“You'll be yourself, whether it's Malta or London,” said Aaron.
“There's a doom for me,” laughed Lilly. The water on the fire was boiling. He rose and threw in salt, then dropped in the potatoes with little plops. “There there are lots of mes. I'm not only just one proposition. A new place brings out a new thing in a man. Otherwise you'd have stayed in your old place with your family.”
“The man in the middle of you doesn't change,” said Aaron.
“Do you find it so?” said Lilly.
“Ay. Every time.”
“Then what's to be done?”
“Nothing, as far as I can see. You get as much amusement out of life as possible, and there's the end of it.”
“All right then, I'll get the amusement.”
“Ay, all right then,” said Aaron. “But there isn't anything wonderful about it. You talk as if you were doing something special. You aren't. You're no more than a man who drops into a pub for a drink, to liven himself up a bit. Only you give it a lot of names, and make out as if you were looking for the philosopher's stone, or something like that. When you're only killing time like the rest of folks, before time kills you.”
Lilly did not answer. It was not yet seven o'clock, but the sky was dark. Aaron sat in the firelight. Even the saucepan on the fire was silent. Darkness, silence, the firelight in the upper room, and the two men together.