"Why not? It would seem only just that he should conquer. There are

men who are not tempted, whose goodness is negative. Character is made

by resistance against evil, not by lack of knowledge of it. And the

judgments of men are not those which count in the final verdict."

He said more than this, breaking the bonds of her despair. Others had

pitied Barry. Roger defended him. She began to think of her brother,

not as her imagination had pictured him, flung into utter darkness, but

with his head up--his beautiful fair head, a shining sword in his hand,

fighting against the powers of evil--stumbling, falling, rising again.

He saw her relax as she listened, and his love for her taught him what

to say.

And as he talked, her eyes noted the change in him.

This was not the Roger Poole of the Tower Rooms. This was a Roger

Poole who had found himself. She could see it in his manner--she could

hear it in his voice, it shone from his eyes. Here was a man who

feared nothing, not even the whispers that had once had power to hurt.

The clouds were sweeping toward them, hiding the blue; the wind whirled

the dead leaves from the paths, and stirred the budding branches of the

hundred-leaved bush--touched with its first hint of tender green. The

mist from the fountain was like a veil which hid the mocking face of

the bronze boy.

But Mary and Roger had no eyes for these warnings; each was famished

for the other, and this meeting gave to Mary, at least, a sense of

renewed life.

She spoke of her future. "Constance and Gordon want me to come to

them. But I hate to give up my work. I don't want to be discontented.

Yet I dread the loneliness here. Did you ever think I should be such a

coward?"

"You are not a coward--you are a woman--wanting the things that belong

to you."

She sat very still. "I wonder--what are the things which belong to a

woman?"

"Love--a home--happiness."

"And you think I want these things?"

"I know it."

"How do you know?"

"Because you have tried work--and it has failed. You have tried

independence--and it has failed. You have tried freedom, and have

found it bondage."

He was once more in the grip of the dream which he had dreamed as he

had sat with Mary's letter in his hand on Cousin Patty's porch. If she

would come to him there would be no more loneliness. His love should

fill her life, and there would be, too, the love of his people. She

should win hearts while he won souls. If only she would care enough to

come.




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