Even that can be cured," said the younger man.
"If there is a will to cure it, perhaps."
"Even a desire is enough."
"I have not that desire. Why cure it?"
"Because, Ledwith, you haven't gone your limit yet. There's more of life; and you're cheating yourself out of it."
"Yes, perhaps. But what kind of life?" he asked, staring vaguely out into the sunshine of the backyard. "Life in hell has no attractions for me."
"We make our own hells."
"I didn't make mine. They dug the pit and I fell into it – Hell's own pit, Quarren – "
"You are wrong! You fell into a pit which hurt so much that you supposed it was the pit of hell. And, taking it for granted, you burrowed deeper in blind fury, until it became a real hell. But you dug it. There is no hell that a man does not dig for himself!"
In Ledwith's dull eyes a smouldering spark seemed to flash, go out, then glimmer palely.
"Quarren," he said, "I am not going to live in hell alone. I'm going there, shortly, but not alone."
Something new and sinister in his eyes arrested the other's attention. He considered the man for a few moments, then, coolly:
"I wouldn't, Ledwith."
"Why not?"
"He isn't worth it – even as company in hell."
"Do you think I'm going to let him live on?"
"Do you care to sink to his level?"
"Sink! Can I sink any lower than I am?"
Quarren shrugged:
"Easily, if you commit murder."
"That isn't murder – "
But Quarren cut him short continuing:
"Sink lower, you ask? What have you done, anyway – except to commit this crime against yourself?" – touching him on the wrist. "I'm not aware of any other crime committed by you, Ledwith. You're clean as you stand – except for this damnable insult and injury you offer yourself! Can't you reason? A bullet-stung animal sometimes turns and bites itself. Is that why you are doing it? – to arouse the amusement and contempt of your hunter?"
"Quarren! By God you shall not say that to me – "
"Why not? Have you ever considered what that man must think of you to see you turn and tear at the body he has crippled?"
Ledwith's sunken eyes blazed; he straightened himself, took one menacing step forward; and Quarren laid a light, steady hand on his shoulder.
"Listen to me," he said; "has it never occurred to you that you could deal him no deeper blow than to let him see a man stand up to him, face to face, where a creature lay writhing before, biting into its own vitals?"
He smiled into the fixed eyes of the almost mindless man:
"If you say the word I'll stand by you, Ledwith. If all you want to do is to punish him, murder isn't the way. What does a dead man care? Cut your own throat and the crime might haunt him – and might not. But kill! – Nonsense. It's all over then – except for the murderer."
He slid his hand quietly to Ledwith's arm, patted it.
"To punish him you need a doctor… It's only a week under the new treatment. You know that, don't you? After that a few months to get back nerve and muscle and common sense."
"And then?" motioned Ledwith with dry lips.
"Then? Oh, anything that you fancy. It's according to a man's personal taste. You can take him by the neck and beat him up in public if you like – or knock him down in the club as often as he gets up. It all depends, Ledwith. Some of us maintain self-respect without violence; some of us seem to require it. It's up to you."
"Yes."
Quarren said carelessly: "If I were you, I think that I'd face the world as soon as I was physically and mentally well enough – the real world I mean, Ledwith – either here or abroad, just as I felt about it.
"A man can get over anything except the stigma of dishonesty. And – personally I think he ought to have another chance even after that. But men's ideas differ. As for you, what you become and show that you are, will go ultimately with the world. Beat him up if you like; but, personally, I never even wished to kick a cur. Some men kick 'em to their satisfaction; it's a matter of taste I tell you. Besides – "
He stopped short; and presently Ledwith looked up.