He felt as if she had knighted him. He turned red and hot with shame

and pleasure.

"Aw, that ain't much. I earned sommore too, fer m'yant." He twisted his

cap around on his other hand roughly and then blurted out the last

thing he had meant to say: "Miss Lynn, it ain't wrong to do a thing you don't know ain't wrong, is

it?"

Marilyn looked at him keenly and laughed.

"It generally is, Billy, if you think it might be. Don't ever

try to fool your conscience, Billy, it's too smart for that."

He grinned sheepishly and then quite irrelevantly remarked: "I saw Cart last night."

Advertisement..

But she seemed to understand the connection and nodded gravely: "Yes, I saw him a moment this morning. He said he might come back again

this evening."

The boy grunted contentedly and watched the warm color of her cheek

under the glow of the ruddy sunset. She always seemed to him a little

bit unearthly in the starriness of her beauty. Of course he never put

it to himself that way. In fact he never put it at all. It was just a

fact in his life. He had two idols whom he worshipped from afar, two

idols who understood him equally well and were understood by him, and

for whom he would have gladly laid down his young life. This girl was

one, and Mark Carter was the other. It was the sorrow of his young life

that Mark Carter had left Sabbath Valley indefinitely. The stories that

floated back of his career made no difference to Billy. He adored him

but the more in his fierce young soul, and gloried in his hero's need

of faithful friends. He would not have owned it to himself, perhaps,

but he had spoken of Mark just to find out if this other idol believed

those tales and was affected by them. He drew a sigh of deep content as

he heard the steady voice and knew that she was still the young man's

friend.

They passed out of the church silently together and parted in the glow

of red that seemed flooding the quiet village like a painting. She went

across the stretch of lawn to the low spreading veranda where her

mother sat talking with her father. Some crude idea of her beauty and

grace stole through his soul, but he only said to himself: "How,--kind of--little she is!" and then made a dash for his

rusty old wheel lying flat at the side of the church step. He gathered

it up and wheeled it around the side of the church to the old

graveyard, threading his way among the graves and sitting down on a

broad flat stone where he had often thought out his problems of life.

The shadow of the church cut off the glow of sunset, and made it seem

silent and dark. Ahead of him the Valley lay. Across at the right it

stretched toward the Junction, and he could see the evening train just

puffing in with a wee wisp of white misty smoke trailing against the

mountain green. The people for the hotels would be swarming off, for it

was Saturday night. The fat one would be there rolling trunks across

and the station agent would presently close up. It would be dark over

there at eight o'clock. The mountains loomed silently, purpling and

steep and hazy already with sleep.