Part 5 (1/2)

But would she be happy at such a sacrifice? Would she not grieve even at the fireside she had regained over her broken dreams? And Dan would come down from his dreams and visions (which, after all, are very vague and uncertain things for boys of thirteen) to Tabby and the teapot, to the fluttering old hand in his clasp, the trembling old voice in his ear.

The sun was close to its setting; supper was over, he knew; and Jim Norris was waiting impatiently for his promised game. But he could not think of tennis just now; still less was he disposed for a meeting with Dud Fielding, whose voice he could hear beyond the box hedge at his right. So, turning away from tennis court and playground, Dan plunged into the quiet shelter of the walk that skirted the high, ivy-grown wall, and was already growing dim with evening shadows, though lances of sunlight glinting here and there through the arching pines broke the gloom.

Pacing the quiet way with feeble step was an old priest, saying his Office. Father Mack's earthly work was done. He could no longer preach or teach; he was only lingering in the friendly shadows of Saint Andrew's, waiting his Master's call home; his long, busy life ending in a sweet twilight peace. Sometimes at retreats or on great feasts, when there was a crowd of juvenile penitents in the college chapel, Father Mack, gentle and indulgent, had his place in a quiet corner, where he was rather avoided by young sinners as a ”dying saint.”

But Dan, whatever might be his month's record of wrong-doing, had taken to Father Mack from the first. Perhaps it was something in the Irish voice that recalled Aunt Winnie; perhaps some deeper sympathy between souls akin. Though they seldom met, for the old priest had his room in a building remote from the students' quarters, Father Mack and Dan were fast friends. His presence here was most unlooked for; and Dan was about to retire without further intrusion, when the old priest closed his book and turned to him with a kindly nod.

”You needn't run off. I'm done, my boy. These long, hot days are a bit hard on me; but I like to stay out here in the evening to say my Office and watch the sunset. Did you ever watch the sunset, Danny?”

”Yes, Father,” answered Dan. ”It's great.”

”What do you see in it, Danny?” was the low question.

”Oh, all sorts of things, Father,--domes and spires and banners of gold and red and purple, and pillars of cloud and fire--”

”And gates,” broke in Father Mack. ”Don't you see the gates, Danny,--gates that seem to open in the s.h.i.+ning way that leads to G.o.d's Throne? Ah, it's a wonderful sight, the sunset, when your day is near done and you are tired and old,--too old to be picturing and dreaming. I'll soon see--beyond the cloud and the dream, Danny,--I'll soon see.”

The old man paused for a moment, his dim eye kindling, his withered face rapt. Then suddenly, as if recalled from some cloudy height to earth, his look and voice changed into fatherly interest.

”Were you looking for me,--were you wanting to talk to me, my son?”

”No--yes--no,” faltered Dan, who had not thought of such a thing. ”Well, yes, I believe I do. I'm all muddled up, and maybe you can set me right, Father Mack. For--for,” Dan blurted out without further hesitation, ”I can't see things clear myself. Aunt Winnie is grieving and pining and homesick at the Little Sisters. She is trying to hide it, but she is grieving, I know. She broke down and cried to-day when I went to see her,--cried real sobs and tears. And--and” Dan went on with breathless haste, ”Peter Patterson, that keeps the meatshop at our old corner, has offered me five dollars a week to come and work for him. To give up Saint Andrew's--and--and--all it means, Father Mack, and work for him.”

VI.--FATHER MACK.

”Give up Saint Andrew's!” repeated Father Mack in a low, startled voice.

”You, Dan! Give up! Oh, no, my boy,--no!”

”Aunt Winnie will die if I don't,” blurted out Dan, despairingly. ”Pete Patterson says so. And I can take her home and give her back her little rooms over Mulligans', and the blue teapot and Tabby, and everything she loves. And Pete says I can work up to be his partner.”

”His partner,--his partner! In what?” asked Father Mack, anxiously.

”Meat business,” answered Dan. ”He's made money, and he's going in for it big,--corning, smoking, sausage, everything. I--I could take care of Aunt Winnie fine.”

”Meat business, sausage? I don't think I understand,” said Father Mack, in bewilderment. ”Sit down here, Dan, and tell me all this over again.”

Dan took his seat on a broken slab that had been a gravestone before the old college cemetery had been condemned and removed beyond the limits of the growing city. It was a very old slab, bearing the Latin t.i.tle of some Brother or Father who had died fifty years ago. The sunset fell through a gap in the pines that showed the western sky, with its open gates, their pillars of cloud and fire all aglow.

”Tell me slowly, calmly, Dan. My ears are growing dull.”

And Dan told his story again, more clearly and less impetuously; while Father Mack listened, his bent head haloed by the setting sun.

”I can't let Aunt Winnie die,” concluded Dan. ”You see, I have to think of Aunt Winnie, Father.”

”Yes, I see,--I see, my boy,” was the low answer. ”And it is only of Aunt Winnie you are thinking, Dan?”

”Only of Aunt Winnie,” replied Dan, emphatically. ”You don't suppose anything else would count against Saint Andrew's, Father. I'd work, I'd starve, I'd die, I believe, rather than give up my chance here?”

”Yes, yes, it's hard lines sometimes,” said Father Mack. ”You may find it even harder as the years go by, Dan. I heard about the trouble yesterday.”