I have still strangely to record moments when,in spite of the aspirations I had achieved,of the redeeming vision I had gained,at the thought of returning to her I revolted.At such times recollections came into my mind of those characteristics in her that had seemed most responsible for my alienation....That demon I had fed so mightily still lived.By what right--he seemed to ask--had I nourished him all these years if now I meant to starve him?Thus sometimes he defied me,took on Protean guises,blustered,insinuated,cajoled,managed to make me believe that to starve him would be to starve myself,to sap all there was of power in me.Let me try and see if I could do it!Again he whispered,to what purpose had I gained my liberty,if now I renounced it?I could not live in fetters,even though the fetters should be self-imposed.I was lonely now,but I would get over that,and life lay before me still.
Fierce and tenacious,steel in the cruelty of his desires,fearful in the havoc he had wrought,could he be subdued?Foiled,he tore and rent me....
One morning I rode up through the shady canon,fragrant with bay,to the open slopes stained smoky-blue by the wild lilac,where the twisted madrona grows.As I sat gazing down on tiny headlands jutting out into a vast ocean my paralyzing indecision came to an end.I turned my horse down the trail again.I had seen at last that life was bigger than I,bigger than Maude,bigger than our individual wishes and desires.I felt as though heavy shackles had been struck from me.As I neared the house I spied my young doctor in the garden path,his hands in his pockets watching a humming-bird poised over the poppies.He greeted me with a look that was not wholly surprise at my early return,that seemed to have in it something of gladness.