After ten years the strangeness of his situation had ceased to be

strange. Always he meant some time to go back to Norada, and there to

clear up certain things, but it was a long journey, and he had very

little time. And, as the years went on, the past seemed unimportant

compared with the present. He gave little thought to the future.

Then, suddenly, his entire attention became focused on the future.

Just when he had fallen in love with Elizabeth Wheeler he did not know.

He had gone away to the war, leaving her a little girl, apparently, and

he had come back to find her, a woman. He did not even know he was in

love, at first. It was when, one day, he found himself driving past the

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Wheeler house without occasion that he began to grow uneasy.

The future at once became extraordinarily important and so also, but

somewhat less vitally, the past. Had he the right to marry, if he could

make her care for him?

He sat in his chair by the window the night after the Homer baby's

arrival, and faced his situation. Marriage meant many things. It meant

love and companionship, but it also meant, should mean, children. Had he

the right to go ahead and live his life fully and happily? Was there

any chance that, out of the years behind him, there would come some

forgotten thing, some taint or incident, to spoil the carefully woven

fabric of his life?

Not his life. Hers.

On the Monday night after he had asked Elizabeth to go to the theater

he went into David's office and closed the door. Lucy, alive to every

movement in the old house, heard him go in and, rocking in her chair

overhead, her hands idle in her lap, waited in tense anxiety for the

interview to end. She thought she knew what Dick would ask, and what

David would answer. And, in a way, David would be right. Dick, fine,

lovable, upstanding Dick, had a right to the things other men had, to

love and a home of his own, to children, to his own full life.

But suppose Dick insisted on clearing everything up before he married?

For to Lucy it was unthinkable that any girl in her senses would refuse

him. Suppose he went back to Norada? He had not changed greatly in ten

years. He had been well known there, a conspicuous figure.

Her mind began to turn on the possibility of keeping him away from

Norada.

Some time later she heard the office door open and then close with

Dick's characteristic slam. He came up the stairs, two at a time as

was his custom, and knocked at her door. When he came in she saw what

David's answer had been, and she closed her eyes for an instant.




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