The dispute went on, Chris Valentine alternately flippant and earnest,

the rector conciliatory, Graham glowering and silent. Nolan had started

on the Irish question, and Rodney baited him with the prospect of

conscription there. Nolan's voice, full and mellow and strangely sweet,

dominated the room.

But Clayton was not listening. He had heard Nolan air his views before.

He was a trifle acid, was Nolan. He needed mellowing, a woman in his

life. But Nolan had loved once, and the girl had died. With the curious

constancy of the Irish, he had remained determinedly celibate.

"Strange race," Clayton reflected idly, as Nolan's voice sang on. "Don't

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know what they want, but want it like the devil. One-woman men, too.

Curious!"

It occurred to him then that his own reflection was as odd as the

fidelity of the Irish. He had been faithful to his wife. He had never

thought of being anything else.

He did not pursue that line of thought. He sat back and resumed his

nervous tapping of the cloth, not listening, hardly thinking, but

conscious of a discontent that was beyond analysis.

Clayton had been aware, since his return from the continent and England

days before, of a change in himself. He had not recognized it until he

reached home. And he was angry with himself for feeling it. He had gone

abroad for certain Italian contracts and had obtained them. A year or

two, if the war lasted so long, and he would be on his feet at last,

after years of struggle to keep his organization together through the

hard times that preceded the war. He would be much more than on his

feet. Given three more years of war, and he would be a very rich man.

And now that the goal was within sight, he was finding that it was not

money he wanted. There were some things money could not buy. He had

always spent money. His anxieties had not influenced his scale of

living. Money, for instance, could not buy peace for the world; or

peace for a man, either. It had only one value for a man; it gave him

independence of other men, made him free.

"Three things," said the rector, apropos of something or other, and

rather oratorically, "are required by the normal man. Work, play, and

love. Assure the crippled soldier that he has lost none of these, and--"

Work and play and love. Well, God knows he had worked. Play? He would

have to take up golf again more regularly. He ought to play three times

a week. Perhaps he could take a motor-tour now and then, too. Natalie

would like that.




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