Burned Bridges - Page 29/167

Thompson had effected a sort of compromise with his principles when he

sought Carr. He had more or less consciously resolved to keep his

calling in the background, to suppress the evangelical tendency which

his training had made nearly second nature. This for the sake of

intelligent companionship. He was like a man sentenced to solitary

confinement. Even the temporary presence of a jailer is a boon to such,

a break in the ghastly solitude. But he was fast succumbing to a despair

of reaching across the barrier of this critical silence and he was about

to rise and leave when he happened to look about and see Sophie Carr

standing within arm's length, gazing at him with a peculiar intentness,

a mild look of surprise upon her vivid young face, a trace of

puzzlement.

A most amazing thing happened to Mr. Thompson. His heart leaped.

Perhaps it rarely happens that a normal, healthy man reaches a

comparative degree of maturity without experiencing a quickening of his

blood in the presence of a woman. Yet it cannot be gainsaid that it does

happen. It was so in Thompson's case. Staring into the clear pools of

Sophie Carr's gray eyes some strange quality of attraction in a woman

first dawned on him. Something that made him feel a passionate sense of

incompleteness.

He did not think this. The singular longing had flamed up like a beacon

within him. It had nothing to do with his mental processes. It was

purely an instinctive revelation. A blind man whose sight has been

restored, upon whose eager vision bursts suddenly all the bright beauty

of sun and sky and colorful landscape, could have been no more

bewildered than he. It was as if indeed he had been blind.

All the women he had ever known seemed pale and colorless beside this

girl standing near, her head a little aside as she looked at him. There

was not a detail of her that escaped him, that failed to make its

appeal, from the perfect oval of her face down to the small feet in

bead-ornamented moccasins. A woman's eyes, her hair, her hands, her

bearing--these things had never obtruded upon his notice before. Yet he

saw now that a shaft of sunlight on her hair made it shimmer like ripe

wheat straw, that her breast was full and rounded, her lips red and

sweetly curved. But it was not alone that swift revelation of seductive

beauty, or warm human desirableness, that stirred him so deeply, that

afflicted him with those queer uncomfortable sensations. He found

himself struggling with a sense of guilt, of shame. The world, the

flesh, and the devil seemed leagued against his peace of mind.

He was filled with an incredulous wonder as to what manner of thing this

was which had blown through the inner recesses of his being like a gusty

wind through an open door. He had grown to manhood with nothing but a

cold, passionless tolerance in his attitude toward women. Technically he

was aware of sex, advised as to its pitfalls and temptations; actually

he could grasp nothing of the sort. A very small child is incapable of

associating pain with a hot iron until the hot iron has burned him. Even

then he can scarcely correlate cause and effect. Neither could Thompson.

No woman had ever before stirred his pulse to an added beat.