Bellefonte, Pa., July 25, 1980, IF HE SHOULD COME If Jesus should tramp the streets tonight Storm-beaten and hungry for bread, Seeking a room and candle light And a clean though humble bed, ‘Who would welcome the Workman in, Though He came with panting breath, His hands all bruised and His garments thin This Workman from Nazareth? Would rick folk hurry to bind His bruise And shelter His stricken form? Would they take God in with His mud- dy shoes Out of the pitiless storm? Are they not too busy wreathing their flowers Or heaping their golden store— Too busy chasing the bubble hours For the poor man’s God at the door? IN THE MEXICAN QUARTERS. Life in the first place had been over kind. For life, I think, had led Billys youth along sheltered ways and of her bounty given with both hands. All that, of course, was very pleasant but it wasn’t particularly good training for the somber days. And then life, with a little insistent simle, began demanding her price and suddenly Billy found himself unwilling to pay. So he ran away from it all and came out here. That's my belief, at least. No one will know certainly just what put Billy out of the race at its very start. For all this, you must re- member, had come to pass before Billy arrived in Verde. Later he told me a little—but not all. And since to each ig the inalienable right o soil and tarnish his own life and his own dreams, none of us ever sought out Billy’s reasons. And, of course, none of us ever judged. Mike, the forest ranger, first told me of Billy's coming to Verde. Part of Mike’s job is to know every- thing, so it’s only natural he should have discovered the new arrival. Mike was mildly curious. “Why, you must have noticed him,” he insisted, draping a spurred boot over the desk. “New England sticks out all over the kid like quills on a porcupine.” And as I still shook my head he added with deep disgust. “Don’t you ever see any- thing but steers?” “Somtimes. But I just got in from the ranch. Who is he?” “Nobody knows. He stepped off the Santa Fe Friday and by Satur- day night he’d tried to drink up everything liquid in the Mexican quarter. Next he commits financial suicide playing gold pieces on the double ‘O’ at Mendoza’s. Before midnight he’s flat as a Basque sheep herder. Then for some reason he ~aroppea in here while I'm finishing | the month's report. : “You're the forest ranger,’ he ac- ¢uses me, kind of unsteady. I ad- ‘mitted it. “Billy’s my name. Billy Whitney,” and he perched on my desk, “Tell me. Is this a pretty good town for a chap to go to the devil in?” He tried to look reckless —devil-may-care stuff. : “So I teld him we couldn’t boast all the conveniences of Chicago or Gomorrah, but I thought he was getting along nicely with what we had. You know he’s a clean-looking youngster. Not weak; just—just beaten. That's it. As if life had beaten him. So I added a word of caution. : “A good many years ago,” I told him, ‘another Billy came into this country. He was even younger than you and he, too, was looking for a paved and graded road to hell.’ “He found it?” “‘By the time he was twenty- one he found it, and they tell me he didn’t particularly enjoy the trip.’ “‘I know. You're talking of Billy the Kid.” He looked at me in silence for a time, then shook his head. ‘No, I'll never be like that Billy. He thought things were worth fight- ing for and I'm through with all that rot. All I want is to be let alone.’ “Well, you came to the best place in the world for that, too, son.” X told him, ‘Here in Verde we spe- cialize in minding our own business. ‘And while I finished my monthly fiction for the supervisor he wan- dered about the -office. Later he went over with me to the Quick and Greasy for a cup of coffee. Didn't like to be alone, I suppose.” Suddenly Mike pointed a leather forefinger in my direction. ‘Wasn't it at "Yale you gol” what you humor- ously call an education?” ‘Spent four years there,” I evaded. “So did he. That's about all of his past life he mentioned.” Mike smil- ed thoughtfully. “Well, another misfit has come to Verde. I've seen ‘em vicious and I've seen ‘em weak, but this kid doesn’t seem to be either. Just all fed up with everything except loafing the rest of his life away out here on the rim of the desert. “Queer little hombre. No starch. No interest. And just a little fear- ful. Like a pup in a strange street, What can you do when a man’s de- cided no game is worth the candle? Just let him alone—like he asks.” And of course I did just the op- posite. I looked him up. Which, as I think back, is probably what Mike intended. For one thing, that name Whitney had roused a memory of anold New England family, almost as old as New England's elm. the sunshine outside Dad's der, pleasant-faced boy with pink cheeks and hair that just missed infinitely old and weary. Eyes that had lost all interest in the world of men. ‘Mike tells me youre Yale.” began by way of greeting. He smiled “Twenty-seven was my year.” I telling.” hi | For some reasonI felt an obliga- tion to be friendly. You see, he was so utterly alone, so uncompromising- ly eastern, And lacking a better subject, I talked of the New Haven that’s gone forever—the New Haven that I had known. “Does old Senator Whitney hap- pen to be a relative of yours?” I asked him once. “Amazing old ‘fel- low. He came up each year to college and lectured us on the im- portance of being born in the prop- er family.” Billy smiled. “He's my father.” Then he chuckled aloud at my dis- comfiture. “Didn't he explain, too, that every time the little old U.S. A. got herself in a fix some Whit- ney was always there to save the day?” Well, as a matter of fact, his family had played its part in our history—in each generation a Whit- ney had found prominence as soldier, jurist or statesman. No New Eng- land museum is quite complete with- out a bust or two bearing that name. And I caught myself wonder- ing why a son of that old time- honored clan had chosen to hide himself out on the desert’s edge. But Billy, I soon saw, didn’t warm to a discussion of family. So I myself did most of the talk- ing, telling him tales of Verde and, the open range. Later, for a couple of hours, I left him while I went over the month's account with Bud, my foreman from the lower ranch, Toward the evening's end Billy drift- ed back. His eyes weren't so clear and I knew that he had been down to the Quarter. “And you've lived in this petrified water hole nearly twenty years,” he reflected while I gathered up my papers. “Strange you keep up your interest in things.” “Youll find, if you stay enough, that life here can be as full as elsewhere. is less fettered.” “Oh, I suppose one 8ah £0 through the same motions here as else- where—if one cares to.” That sort of thing always tires me. “Why did you come here?” I asked abruptly. “Blessed if I know. Back Eastl was cluttered up with a world of famous relatives and friends who, for some reason, conceived I should make a success of life. I grew tired of a houseful of gloomy an- cestors done in oil looking down at me in eternal disapproval. So I bought” a couple yards of green ticket and got off here.” “You object to the old-fashioned notion that a man should make something of his life?” For a brief moment that cloak of indifference slipped away. “I object to being forced into molds that don't fit.” His voice had lost its quality of quiet monotone, “You asked me why I came out here. ple who talk of careers and success and all that. ~ Nobody ever seemed long just Certainly it to think I might want to lead my) own life. Or that I had any right to my own life. Perhaps Ihadn’t. But I know that little by little they were making life unendurable. - “I wanted to throw it all backin their faces and be my own self, no matter how little that amounted to. And by that time I couldnt. I hadn't realized all this until I was too far enmeshed. I had been do- ing the exepcted thing too long.” “Why didn’t you tell your pre- cious relatives you intended to lead your own life?” g “How could I? I couldn't sudden- ly say, “This dream about my be- ing a lawyer and a statesman is all well enough, but not to.” broken my mother’s heart. me to do things.” out into the warm night. he sighed, & let-up, and before long the was broken and done. cut out for a racer. —I couldn’t go through with it. I'm not built for earthly carser I'm going to around in the sun, like a cat, waste the days as I choose.” “How long did you stick it out?’ nings T made small with Claire.” “Claire?” here, to ' she could love Ter. I couldn’t say that, could pili I? In the first place it would have 'SPilin 2 Ana 2a battle ground of protesting nerves. long cars stopped. And suddenly I He stood in the doorway looking A 2 oy I think over all the family plans and left act delighted,” I said and thrust him “That book of Barnes’ tells of a 'badly—Dad, too. | : colt that was ridden too hard at that, except for a girl I knew once, | old couple talking with that the start. Spur and quirt and never , their happiness is the only thing in: back Hast dialect that some of us colt life Icare for. He wasn’t Kill my mother to know what T've | But the little old lady had eyes for Well, that’s become. So for them I've invented why at twenty-four I am out here ‘another life out here. I!'I have written telling them how didn’t want to be successful or mas- busy Tam and how well I'm doing.” terful or a pewer in the cornmunity. it. I'm one of life's deuce spots and satisfied to have it so, and for the rest of my lie ; and “Long as I could. T graduated in law—musty, inhuman stuff. Then for a year I dutifully thumbed those deadly law books. And in the eve- ‘talk, usually “The girl I was to marry. But | Claire didn’t just want a mere man She wanted a man respect and look up to. | At last I said, “Perhaps you were right in chucking it all ‘back there. Many of us have done that. But I can’t see that it’s any good reason for wanting to rot on your feet. This country isn’t half finished, you know. Lots of work to be done. Why not try a month riding the e with my boys at the ranch?” e smiled a little tired smile and shook his head. “Thanks just as much. I'm not in need of either work or money. All I want is to be let alone.” And Verde granted that request. They let him alone. As the days passed Billy slumped in every way. Deliberately he was wasting himself and the youth that was in him. He became slovenly in his dress. He was going down the ladder. Still later he moved to a small hotel kept by a half-breed. It was nearer the Mexican quarter and easier for him to avoid us all Now the Quarter, you know, is just south of Verde on the Mexican side of the line. The sky's the lim- it over there, especially at Men- doza’s, where I had gone one night in search of a vagrant Mexican herd- er: A marimba band was pounding out Spanish music, and the bar was jammed, but my herder was not there. Turning to go, I caught sight of Billy at a secluded table dealing himself a hand of Canfield. One of the girls of the place stood watch- ing him, and as I spoke she laid her hand on his shoulder. Billy looked up at her, then deliberately set down the cards and rose. “Not going, are you, handsome?” The girl smiled confidently into his face. Billy never answered, but taking ,my arm for greater steadiness led me toward the bar and with a hand , that shook a little raised a glass of whithy: , terness too old for Billy's years had crept into his voice, “life must have given any woman a tough deal when it's worth her while to smile at me. You know, in the days when I was playing the part of poor little rich boy, I thought I had found a girl who didn’t care for what I had or what Iwas to be.” And then his laugh jarred above the other voices, “I thought she cared all for little me. Until I learned at some ex- pense that she cared more for the world’s judgment.” And again that discordant laughter jangled in my ears—laughter that was half a sob.’ All that was back in February. It was not until April that I drove again into Verde. Meantime spring had come and all the desert had blossomed and every clump of mes- ' quite harbored a song bird. | i Filled with the benediction of that spring morning, I stopped the car before Verde's post office, and looked Billy’s face. A kind of terror was ' stamped there. “I've got to talk to you,” he be-' gan, = x SHO ' “You don’t happen to be drunk, Billy? For I'm just about busy ' enough.” He shook his head. ‘today, I swear—nor yesterday. | But Ive got to talk and you've got to listen.” i So he climbed in and I drove back out to where the road meets {the mesa. v “How’s this?” He pulled a letter from his pock- let. “Pm in the devil of a fix|” His trembling fingers tore clumsily at the envelope, i “You calm down,” i 1 growled. I have decided “Calm down and smoke first.” In silence he rolled a cigaret, half the bag. The boy was then,’ he added slowly as if some But at last he did pull himself to- far-away regret had awakened, ether and began to talk in his ex- “there was another who expected ; Pressionless voice. “This letter is from my mother. Inever told you that when Ikicked i for the West, it brokeher up pretty And it happens It would just about Each week Drearily he gazed out across the spring-clad ‘world. ‘I’ve lied delib- erately and. persistently. I've told then I was prospering. Everything they've wanted me to be, I've been for them in those letters. And not for a minute do I regret it. It’s the last decent thing I could do for the love of those two old people back East,” What a harmless, Tikable boy he might have been, IT caught myself thinking if only the world had let ‘him alone, to fill seme inconspicuous niche in life. Instead it had driven him, goaded him, and finally brok- en him. . “A month ago,” Billy was say- ing, “Dad wrote me that they were i Power in the community, That sort | coming West and would stop off at | of thing. Well, Lord knows I tried,” | Verde. I wired I was leaving for { Suddenly he checked himself. “I'm | Colorado to buy cattle. Today I an awful 'But you knew Father, you said.” ass telling you all this. get this letter from mother telling [ me theywill be in Verde next week. His tired voice trailed into noth- If I'm still away, they'll run out to -ingness and for a long time we sat my ranch and wait.” Hopelessly iin silence. Difficult, of course, { know just how much of this talk Billy and how much Mexican ‘hey ask for my ranch. The ranch rum. Yet it was all plain enough. | of Billy, the loafer. There will be re- | a howl of laughter that will ring in | was Back East they had tried to model a pleasant, normal an incipient Gladstone. So he ran away. {| But the memory of that girl, I any rate, I found Billy sitting in remember thinking, wasn’t so easily reading 10st. one of Barnes’ range stories. A slen- | Well, he wasn’t the first who had come out to the desert bruised and | beaten. being curly. But the ‘eyes were so | You know there's something in- finitely comforting about the desert. It’s big and quiet and ageless and it seems to tell you that here at ‘least is rest from the grinding gears of the world and freedom from the slowly up at me |tyranny of those garish idols the ! world ‘worships. “Mine is so far back I'm not even That, I suppose, is why ‘many of life's misfits come out to | the hoy boy into A -girl he loved had wanted—what? Something ost | Billy hadn't. looked up at me. You | know what Verde will say when ! mother’s ears as long as she lives. In heaven’s name, what am I going to do?” I drummed for a while on the wheel. “You've sewed yourself up in a sweet bundle of lies and now you're looking for the easy way out. I'm afraid there is no easy way, Billy.” “I'm not looking for easy ways— the easy way would be to shoot myself.” “Yes, that would be helpful. would ‘solve ‘so much.” Tightly his white thin hands clutched my arm, Don't let me down, old man. You'll find a way, won't you?” “If TI do, it will be for those two trusting people back Fast. Not—" That he muitered, and a bit-' | Well, partly to escape peo-!down with an unpleasant start into go i i “Not a drop “Not for me. Of course not.” Poor chap. He had ceased even to expect anything might be done for him. Then for long minutes we sat in brooding silence. I was forming a crazy notion that seemed destined ‘to failure. And yet— “So you're a partner in a ranch here.” I turned toward him. “Well, it looks as if I'll have to be the partner.” Even then he didn’t understand. “It’s clear enough, isn't it? We can’t let your parents spend ten minutes in Verde, or you're lost. It’s a bare piece of deceit, but if I'm going to help you, we might as well do the thing right. We're partners in the ranch and as soon as your parents arrive, We whisk out to my hacienda. There we can keep them from learning the truth. It'll have to be close herding. And when they're ready to go, we'll put them on the train. “The scheme may blow up— it may succeed. It’s a rotten lie either way, but it seems your only chance.” I saw a spark of hope in his eyes. “What can I do to help?” Plenty. Just now you look more like a broken-down faro dealer than a ranch owner. For the next week you've got to ride hard. Get some , tan on your face and learn one end of a horse from the other.” I threw in the clutch, and as we rolled down the big hill from the mesa I added, of you.” “I don’t want to sail under false colors,” he replied slowly. “Especial- | ly with you, for I owe you a big debt of gratitude. But I haven't the . least desire to buck up and be somebody. Please don’t make that a condition.” “I won't, folks As depart you soon as can go to the devil as quickly and completely as you see fit.” And in a thoroughly bad humor 1 dashed through Verde to the noisy. delight of every mongrel town. : At the ranch that night I called the boys out to the bunk house and told them of my conspiracy. Some of them grinned; swore, but all promised to see me through. “And,” Bud added, “if I have to perjure my immortal soul too heavi- ly, I'll show the kid that life can be interesting for five minutes at least. That is, when his parents pull out.” I nodded. “It’s the parents we've got to think of. They're old, you see. All their hopes are bound up in this worthless pup. Well, we can’t take that away,” So again they all swore violently, dog in wihch is the cowboy’s way of tell- | ing you that th ey're with you tooth and nail, : ' And now every day before the old lks’ coming Billy rode with us, He sat a horse in that queer, stiff eastern fashion and tried to per- suade my sorrel mare to trot in the approved English style until she got sick of itand bucked him off. After that Billy took my advice and rode saddle. On those rides he learned ‘a little about the cattle game and not once did he ask for a drink. | Which may or may not have been a good sign. , Now it's unimportant whether i Billy or I happened to be the more nervous that morning as we drove to the Santa Fe station before train time. Twice we walked the length | of the long platform, swapping plati- tudes about the spring weather to ‘show how unconcerned we were. At the blast of the whistle, Billy jump- ed a foot. Then with a grinding of brakes and the hiss of steam, the ‘felt my arm clutched as in a vise. “We're lost” Billy whispered; | they’ve brought Claire.” i At the moment I didn’t realize who Claire was. “Keep steady and | forward. ; | I remember a lovable and gentle same once knew and have since forgotten. no ene but Billy, He had lifted her in his arms and: carried her to the car. I was pre- sented. ‘“Biliy’s partner.” Yes, they had heard of me. To the old senator I recalled the days when he spoke at college banquets back East. That pleased him. Claire I couldn’t quite make out. By that time I had remembered she was the girl Billy almost married— the girl who had insisted on Billy's being somebody. Well, she seemed a very competent little somebody herself. Billy’s father shared the front seat with me and tried not to seem too proud of Billy as I showed him our ranch property and some of our live stock. “Blood, sir, blood in both cattle and man,” he said once. “The thing’s an axiom. Good blood and you can’t go wrong.” : I agreed heartily. I would have agreed to anything. Luncheon went by safely and Billy took his father on a tour of the buildings, Throughout that sun- lit afternoon his mother sat in the patio. And there she told me a little tale of her hopes and dreams for this boy of hers. A tale of simple high-hearted devotion and of loyalty and belief even when he funked the eastern career. “Some said then he would just become an ordianry cowboy’—she looked at me with those kindly eyes ~—“but I knew he couldn’t help go- ‘ing upward.” And now her hopes were being justified. He was making a place for himself out here—helping to build up the country. Always the Whitneys had been nation builders. Was I wrong, I wonder. in resolv- ing to preserve to her that dream ‘of a man who never lived? For in the next two hours I painted a pic- ture of a vigorous, masterful man whose coming to Verde had put pew heart in us. I told her how, this Blliy of hers had introduced new methods into “And let's hope this makes a man the old, most of them with longer stirrups and a western ! my ranch and by unending labor and sheer personality was turning a losing venture into a glorious success. I told her of the devotion of the men and their trust in him. And more than once I saw tears of happiness—even at a price. And through it all Claire, silent and imperturable, stood behind the old lady’s chair watching me with wide contemplative eyes. And when at last the mother had gone, Claire sauntered over and stood before me. “Do you know whatI think?” she asked abruptly. “I think you are probably the most imaginative liar in all New Mexico.” She left me to digest that, And not until after dark could I get Billy alone to tell him of Claire's words. We were sitting on the cor- ral fence talking. Billy nodded gloomily. “Neither you nor I can take her in. But I think she'll help us. Wait.” He left me and not many minutes later returned with Claire. To Billy's look of entreaty, I shook my head. “It’s your story,” I reminded him —*you tell it.” Billy didn’t tell it well. But he did manage to make a clean breast of it in his fashion and I think her , contempt for Billy grew in the telling. At the end she blazed up at him. “You're a loathsome beast, Billy,” she said among other things, and the pitiless disdain in her voice made him flinch. “What a rotten job you've made of living—and I sus- pect you'll make a rotten job of dying.” For a minute her lips quivered. “And if it weren't that I loved those old people in there too much—" Then abruptly, “After all, you're not worth getting steam- ed up over, are you, Billy? Of course I'll lie like the rest of you if the need comes.” “You're a good fi boy began, She raised hér hand. “Don’t praise me, please—somehow praise from you makes me feel unclean.” And Billy slunk away like a dog. For a time the girl and I sat smoking on the corral fence while a tiny moon rose in the eastern sky. Somehow outon the dessert frailties seem unimportant. And perhaps a little of the brooding peace of it all ellow, Claire,” the touched the girl, for presently she ‘asked a little defiantly, ‘You're { thinking I've been hard?” “I shook my head. “I didn’t hap- pen to be thinking of that at all ‘No, but it’s interesting to speculate ,on what kind of man he might ‘have become if everybody hadn't ' conspired to stampede him.” “Stampede ?" “With the necessity of being some- body. Driving him, as he once told me, like a colt #puired and quirted jat every step. So he fled away, (broken. And new he's geed for ; nothing. Yes, Parlaps I do think | you've all been a little hard.” | “Do you blame me-—even if your i theory is true?” “It isn’t a theory and I'm not ! blaming anyone. But I do believe [you had more to do with it than | i the others. You see, I happened to know that Billy loved you, and i feeling that you, too, were among the success worshipers, he played up to you. Played the big c¢9mpetent man of the world. And the role was too much for him. “You've got to remember tiiat for every Abe Lincoln there are a few millions who are just plain nice boys. Out here we think more of living and less of getting some- where. Still, that’s all aside from Billy's ship wrecked love.” She seemed to consider that for a time. ‘The world has wasted a deal of emotion over the thing you call ‘shipwrecked love’ hasn't it? That sort of thing is not love, just at- traction—a mating kind of thing.” “And that isn’t love?” “It is? It’s not what I want to believe. I want to believe there's something finer to it all than that. Some quality of the intelligence at least. = My generation’s not willing to accept your ready-made definitions if it can find something cleaner and better.” I groaned. “In another minute you're going to tell me you belong to the generation that wants to think things out for itself. You know, back in the past geologic ages even my own benighted contemporaries taught us was that love isn’t the describe but a dear, thing that suffers and helps and content to love. Love doesn’t ask if you're a judge or a horse thief.” “Was it milk-and-water to give Billy back his ring when he decided to be a rich man’s son rather than a man in his own right? You say he played up to me—but all I ever wanted was that he stand on his own two feet. Is it milk-and-water to ask a little self-respect in the man you love?” “Perhaps. At any rate, when love seeks you out you won't split any hairs or go through any laboratory tests. You'll go to your man, In the years I've lived out here, Ihave seen a good many hard lives, some rough people, and a few quick un- tidy deaths. But through it all I've seen this force of love making up ‘for a whole flock of misery. Yes, and bringing the damned - out of hell. This congealed partnership of yours—well, I'm prophesying that when love reaches out and touches you, you'll ask no questions.” In answer she smiled that rare smile of hers. “What a sentimental fire-eater you are! You know I wish I could believe that—almost.” Altohugh we spoke a different language, I could find it in me to admire her fearless sincerity. Two weeks passed. Billy's parents were basking happily in the boy's reflected glory. And through it all Billy played his part and was per- haps ‘the ‘most miserable man in New Mexico. “It wasn’t ‘easy, of course, and the bitter part of life's little jest was that Billy had to 1 miik-and-water kind of emotion you unreasoning is —— play his unenviable role before the level gaze of this girl he couldn't quite forget tolove. For Billy wasn’t deceiving any of us in that, ail least—a smile from her would have brought paradise down. But para. dise remained far away. And it was little compensation tc know that by very necessity some: thing of a man’s assertion hac come to him during those days he rode the range. For one thing, Buc strained his knee and Billy hac been doing his best to fill the breach Then on the corral fence one eve- ning he told me his parents had de- cided to leave. “Life is funny in a cruel kind of way,” he added. “I've never seen them look so happy. You know un- til the day they die, theyll be proud of a man who lives only in their imaginations. Claire said that. She said, too, that you ranked a big gold medal for being the most bare- faced liar in the Southwest,” “Thanks.” Billy kicked his heels on the cor- ral bars. “Once I told you that as soon as they left I wanted to sink back into the old life and be a bum again. But somehow the way you've trusted me, the way the boys have treated me—I'm trying to say that I want to begin again. I want to make another start, a real start this time” He smiled across at me almost happily. “Wouldn't you be surprised if I have in me the makings of a he- man?” Slowly the smile fadeed, “Only it will come too late with Claire.” I had nothing to contribute to that. Then after a time, “I don’t sup- pose you know much about love.” As a matter of fact I don't. Hereford steers are my only weak- ness. But I asked, “Are you tak- ing this roundabout way of telling me that you've been bamboozling yourself for a long time, Billy, about the wuselessness of life in general? What you're really suffer- ing from is a bad case of dislocated hopes because a little girl once said you hadn't the right stuff in you. It's just possible that if you went to her with this new plan of yours, she’d listen.” And Billy climbed down off the corral. “You give so much advice, some of it ought to be sound.” I sat and smoked and watched the desert. Perhaps I had finished two cigarets when Billy came out of the house. Without a word or a look he passed me and disappeared in the stables. A moment later he was lost in a cloud of dust on the high lope to Verde. The sound of galloping- hoof-beats must have reached Claire, for she came down the path to where I sat. “Billy's gone?” tremulous, T pointed toward Verde. iF & Her voice was ; Sih HB ad “Gone as f Gli his devils were after him.” “They were.” She looked up at me with white lips. “I semt him away. I tried to be kind, but he wouldn't let me. He asked me to be his wife. He needed me, he said, to help him hold on. I tried to tell him that he had to stand on his own two feet. I can’t marry him just to bolster up his faint courage, can I? If Billy had come through just one test with flying colors, if he—" “What did he say?” I interrupted. “He just stood there in the door- way looking at me; then he pulled on his hat and said, ‘I ‘guess after all you are a success-worshiper, arent you, Claire? From now onI'll take my own road.” A tear gleam- ed in her lashes. “But he was wrong, wrong. I'm not a success-worshiper. I just wanted him to be a man— to face life like a man, to work out his own destiny.” “You know what you've done, don’t you?” I asked grimly. “You've sent him back to that death in life —back to that cursed existence he led before you came.” “I sent him? How have I sent him? Can’t you realize how terribly easy it would have been for me to surrender to that unreasoning love you talk of? And yet love alone won’t help him. He's got to help himself, He’s got to find manhood for himself, just for the sake of manhood —or fail. And now he’s lost it all. And now he’s lost it all. And I—I'm making a fool of myself, crying about milk that was spilt years ago.” Tearfully, resentfully she add- ed, ‘Much you know about love.” It seemed unanimous around there were saying that. But life found |that my ignorance of love was pro- us out. And some of us found life | found. So I went in and read about out, And one of the things life | Hereford breeding for pron. ny And once during that interminable evening the thought came to me that neither Claire nor I Was whol- ly right or wrong. For this thing we call love may assume as many aspects as beauty, And not all love perhaps is a redeeming force. A mother’s love had led this boy to play an unenviable role in the eyes of the girl. And love for that girl had driven him back again to the futilities of the Mexican quarter. Yrs, it may be that only to the strong does love inevitably come as a glory and a fulfillment. As tq Claire—well, I believed life had one or two lessons in store for Qer. Somehow the evening passed. At five next morning the tele-= phone roused me. It was Bud at the lower ranch. “Those greasers have rustled fifty cows and they're driving them ta= ward the border.” Then he eékploded the bomb. “Billy’s ritii§ after them--told me to phone you, then get out the boys.” “Billy went alone?” “All alone. This cursed leg kept me out. He pulled out soon as he heard.” “Phone Sam at Number Four to saddle all the horses he’s got. I'll drive over in fifteen minutes,” As I hung up Claire stood in the doorway. “What about Billy? she asked. So I told her while I gathered up an armload of miscellaneous artil- lery. I saw her face go white, then I called three of the boys and ran for the car. Claire jumped into the front seat. “You're not going,” I announced. (Continued on page 3, Col. 3.)