"Oh-h!" The agony went out of the pinched little face, a half

smile dawned and she sank into rest.

As Marilyn went home in the dawn with the morning star beginning to

pale, and the birds at their early worship, something in her own heart

was singing too. Above the feeling of awe over standing at the brink of

the river and seeing a little soul go wavering out, above even the

wonder that she had been called to point the way, there sang in her

soul a song of jubilation that Mark was exonerated from shame and

disgrace. Whatever others thought, whatever she personally would always

have believed, it still was great that God had given her this to make

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her know that her inner vision about it had been right. Perhaps,

sometime, in the days that were to come, Mark would tell her about it,

but there was time enough for that. Mark would perhaps come to see her

this morning. She somehow felt sure that at least he would come to say

he was glad she had stayed with his mother. It was like Mark to do

that. He never let any little thing that was done for him or his pass

unnoticed.

But the morning passed and Mark did not come. The only place that Mark

went was to see Billy.

"Billy, old man," he said, sitting down by the edge of the bed where

Billy was drowsing the early morning away, just feeling the bed, and

sensing Saxy down there making chicken broth, and knowing that the

young robins in the apple tree under the window were grown up and flown

away. "Billy, I can't keep my promise to you after all. I've got to go

away. Sorry, kid, but she'll come to see you and I want you to tell her

for me all about it. I'm not forgetting it, Kid, either, and you'll

know, all the rest of my life, you and I are buddies! Savvy,

Kid?"

Billy looked at Mark with big understanding eyes. There was sadness and

hunger and great self control in that still white face that he

worshipped so devotedly. All was not well with his hero yet. It came to

him vaguely that perhaps Mark too had even yet something to learn, the

kind of thing that was only learned by going through fire. He struggled

for words to express himself, but all he could find were: "I say, Mark, why'n't'tya get it off'n yer chest? It's great!"

Perhaps there wouldn't have been another human in Sabbath Valley,

except perhaps it might have been Marilyn who would have understood

that by this low growled suggestion Billy was offering confession of

sin as a remedy for his friend's ailment of soul, but Mark looked at

him keenly, almost tenderly for a long minute, and shook his head, his

face taking on a grayer, more hopeless look as he said: "I can't, Kid. It's too late!"




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