Nevertheless, Delight received a lesson in driving from Graham, and that

within two days.

On Saturday afternoon, finding the mill getting on his nerves, Clayton

suggested to Graham what might be the last golf of the autumn and Graham

consented cheerfully enough. For one thing, the offices closed at noon,

and Anna Klein had gone. He was playing a little game with Anna--a

light-hearted matter of a glance now and then caught and held, a touched

hand, very casually done, and an admiring comment now and then on her

work. And Anna was blossoming like a flower. She sat up late to make

fresh white blouses for the office, and rose early to have abundance of

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time to dress. She had taken to using a touch of rouge, too, although

she put it on after she reached the mill, and took it off before she

started for home.

Her father, sullen and irritable these days, would have probably beaten

her for using it.

But Anna had gone, and a telephone call to Marion Hayden had told him

she was not at home. He thought it possible she had gone to the country

club, and accepted his father's suggestion of golf willingly.

From the moment he left the mill Anna had left his mind. He was at that

period when always in the back of his mind there was a girl. During the

mill hours the girl was Anna, because she was there. In the afternoon it

was Marion, just then, but even at that there were entire evenings when,

at the theater, a pretty girl in the chorus held and absorbed his entire

attention--or at a dance a debutante, cloudy and mysterious in white

chiffon, bounded his universe for a few hours.

On this foundation of girl he built the superstructure of his days. Not

evil, but wholly irresponsible. The urge of vital youth had caught him

and held him. And Clayton, sitting that day beside him in the car,

while Graham drove and the golf clubs rattled in their bags at his feet,

remembered again the impulses of his own adolescence, and wondered.

There had been a time when he would have gone to the boy frankly, with

the anxieties he was beginning to feel. There were so many things he

wanted to tell the boy. So many warnings he should have.

But Natalie had stolen him. That was what it amounted to. She had stolen

his confidence, as only a selfish woman could. And against that cabal of

mother and son he felt helpless. It was even more than that. As against

Natalie's indulgence he did not wish to pose as a mentor pointing out

always the way of duty.