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He traversed the wide, red brick pavement and stood on the curb, looking down into the canal. He knew that the next hour would determine the whole course of his external life. If he could only see Kay, talk to her, make her understand, everything would work out. But the father of a young girl possessed the key to the front door. Supposed the Reverend Stricker refused to admit him.

A sand barge came slowly upstream, being pushed to its nightly anchorage. There was a trail of moist yellow sand over the black side where the cargo had been shovelled out of the hollow. Vincent noticed that there was no wash strung from stern to prow, and idly wondered why. A thin, bony man stuck the side of his chest to the pole, and leaning against it heavily, pushed his way down the catwalk while the thick, clumsy boat slipped upstream from under him. A woman in a dirty apron sat at the stern, like a piece of water-carved stone, the hand behind her guiding the clumsy tiller. A little boy, a girl, and a filthy white dog stood on top of the cabin and gazed at the houses along the Keizersgracht wistfully.

Vincent mounted the five stone steps and rang the bell. After a moment the maid came. She peered at Vincent standing in the shadows, recognized him and thrust her adequate bulk into the doorway.

“Is the Reverend Stricker at home?” asked Vincent.

“No. He’s out.” She had received her orders.

Vincent heard voices inside. He pushed the woman aside brusquely.

“Get out of my way,” he said.

The maid followed him and tried to bar his entrance.

“The family is at dinner,” she protested. “You can’t go in.”

Vincent walked down the long hall and stepped into the dining room. As he did so he saw the very end of a familiar black dress disappear through the other door. The Reverend Stricker, his Aunt Wilhelmina, and the two younger children were at the table. Five places had been laid. At the place where the empty chair was pushed back at a crooked angle, there was a plate of broiled veal, whole potatoes, and string beans.

“I couldn’t stop him, sir,” said the maid. “He just pushed his way in.”

There were two silver candlesticks on the table, with tall white candles giving off the only light. Calvin, hanging on the wall, looked eerie in the yellow glow. The silver service from the carved sideboard gleamed in the darkness, and Vincent noticed the little high window under which he had first spoken to Kay.

“Well, Vincent,” said his uncle, “you seem to have less manners every day.”

“I want to speak to Kay.”

“She’s not here. She’s visiting with friends.”

“She was sitting in this place when I rang the bell. She had begun her dinner.”

Stricker turned to his wife. “Take the children out of the room.”

“Now, Vincent,” he said, “you are causing a great deal of trouble. Not only I, but everyone else in the family has completely lost patience with you. You’re a tramp, an idler, a boor, and as far as I can see, an ungrateful, vicious character. How dare you even presume to love my daughter? It is an insult to me.”

“Let me see Kay, Uncle Stricker. I want to talk to her.”

“She doesn’t want to talk to you. She never wants to lay eyes on you again!”

“Kay said that?”

“Yes.”

“I don’t believe it.”

Stricker was aghast. It was the first time he had been accused of lying since he had been ordained.

“How dare you say that I am not telling the truth!”

“I’ll never believe that until I hear it from her own lips. And even then I won’t.”

“When I think of all the precious time and money I wasted on you here in Amsterdam.”

Vincent sank wearily into the chair Kay had just vacated, and rested both his arms on the table.

“Uncle, listen to me a moment. Show me that even a clergyman can have a human heart under his triple steel armour. I love your daughter. I love her desperately. Every hour of the day and night I think of her and long for her. You work for God, then for God’s sake show me a little mercy. Don’t be so cruel to me. I know that I’m not successful yet, but if you’ll give me a little time, I will be. Give me a chance to show her my love. Let me help her to understand why she must love me. Surely you must have been in love once, Uncle, and you know what agony a man can suffer. I’ve suffered enough; let me find a little happiness for once. Just give me a chance to win her love, that’s all I ask. I can’t bear this aloneness and misery another day!”

The Reverend Stricker looked down at him for a moment and then said, “Are you such a weakling and a coward that you can’t stand a little pain? Must you be forever whimpering about it?”

Vincent sprang to his feet violently. All the softness was gone from him now. Only the fact that they were standing across the table from each other, separated by two tall candles in silver candlesticks, kept the younger man from hitting the minister. A bruising silence hummed in the room while the two men stood staring at the sparkling points of light in each other’s eyes.

Vincent did not know how much time passed. He raised his hand and placed it near the candle.

“Let me speak to her,” he said, “for just as long as I can hold my hand in this flame.”

He turned his hand over and placed the back of it in the flame. The light in the room dimmed. The carbon from the candle instantly made his flesh black. Within a few seconds it turned to a raw, burning red. Vincent did not flinch or take his eyes from his uncle. Five seconds passed. Ten. The skin on the back of his hand began to puff. The Reverend Stricker’s eyes were wide with horror. He seemed paralysed. Several times he tried to speak, to move, but he could not. He was held in the grip of Vincent’s cruel, probing eyes. Fifteen seconds passed. The puffed skin cracked open but the arm did not even tremble. The Reverend Stricker at last brought himself to consciousness with a violent jerk.

“You crazy man!” he shouted at the top of his voice. “You insane fool!”

He threw himself across the table, snatched the candle from under Vincent, and crushed the light with his fist. Then he leaned down to the candle nearest and blew it out with a great puff.

The room was in utter darkness. The two men stood leaning on their palms, across the table from each other, peering into the darkness, unable to see, yet seeing each other only too clearly.

“You’re mad!” cried the Reverend. “And Kay despises you with all her heart! Get out of this house and never dare to come back!”

Vincent picked his way slowly along the dark street and found himself somehow on the outskirts of the town. The familiar and pleasantly fetid odour of still water assailed his nostrils as he stood staring down into a brackish, dead canal. The gas lamp at the corner cast a light on his left hand—some deep instinct had kept his drawing hand at his side—and he saw that there was a black hole in the skin. He passed over a series of tiny waterways smelling faintly of a long forgotten sea. At last he found himself near the house of Mendes da Costa. He squatted down on the bank of a canal. He dropped a pebble on the heavy green blanket of kroos. It sank without even showing that there was water beneath.

Kay was gone from his life. The “No, never, never” had been wrung from the depths of her soul. Her cry had now become transposed, had become his property. It pounded through his head, repeating, “No, never, never shall you see her again. Never shall you hear the lilting croon of her voice, the smile in her deep blue eyes, the feel of her warm skin on your cheek. Never shall you know love, for it cannot live, no, not even for as long as you can hold your flesh in the burning crucible of pain!”