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PAGE 2

Lib
by [?]

“It’s too bad,” continued Miss Adair, intent upon her own exalted charity, “but that doesn’t make it right for you to get other folks into trouble. You’d ought to remember that.”

“If you think he’s all right, why don’t you go ahead and marry him?” asked Lib.

“My folks would make such a fuss, and besides I don’t know as it would be just right for me to act like I didn’t care, after all that’s been said–and me a church-member!”

Miss Ruby bent her head a little forward, as if under the weight of her moral obligations.

“Has he joined the church?” inquired Lib in a curious voice.

“He’s been going to the union meetings regular with me, and he’s stood up twice for prayers, but I dunno ‘s they’d take him into the church with all these stories going about. You’d ought to think of that, too–you may be standing in the way of saving his soul.”

“If his soul was lost, it would be awful hard to find,” said Lib quietly.

Her listener’s weak mouth slackened. “Wh-at?” she asked, with a little stuttering gasp.

“Oh, I dunno. Some things are hard to find when they’re lost, you know.”

“And you’ll speak up and tell the truth?” The visitor arose, gathering her flounces about her with one hand.

“If I speak up, I’ll tell the truth, you can bet on that,” said Lib.

Miss Adair waited an instant, as if for some assurance which Lib did not vouchsafe. Then she writhed down the walk in her twisted drapery and disappeared.

Thad Farnham and his father had been cutting down a eucalyptus-tree. The two men looked small and mean clambering over the felled giant, as if belonging to some species of destructive insect. The tree in its fall had bruised the wild growth, and the air was full of oily medicinal odors. Long strips of curled cinnamon-colored bark strewed the ground. The father and son confronted each other across the pallid trunk. The older man’s face was leathery-red with anger.

“The story’s got around that the kid’s yours, anyway,” he announced. “I don’t care who started it, but if it’s true, you’ll make a bee-line for the widow’s and marry the girl. D’you hear?”

Thad dropped his eyes sullenly and made a feint of examining the crosscut saw.

“I don’t go much on family,” continued old Farnham, “and I never ‘lowed you’d set anything on fire excepting maybe yourself, but I’m not raising sneaks and liars, and what little I’ve got hain’t been scraped together to fatten that kind of stock!”

“Who said I lied?”

“Nobody. But I’m going to take you over to face that girl and see what she says. If you don’t foller peaceable, I’ll coax you along with a hatful of cartridges. I hear you’ve been whining around the revival meetings. I never suspected you till I heard that!”

“I don’t see why you suspect a feller for lookin’ after the salvation”–

“Oh, damn your salvation!” broke in the old man.

“Well, I dunno”–

“Well, I do !” roared the father; “I know you can’t make an angel without a man to start with, and I’ll do what I can to furnish the man, seein’ I’m responsible for you bein’ born in the shape of one, and the preachers may put in the wing and the tail feathers if they can! Now start that saw!”

* * * * *

Old Farnham and his son sat in the small front room of the widow Sunderland’s cabin. The old man’s jaw was set, and he grasped his knees with his big hairy hands as if to steady himself.

Neither of the men arose when Lib came into the room with the baby. The old man’s eyes followed her as she seated herself without so much as a glance at his companion.