"How about--Rust?"

"He's dead."

The winter came, with its bleak sea winds and cold rains and blizzards

of snow. Carley did not go South. She read and brooded, and gradually

avoided all save those true friends who tolerated her.

She went to the theater a good deal, showing preference for the drama

of strife, and she did not go anywhere for amusement. Distraction

and amusement seemed to be dead issues for her. But she could become

absorbed in any argument on the good or evil of the present day.

Socialism reached into her mind, to be rejected. She had never

understood it clearly, but it seemed to her a state of mind where

dissatisfied men and women wanted to share what harder working or

more gifted people possessed. There were a few who had too much of

the world's goods and many who had too little. A readjustment of such

inequality and injustice must come, but Carley did not see the remedy in

Socialism.

She devoured books on the war with a morbid curiosity and hope that she

would find some illuminating truth as to the uselessness of sacrificing

young men in the glory and prime of their lives. To her war appeared a

matter of human nature rather than politics. Hate really was an effect

of war. In her judgment future wars could be avoided only in two

ways--by men becoming honest and just or by women refusing to have

children to be sacrificed. As there seemed no indication whatever of

the former, she wondered how soon all women of all races would meet on

a common height, with the mounting spirit that consumed her own heart.

Such time must come. She granted every argument for war and flung

against it one ringing passionate truth--agony of mangled soldiers and

agony of women and children. There was no justification for offensive

war. It was monstrous and hideous. If nature and evolution proved the

absolute need of strife, war, blood, and death in the progress of animal

and man toward perfection, then it would be better to abandon this

Christless code and let the race of man die out.

All through these weeks she longed for a letter from Glenn. But it did

not come. Had he finally roused to the sweetness and worth and love

of the western girl, Flo Hutter? Carley knew absolutely, through both

intelligence and intuition, that Glenn Kilbourne would never love

Flo. Yet such was her intensity and stress at times, especially in the

darkness of waking hours, that jealousy overcame her and insidiously

worked its havoc. Peace and a strange kind of joy came to her in dreams

of her walks and rides and climbs in Arizona, of the lonely canyon where

it always seemed afternoon, of the tremendous colored vastness of that

Painted Desert. But she resisted these dreams now because when she awoke

from them she suffered such a yearning that it became unbearable. Then

she knew the feeling of the loneliness and solitude of the hills. Then

she knew the sweetness of the murmur of falling water, the wind in the

pines, the song of birds, the white radiance of the stars, the break

of day and its gold-flushed close. But she had not yet divined their

meaning. It was not all love for Glenn Kilbourne. Had city life palled

upon her solely because of the absence of her lover? So Carley plodded

on, like one groping in the night, fighting shadows.




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