Bounil fd, . Bellefonte, Pa., January 14, 1927. RECOMPENSE. They told me the roses were cruel, Surrounded with thorns untold; The story of gold and the rainbow, Was only a fable old. But the sun-kissed roses unfolded, To yield me a perfume sweet; And the kind of the western sunset, Scattered his gold at my feet. They told me the snowdrifts of Winter, Were deeper than ever before; The murmuring winds of the Summer, Had gone to return never more. But in the warm light of the Springtime, The snowdrifts all melted away; The soft winds returned with the Summer. To scatter the clouds of each day. They told me the life of a Christian, Was toilsome, and dark, and cold; The love and rewards of the Master, Were all for the brave and bold. The sun of His love fell upon me— My heaviest crosses are light; And out of the gloom and the darkness, He bringeth me sunshine bright. —By Mrs. A. S. Roe. remem pA ees ene A WAY OF ESCAPE. For Oliver Emerald, going down the white steps of his new house and pausing to look back at his new wife, perfection reigned. He ran back up the steps. “Dearest!” he said. He was keen to utter something more. “Dearest!” he uttered, and went down again. “Qliver,” cried Clare practically, “what night shall we have the dinner party?” “Not till Saturday when the Wern- ers are back,” he replied. “Not be- fore Saturday on any account. But I don’t want to dictate, darling.” “Shall we ask the Ramsays or the Mertons ?” “The Mertons—I don’t like your go- ing with Helen Ramsay. Not that I want to run you, dearest!” “And Oliver—we didn’t decide Yhetper to have lobster or to skip the sh, “Oh, skip it—skip it! Though I simply will not decide for you, angel.” He broke into a run to catch the interurban. Clare looked after him with adoration. He was everything. She turned indoors. It was the first at-home morning of their presum- able fifty or sixty years together. As she thought of this, her eye fell on a little marble angel on the clock. And something in her consciousness sank. She thought that it was because the clock said nine-fifteen and there was everything to do before Arthur came —Arthur, the first member of her family whom she had seen since six weeks before she had driven away from her home with Oliver. Oliver and Arthur and Linda—the little sis- ter who had mysteriously left them five years before—made up Clare's nearest world. More than anybedy save Oliver and that sister, or her memory, Clare loved this elder broth- er. Yet when she heard his ring and his step in the passage, she was pos- sessed by shyness. Arthur came in, held her face in his hands to kiss, looked intently into her eyes. She knew what his ques- tion would be: “Happy, little sister?” “Yes—oh, yes!” “Not just saying so?” “No, Arthur. Oliver is—” “Yes, of course. Fr 27 “Oh, Arthur, I shall be the happiest woman imaginable—" “Clare! Are you happy now?” She met his eyes. “Yes. Truly. Very, very happy.” “Well—I didn’t know. Oliver, you know, is a pretty positive chap, and you—well, you aren’t exactly used to having a course mapped out for you.” She regarded him from the heights of her experience. “In love you don’t boss, Arthur. You want to do what the other pet- son wants.” “You do and you don’t,” Arthur said. “If you each identify yourself with the other, who is the one to act?” “Things settle themselves—if you love enough,” Clare offered. “I don’t know. But you belong to yourself, and so does Oliver. Your inner voices don’t marry, you know! Surely they continue to talk to each one of you individually—no ?”’ “You don’t understand,” said Clare stiffly. “Either I'm right,” said Arthur, “or else, in any happy marriage, either the husband or the wife disappears— becomes swallowed up!” She cried, “They both disappear! They're both born again.” “Once in a million times. The other nine hundred thousand, and so on, one is sacrificed to the birth of the other —if they don’t watch out.” “Well, it’s all right,” said Clare. “Oliver and I know everything. We..” His delighted laughter made her laugh too. When he went away he put his arms about her with wistfulness in his tend- derness. “Little sister,” he said, “married life is like any other life—and like dying: it has to be done by one and by one.” “Marriage “Not at all. thing is.” Arthur shook his head. “Nothing is,” he said. ‘“That’s the grand mis- take of the ages. That's defeated more marriages than anything else— even than selfishness. No, don’t be misled. Marriage is entered upon by pairs, but in it you succeed or you fail in a tremendous solitude.” “Not Oliver and I!” said Clare in- corrigibly. Arthur went away laughing. In an hour he was back again, his face grave and questioning. Something in his look arrested and warned her. To her question but half formed he replied without gladness: “It’s Linda. I oughtn’t to tell you this first day—" Clare gave a cry. “She's alive!” But are you hap- does?” Clare cried. It’s by two’s, if any- They had both dreamed of such a moment, of hearing that this strange- ly vanished sister had returned; but now that the moment was here, even Arthur was amazed at the passion of tenderness in Clare’s face. “Yes, she’s alive,” he told her. “I've seen her—but oh, Clare, she’s so changed.” “She's sick—she needs mel” “She’s sick and she wants you,” he assented. “But it isn’t only that. Clare—she’s—she’s somebody else. She’s not Linda any more.” “You mean—" “T don’t know what I mean. But she’s like a shell—she’s hard and bit- ter—she’s tired—I’ve asked her noth- ing. But I cansee...... n “Take me to her, Arthur!” “She said she would come here. She can’t tell when she can come— she’s trying to work and she wouldn’t tell me where. But if you'll see her, I'm to telephone to a number she gave me and leave the word.” “Qh, Arthur, I can’t wait to see ber. Linda—think of seeing my little Lin- dg" “She said that when she heard of Mother's death, she meant never to come back. But she’s ill—she needs ” “Oh, she needs us!” Clare was si- lent, thinking back to that morning when their mother had come to them, sick with the import of her news, Linda’s curt note in her hand. Linda had given no explanation, had sent no later word; their mother had died without ever having heard from her. And now— i “She walked into my office,” said Arthur,” as if I had seen her yester- day. And I didn’t know her.” “Qh, Arthur,” Clare cried, “I want Oliver to know!” Arthur looked at her with sudden attention. “Qliver isn’t going to be very keen about her,” he said dryly. “She’s my sister—she’s—" “She’s a human being and Oliver's going to judge her as such.” “Oliver will want whatever I want.” “Perhaps he’ll expect you to want what he wants. It may be that Oliv- er’s inner voice won’t be the same as yours. Remember my theory of soli- tude!” She asked him to tell his theory to the dinner party—the dinner party which was on Saturday night, and which skipped the fish, and at which the Mertons and not the Ramsays sat down, even as Oliver had specified. Clare would have preferred Friday, was proud of her Newbergs, and liked the Ramsays far better than the Mer- tons, but of all this Oliver knew noth- ing. He merely adored Clare. In the gray dining-room, in the car- dle-lit spring dusk, they made a vital group of thrilling significance. Of the ten at table, Clare and Oliver, with their seven weeks, had the shortest span of married life; and the Mer- tons’ year and a half made the long- est. Between were the Weldons and the Berthelets, with their year or so together. The women were in the twenties, all on the incline of mental vigor, with every day an assumable dawn of newly unfolded powers. The men, in the late twenties and early thirties, were of the “normal” of America: one of the university, two of other professions, and Oliver the new partner in a great buisness. None had been married before and all were childless. They sat there to- gether in the beauty of a possible mental and probable physical fertility, the potential heads of four lines of descendants, accepting, with the grace of children, life and all that it offered. At the foot of the table sat Arthur Alward, so arrestingly good-looking that they listened to him with more than curiosity when Clare said to him: “Tell them to their faces what you've been saying of all our lives.” “It’s no mere observation,” he pro- tested, “and no theory. It’s a law.” He offered them his Law of Soli- tude in the Decisions of the Married how “we think” means that one of the two thinks and absorbs in the pro- cess the other, who continues to think otherwise but is content to be absorb- ed. And he lazily enjoyed their throes of protest. “I'm myself,” said Jenny Merton; “Bobby Merton is Bobby. We were so when we met and when we married, and behold us now. But everything there’s been to decide since we were married we've decided togther. Haven’t we, Bobby?” “Yes, you have,” said Bobby promptly. Their laughter was broken by Mary Weldon’s, “Well, at our house we’ve been so unanimous that we're silly. Haven’t we, Gene?” “I’ve been unanimous,” Gene agreed, “but you’ve made most of the deci- sions score, Molly. ....” “But now see us,” cried Carrie Berthelet. “The only big fight we ever had was when I gave in about going away on an expensive vacation that—" ; “That you wanted to go on most awfully,” said Nick Berthelet, “or we wouldn’t have gone.” “And I gave in,” she finished con- tentedly. “And so we decided that together, didn’t we?” “There’s my point,” said Arthur Al- ward. “You may act together, hut your decisions are solitary affairs. Marriage can’t alter that.” At either end of the table, Clare and Oliver sat listening. Their eyes said triumphantly, “There! We knew we were more married, better married, than all these people. We really do settle things together, you know.” Coffee was to be served in the little living-room. It was as they entered the room, laughing, that Clare saw someone who had been wandering about there, and who now turned and faced them. Though Clare would have known her at a casual glance, she now ran forward with a cry of certainty. “Linda!” “You didn’t mind my waiting, did you?” said Linda. “I asked the serv-|l ant not to tell you.” It was like her to walk in after five years and greet Clare as if they had parted at tea-time. But as she kissed her sister, Clare’s heart sank. It was as Arthur had said—Linda had come back, with the five years writ- ten upon her head to toe. Inthe black EE ! hair—when had it been so black?— and her red cheeks and lips and her challenging eyes; in the sleeveless street gown; and more than these, in some strange atmosphere about her which flooded the room like a blazing colored light. Before that light the placid and commonplace suburban wo- men went out like candles. Clare got through the presentations, through Linda’s brief indolent inspec- tion, and dismissal, of Oliver; through her swift amused appraisal of the wo- men and the polite murmurs of her guests. They all waited for Linda to speak, as if she were some new cen- ter of energy which drove all their thoughts against the walls. “1 didn’t know it was a party,” said Linda, with enormous distinctness, “or I wouldn’t have broken in. I've only an hour—" “Only an hour!” Clare cried. She was hardly thinking of her dinner guests. Here was Linda, her little sister, whom she had loved and whose loss was the only touch of tragedy in her own life. Linda was extremely at home—at home, though with a betraying man- ner of defiance. She was as different from these other women as a rhine- stone from a box of beads, and she enjoyed her rhinestone estate. “A frightful journey,” she said, “so frightfully cold. The parlor car was. like ice—I always take the parlor car. The food was abominable. What a trip it is out from the city—do you all make it often? Or do you stay here, Clare—now that you're mar- ried?” The servant was there with the cof- fee. Clare poured it, thankful for Arthur's contained fashion of han- dling the time. When the coffee had been handed, she heard above her Oliver's discreet murmur: “Clare—this isn’t Linda!” “Yes, it Is.” “But the picture that you have of her—" “I know—1I know. stand.” “You must get rid of her before the Werners come.” “Get rid of her!” “Certainly. Surely you see what it means—"" “But Oliver—” “Clare!” “But how can I—" “Clare!” She rose, made her way to Linda and took her empty cup. “Will you all excuse us,” Clare said evenly, “if I run away with her for a few minutes? We must make a plan laughed and followed. “Plans!” she cried. “Not for me. You either do a thing or you don’t do it— see?” In her room Clare took her sister in her arms. “Darling! Tell me things —oh, I've so longed for you—to know where you were—" “I knew youd do that way,” said Linda. She stood at Clare’s mirror and powdered her face. “Arthur did that too,” she went on. “You wouldn’t think he was emotion- al, would you? I thought how, won- derful it’d be to have a relative. who didn’t ask you a string of questions. Now I’ve only one thing to tell— see? I went away on my own. I've lived my own life—and I'm answer- able to nobody for it. If Mother had lived, it would have been different. 1 always thought that sometime she and I—well, she didn’t live. But there is one thing I want to tell you. “Don’t tell me even that if you'd rather not, Linda. It’s only that I love you.” “Do you? I wonder! Now we'll see whether you do. You remember about my heart when I was a little girl? Well, now it’s gone to pieces, or it’s going hard, and they tell me I mustn’t work for a year. There's a threat of something else too—you see, Clare, it’s selfishness.? 1 was al- ways selfish, wasn’t I? It looks as I don’t under- if I'd nowhere else to go—but that | 5 "her in his arms. isn’t true. I could keep on, as I have been. But I want to come here to you—if you'll have me. I’ve no claim, I know. . . . That's about all, I think. She finished with a hard brightness, 2 dry-eyed look about the room, a faint smile at Clare. Clare cried only, “Linda! You'll come here to me?” “Shall 1? That's what I wondered! Your husband looks to me pretty ter- ribly good. = Still, that kind— How- ever, he might not be able to stand me here, on account of the neighbors.” “Linda! Oliver would want any- body here that I wanted!” “Thanks. Put it up to him first, though.” : “That is absurd, Linda. Of course we want you—when will you come?” “Put it up to him first,” said Linda. “I've enough to live on for a week. And if he won’t have me—" Clare’s protestations were inter- rupted by a tap at the door and Arth- ur came in. “You're awfully good-locking, Art, if you weren't so solemn,” said Linda. “I'm solemn too, but I don’t look it, do I? I’m inviting myself to come to stay for a year with Clare and her husband.” She caught Arthur’s glance at Clare. “That’s what I thought,” Linda said, “but Clare’s going to put it to him.” “Linda, look here,” said Arthur bluntly, “you’ll never be happy in—" “In respectability! Yes, I should. For a while. ‘When the devil was sick, the devil a monk. . . .” Besides, oh, besides—" She turned to the mirror again and used her powder-puff; but Clare saw her face. Linda’s eyes were filled with tears. “Darling!” Clare cried. “Darling!” “Let me send you somewhere, Linda,” Arthur was saying, “to a san- itarium or some quiet place. I could manage—"' “Arthur!” Clare cried. “Don’t you se? What she wants is me.” “So does Oliver,” said Arthur short- Yeoliver will want what I want,” said Clare stiffly. As if he were speaking for himself, Oliver's voice sounded outside the door. “Clare! Clare!” : He was on the threshold, a tone of The Werners are here. injury in his voice. “They’ve been here for ten minutes. I don’t know what to say to them. Surely your sister will excuse you—" “She’ll come down to meet them!” Clare cried defiantly. Linda laughed. “No,” she said, “I've met enough for one night. Haven't I, my brothers? Good-by, darling. Ill hear from you sometime at the end of next week? Send me a letter by Arthur and I'll drop in on him. No—TI’ve what I've been saying. Good-by, my dears. Go back to your party.” She ran down the stairs before them. From the foot of the stairs her voice rang out with its strange vigor: “My best love to all the guests, you know!” “My heavens,” said Oliver, “what will the Werners think ?” Clare looked at him—a strange look, a look which he had never seen on her face before. He saw the look again when the guests had gone, and the hall-door was locked. He turned out the light, groped for Clare in the lowest step, and together in silence they went up the stairs. In this week in their home, this small ceremony had become a habit—the silence, Oliver’s arm about her, the kiss as they stepped in- side their door. He kissed her now, saw her eyes and said: “Clare, what is it?” She answered. “It’s course. Linda, saying, “Don’t think of that, sweet- heart. I don’t believe they’ll think any less of you—you can’t help. . .” “What are you talking about?” Clare asked sharply. “Why, the bunch are pretty under- standing. They won’t mind Linda—" “ ‘Mind!” What is it to me what they mind?” “Well, the Werners would have minded, let me tell you. I was on pins for fear they’d see her—or hear her! It would have been the end of us, with them—"’ “Oliver! You’re talking about Lin- da—that I’ve tried to get trace of for five years. ...” “T know, sweet. It’s terrible fo you to find her like this. It’s incredible that she’s your sister.” “But she is my sister: And I love her more than anything in the world but you.” “Angel! What a woman you are! What can we do for her?” “There’s only one thing to do.” “Money. Of course we'll do that.” “Not money. She’s alone—and she’s sick. I want her to come here.” “Here with us?” His incredulity was almost comie. “Why, of course. I'm all she has. She’s turned to me when she needs me.” “When somebody else has cast her off, I'll wager.” At this instead of a blaze of anger Clare felt a leepening certainty of what she was to do. She said gently, “That’s not it. If it were true, she would need me all the more because of it.” “Clare—you can’t pretend not to know what sort of woman she is?” “Then she does need me all the more!” “But you! What about your good name? What about my name?” “Qur good name. Oliver, could you love me if I turned away from her for any reason?” “Of course, darling, we must be ‘good to her. We'll send her some- where till she gets well—we’ll heip to see that she has enough for every care—we’ll help her afterward to find her place again.” “That isn’t enough. She needs me.” “But I need you! You belong to me!” “I belong to myself—" she stopped. The words had a peculiar familiarity. Arthur’s words— “when all is said, Oliver. inner voice speaks to you alone.” “Darling.” He came to her, took ! For the first time since their springtime, she stood quietly, did not turn to him. “I adore you,” he told her. on earth for you. But are you willing to—to harm our love by having her in the house with us, to share our table, to meet our friends, to have them think—" “I don’t care what they think,” Clare said. “I care what you think. And I care what my mother wouid think, if she were alive to know.” “Darling—you don’t mean that you want your sister here?” “I love her. Whatever she’s done can’t change that, any more than it can change my relationship to her.” “But you can see, surely vou can see, what having her here will mean to us socially?” “If it does, I'm sorry—on your ac- count. But I can’t help it.” He moved away from her, stood at a window. All that he saw was a re- flection of the pretty room, the hang- ings, the shades, Clare in her charm- ing gown. It was heaven, his heaven. Their friends were a part of their new life together. The Werners and their connections were going to mean everything. He saw the years ahead, smooth, prosperous, filled with ever more delightful relationships with nice peaple, charming people to whom Lin- a= He went back to Ciare, looked sor- rowfully into her eyes. “Sweetheart,” he said, “you do not see this thing as it is and I don’t wonder at it. But you must trust me. You must let me decide this for you.” She lay awake, staring at the dim glass. Was this what other women had found out, hundreds of thousands of them, millions of them: That the inner voice which spoke to them and told them what to do was as nothing to the voice of the man whom they had chosen and who told them that his voice—or his judgment, or his ex- pediency—was the rule by which they should walk? Could she make Oliver see that she had married him but that she had not married his conscience nor had he married hers? Did married people ever manage to make the We a real We, instead of a masculine I, or a feminine I, masked as that conjugal We? She thought about the men and wo- no address—that’s of ; To her amazement she heard Oliver | you belong to yourself and so does | Married or single, your own “I'll do anything ; ih - \ men who had been there at the house that evening—the Mertons, the Wel- dons, the Berthelets. What would , they do? The three husbands had agreed whimsically that they were ! outvoted in their households. Clare ‘thought that on inessentials this was | very likely true; but that on the es- ' sentials, on a matter like this—oh, but there never had been for them a ‘matter like this. Nor for anyone! : And Linda should come to her. Any woman would say the same. At breakfast they did not reopen the matter. Clare knew that Oliver considered it settled and closed. Alone Clare cried, as she had been longing to do all night. A little later Arthur came in and went into the li- brary to read. When she saw him, Clare cried: “P’ll wager you're going to side with Oliver!” “About not having Linda come here? No—I think he’s wrong.” “Good, Arthur! And you think that I should hold out to have her here—" “That’s another matter.” “But isn’t it always right to stand up fer what you know is right?” “That’s not the trouble. It's easy enough to stand up for one principle, perhaps—but here two principles con- flict: your duty to your husband and your duty to your sister.” i. “You think that Oliver should come | first?” “Don’t you?” “Whether he is right or wrong?” “But he’s both. Having Linda here will hurt you both socially—she has talked to me a bit, Clare. But even : without knowing, one knows—by that strange aura which a woman carries about her and which tells everybody what she really is. If the Werners came to know about her, had to meet her here, they simply wouldn’t come here. This might even hurt Oliver with them in a business way. You might as well face it. I know the Werners, and I know that Oliver's prophecy is probably perfectly right.” | “Arthur, that oughtn’t to weigh ‘when Linda’s future is concerned.” { “How about Oliver's future? And i the future of your children when they ‘come ?” | They stared at that wall. But when they sat down together at luncheon, | they were both laughing. Clare bad : said dejectedly: | “I never knew living was such a : terrible job.” “It has,” said Arthur, “that repu- tation.” | She tried to think of any problem that could be so hard. To choose be- tween darkness and light was easy. To choose between two lights was hardly less simple. But—to choose between two dark spots! When Oliver came home, she search- ed his face to see whether the day had brought its own solution. Oliver’s | face was serene enough. Even when ‘he asked: | “Have you written to Linda?” | “I’ve written, but I haven’t mailed it.” { “But she ought to know that she | cannot come here. She’ll want to make other plans.” “QOliver—" | “Clare!” They said no more. ‘at him and saw for the first time a stranger. Oliver she had married, but | this stranger had also married. With Oliver she was one flesh. From this stranger she was living and was fo live her separate life. She lay beside him, knew his tenderness, and thought: “Here is the man I have married, and here am I his wife. Here also a man whom I do not know, and I am some- one whom he does not know. Which pair of us, then, is to lead a life to- gether? Or have we all four got to make out as best we can?” The next day brought a letter from Linda. It came after Oliver had gone, and Clare was alone as she read: “Dearest Clare: “It did somthing to me to see you. Oh darling—I wanted to say things to vou, to tell you things. I wanted you ‘to know how it all came about—now innocent I am inside, no matter what you may think. It was all such a hox- rid jumble—I never meant to be bad : —oh, that sounds like every man in { Clare looked jail, and perhaps it’s true for them as it is for me. I don’t regret every- thing, either-—you won’t like that. { But Clare, what I did regret, when I saw you, regret so that it kills me— (it kills me—was this long silence. { Why didn’t I write to you? I knew perfectly well that you were the best { friend I have in the world, that yeu { would never go back on me—" i! “No,” Clare said, “No, I never wiil go back on you, little sister!” Having made up her mind, she faced the necessity to tell Oliver. She wrote another letter to Linda, but she did ! not post the letter until she should have told Oliver her intention. For this recital she wanted to make some preparation, and she had no idea what to do. She tried to plan out what she would say to him but every time that she went over it in her mind, she said something different. She would have liked to talk to some wise being, but the beings whom she knew seemed not wise enough. She would have liked to read some wise books, but all the books that she could think of seemed to concern something besides her particular problem. She tried her schoolgirl device, resorted to by the wisest, of opening the Bible to a ran- dom verse, and she opened at some- thing merely about the wild ox. Fin- ally, toward teatime, she fell asleep with a prayer on her lips: “God, help me to help Linda. God help me to be right with Oliver. God help me. ...” She woke with a sense of renewal, relaxed and yet invigorated It was six o'clock and it was the closing of the hall door as Oliver entered which had wakened her. He came running up the stairs, he was calling her, he took her in his arms and kissed her. “Darling! I couldn’t remember how you looked!” “You forgot me!” “No, but just now, in the car, I couldn’t get you back—couldn’t re- member how your eyes look—" “But you loved me just the same?” He spoke solemnly, “More every minute of my life.” All the delicious foolery and earn estness of every day. But there came to her something of the unspeakable wonder of love. It came to her newly, as if before now she had indeed known Oliver’s love, but not the very face of love itself. She held him, thought, “Isn’t this enough? Is there any- thing more? Not to hurt nor to hin- der this that we have—Oliver and I— isn’t this all that I have to do?” She drew back and looked at him. but between his eyes and hers was the face of Linda—of the little sister whom she had loved as a little girl; her mother’s baby, for whose return their mother had died grieving. “What is it, darling?” Oliver was asking. “I love you—I love you!” she cried. “Will you always remember that?” “Remember—no! Ill live it,” said Oliver. She thought, “How much does a man’s love mean? In an hour, when I defy him, how much will it mean then?” Not at dinner obviously. She would not tell him then. It would be after- ward, when they were sitting alone. And all through dinner she looked at him with her new question: How much does love mean? Is it love only when it has its own way? How would Oli- ver lcok at her when she told him? What if it meant a long ugly argu- ment, during which in each something ugly should rise in words? What if he asked her to choose between Lind: and him— She would not think of that. She thought, “In an hour, ll know.” But when they rose from the table and went into the little living-room, Clare was conscious of an impulse in her not to tell Oliver yet. She put it aside, realizing that she must mail Linda’s letter. But the impulse came back, was present as insistently as words, a definite urge and direction not to tell him now. She said to her- self that this was foolish, that it was even cowardice. Was she really afraid to tell Oliver? She turned to him, ready to open her lips to tell him. But he unfolded his paper with some slight comment and in that respite the in- hibition in her was like words: “Don’t tell him to-night!” The long quiet evening passed, and she did not speak. The compulsion to silence was like a command, sharp, definite, imperative. There was noth- ing unusual in such commands, she had obeyed some such innei impulse all her life as, she thought, has every- one else; often this had been done against all reason and she had ex- plained it by the familiar words: the sense of peace and security in “Something told me to do so-and-so,” or, “I felt in my bones that I had better not.” Ten o'clock came. Oliver rose and held out his hands; together they moved about the rooms, turning off the lamps. In the darkened hall, Oli- ver groped for her and they weni up i the stairway. Still she did not speak. | Her brain went on: “if I don’t tell him to-night, there will not be time jin the morning—and Linda should | have her letter. I must tell him—" I But the command within went on i too: “Not to-night.” A rainy morning could not darken { which she woke. Her mind went on with its thinking, but underneath all was a. sense of singing calm. She thought: “What is it? I ought to be worried. I ought to be frightened. Last night I was! Shall I tell Oliver before he goes to the office—" But in the end she stood on the white steps to see him go, and watei- ed him wave from the interurban plat- form. And she had not told him her resolve, nor again mentioned Linda. On her desk lay the unmailed letter to Linda, bidding her to come to them. Clare sealed it, ran out to the street and dropped it in 2 postbox. By evening she was certain that her failure to talk with Oliver had been sheer cowardice. Now she would be firm. She would not wait for dinner to be over. She would begin as soon as he came into the house. When she heard his latch-key she ran downstairs. She would pull him into the library and tell him instantly. She would say, “Oliver, it makes no difference what happens—I can’t fail Linda now.” And to her surprise, she found in herself now no denying impulse. The 'way seemed to be clear for her to speak. She heard voices in the lower hall- way. Someone had entered with Oliv- er. It was Arthur. So much the bet- ter. She would tell them both. { She went down the stairs, her white i frock lightening the shadows. She greeted them, smiling, drew them into ; the library. i And Oliver said, “Has Linda come yet?” {| “Linda! Neo.... “She wants your endorsement of a : plan of mine,” said Arthur. “I’m go- |ing to take her to the Mediterranean this winter.” “You. . . .” said Clare uncertainly. “I've been wanting to go abroad. This gives me an excuse. I've the money, as it happens. And Linda's keen to go.” “But she wanted to be with me—" Clare began. “With you—yes,” said Arthur. “But she confessed to me that she was afraid she couldn’t stand .your neigh- bots... .., you know how Linda was. She didn’t seem to care for your guests the other night. Anyway, she’s in no condition for this climate. Oh, the Mediterranean is the thing.” Clare was silent. Then she was to do nothing, need decide nothing. But she had decided! She had decided on the necessary thing. : Did that decision draw toward her forces which invisibly helped? Which provided a way of escape? “I'm no end relieved,” Oliver was saying. “I simply could not have her here—"" “T understand,” said Arthur gravely. Clare was not listening. She was thinking: Were things as simple as this? The right decision, made at all costs—did it actually key all other events to itself? She had said, “if you love enough, things will settle themselves.” Was this how they did it? Oliver had crossed to her. He was saying. “Darling, you didn’t think I was stupid about Linda? You did ” (Continued on page 7, Col. 4.)