The City of Fire - Page 14/221

"But he is letting all his opportunities go by."

"I'm not so sure. You can't tell what he may be doing out in the world

where he is gone."

"But they say he is very wild."

"They were always saying things about him when he was here, and most of

them were not true. You and I knew him, Mary. Was there ever a finer

young soul on earth than he with his clear true eyes, his eager tender

heart, his brave fearlessness and strength. I can not think he has sold

his soul to sin--not yet. It may be. It may be that only in the Far

Country will he realize it is God he wants and be ready to say, 'I have

sinned' and 'I will arise.'"

"But Graham, I should think that just because you believe in him you

could talk to him."

"No, Mary. I can't probe into the depths of that sensitive soul and dig

out his confidence. He would never give it that way. It is a matter

between himself and God."

"But Lynn--"

"Lynn has God too, my dear. We must not forget that. Life is not all

for this world, either. Thank God Lynn believes that!"

The mother sighed with troubled eyes, and rose. The purring of the

engine was heard. Lynn would be coming in. They watched the young man

swing his car out into the road and glide away like a comet with a wild

sophisticated snort of his engine that sent him so far away in a flash.

They watched the girl standing where he had left her, a stricken look

upon her face, and saw her turn slowly back to the house with eyes

down--troubled. The mother moved away. The father bent his head upon

his hand with closed eyes. The girl came back to her work, but the song

on her lips had died. She worked silently with a far look in her eyes,

trying to fathom it.

The eyes of her father and mother followed her tenderly all that day,

and it was as if the souls of the three had clasped hands, and

understood, so mistily they smiled at one another.

Billy Gaston, refreshed by a couple of chocolate fudge sundaes, a

banana whip, and a lemon ice-cream soda, was seated on the bench with

the heroes of the day at the Monopoly baseball grounds. He wore his

most nonchalant air, chewed gum with his usual vigor, shouted himself

hoarse at the proper places, and made casual grown-up responses to the

condescension of the team, wrapping them tenderly in ancient sweaters

when they were disabled, and watching every move of the game with a

practised eye and an immobile countenance. But though to the eyes of

the small fry on the grass at his feet he was as self-sufficient as

ever, somehow he kept having strange qualms, and his mind kept

reverting to the swart fat face of Pat at the Junction, as it ducked

behind the cypress and talked into the crude telephone on the mountain.

Somehow he couldn't forget the gloat in his eye as he spoke of the

"rich guy." More and more uneasy he grew, more sure that the expedition

to which he was pledged was not strictly "on the square."