Toward the middle of the summer, certain business interests called Dick

to North Dakota, and then life was duller than ever.

Therefore it was a not wholly unwelcome diversion when, late on an

August afternoon, she saw the thick laurels of the hedge near her part a

little and the form of Ram Juna stand in the cleft, snowy white from

turban to slippers save for the gleaming ruby and the polished bronze

face. He looked like the day itself, glowing, sultry, indolent.

"Pardon me, dear lady," he said, "that through the bush I spied you. I

was solitary. You are solitary. The heat suits not with the severer

thought. The weak body refuses to yield to the commands of mind. I fail

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to write; and perhaps you fail to read."

"I guess your thinking is harder work than my reading. Won't you come

over and sit down?" said Lena cordially.

"Then you, like me, would welcome companionship?"

"Yes. Isn't this a nice shady place?" Lena answered. "The maid is just

bringing me some iced drinks, and I dare say they'll taste good to you

if you have been trying to write that wonderful book of yours in all

this blaze."

The Hindu pushed the hedge still farther asunder and swept with a sigh

of content over to a cushioned reclining chair.

"If one's heart were set on the things that fade, what greater

satisfaction? Shadow, deep shadow from the heat, cool drafts, the voice

of a fair woman."

"You must not count me among the things that fade, though," laughed

Lena, as she handed him a tall glass of clinking fragrance. "I shan't

like you a bit if you do."

"Everything fades, the rose, the lady, even thought, which is after all

but a grub on the tree of truth. All, all fade."

"I wish you wouldn't talk that way," objected Lena. "You make me feel

quite creepy."

"Ah," said Ram Juna, "you love the things of to-day. To me the thought

that all is transitory is bliss. Is it not so?"

"Yes," said Lena, "I'm sure I like roses and jewels and iced minty stuff

to drink. And Ram Juna, I wish you would tell me the really-truly

history of your ruby. I've heard so many stories about it." He put up

his hand, detached the great jewel from its place and laid it in her

small outstretched palm.

"That is a mark of my confiding," he said. "There are few to whom I

would give to handle my treasure. It may truly be called a stone of

blood. Such angry storms of greed and passion, such murders of father by

son and husband by wife link their story to it. And now it rests at last

on the head of a man of peace. For how long? For how long?" Lena looked

at it with the eyes of fascination as it lay in her open hand.