Part 45 (1/2)

But Derry was conscious, as the night wore on, and Bronson left him, and he sat alone, of more than the physical evidences of Hilda's presence; he was aware of the spiritual effect of her sojourn among them. She had stolen from them all something that was fine and beautiful. From Derry his faith in his father. From the General his constancy to his lovely wife. The structure of ideals which Derry's mother had so carefully reared for the old house had been wrecked by one who had first climbed the stairs in the garb of a sister of mercy.

He saw his father's future. Hilda, cold as ice, setting his authority aside. He saw the big house, the painted lady smiling no more on the stairs. Hilda's strange friends filling the rooms, the General's men friends looking at them askance, his mother's friends staying away.

Poor old Dad, poor old Dad. All personal feeling was swept away in the thought of what might come to his father. Yet none the less his own path lay straight and clear before him. The time had come for him to go.

BOOK TWO

Through the Crack

”I will go to the wars! I will go to the wars!” the Tin Soldier cried as loud as he could, and he threw himself from the shelf... .

What could have become of him? The old man looked, and the little boy looked. ”I shall find him,” the old man said, but he did not find him.

For the Tin Soldier had fallen through a crack in the floor, and there he lay as in an open grave.

CHAPTER XVIII

THE BROAD HIGHWAY

The Doctor's house in Maryland was near Woodstock, and from the rise of the hill where it stood one could see the buildings of the old Jesuit College, and the river which came so soon to the Bay.

In his boyhood the priests had been great friends of Bruce McKenzie.

While of a different faith, he had listened eagerly to the things they had to tell him, these wise men, the pioneers of missionary work in many lands, teachers and scholars. His imagination had been fired by their tales of devotion, and he had many arguments with his Covenanter grandfather, to whom the gold cross on the top of the college had been the sign and symbol of papacy.

”But, grandfather, the things we believe aren't so very different, and I like to pray in their chapel.”

”Why not pray in your own kirk?”

”It's so bare.”

”There's nothing to distract your thoughts.”

”And I like the singing, and the lights and the candles--”

”We need no candles; we have light enough in our souls.”

But Bruce had loved the smell of the incense, and the purple and red of the robes, and, seeing it all through the golden haze of the lights, his sense of beauty had been satisfied, as it was not satisfied in his own plain house of wors.h.i.+p.

Yet it had been characteristic of the boy as it was of the man that neither kirk nor chapel held him, and he had gone through life liking each a little, but neither overmuch.

Something of this he tried to express to Jean as, arriving at Woodstock in the early afternoon, they pa.s.sed the College. ”I might have been a priest,” he said, ”if I hadn't been too much of a Puritan or a Pagan.

I am not sure which held me back--”

Jean shuddered. ”How can people shut themselves away from the world?”

”They have a world of their own, my dear,” said the Doctor, thoughtfully, ”and I'm not sure that it isn't as interesting as our own.”

”But there isn't love in it,” said Jean.