"So he says."

"I want to be a soldier, too, Clay. A good soldier."

He suspected that she was rather close to unusual tears.

As they approached the clubhouse they saw Graham and Marion Hayden

standing outside. Graham was absently dropping balls and swinging at

them. It was too late when Clayton saw the danger and shouted sharply.

A ball caught the caddie on the side of the head and he dropped like a

shot.

All through that night Clayton and Audrey Valentine sat by the boy's

white bed in the hospital. Clayton knew Graham was waiting outside, but

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he did not go out to speak to him. He was afraid of himself, afraid in

his anger that he would widen the breach between them.

Early in the evening Natalie had come, in a great evening-coat that

looked queerly out of place, but she had come, he knew, not through

sympathy for the thin little figure on the bed, but as he had known she

would come, to plead for Graham. And her cry of joy when the surgeons

had said the boy would live was again for Graham.

She had been too engrossed to comment on Audrey's presence there, and

Audrey had gone out immediately and left them together. Clayton was

forced, that night, to an unwilling comparison of Natalie with another

woman. On the surface of their lives, where only they met, Natalie had

always borne comparison well. But here was a new standard to measure by,

and another woman, a woman with hands to serve and watchful, intelligent

eyes, outmeasured her.

Not that Clayton knew all this. He felt, in a vague way, that Natalie

was out of place there, and he felt, even more strongly, that she had

not the faintest interest in the still figure on its white bed--save as

it touched Graham and herself.

He was resentful, too, that she felt it necessary to plead with him

for his own boy. Good God, if she felt that way about him, no wonder

Graham-She had placed a hand on Clayton's arm, as he sat in that endless vigil,

and bent down to whisper, although no sound would have penetrated that

death-like stupor.

"It was an accident, Clay," she pled. "You know Graham's the kindest

soul in the world. You know that, Clay."

"He had been drinking." His voice sounded cold and strained to his own

ears.

"Not much. Almost nothing, Toots says positively."

"Then I'd rather he had been, Natalie. If he drove that ball out of

wanton indifference--"

"He didn't see the boy."




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