If the living-room at "Idle Times" bore the impress of Van Bristow's

individuality and taste, his den was the tangible setting of his

personality.

His marriage had, only eighteen months before, cut his life sharply with

the boundary of an epoch. The den bore something of the atmosphere of a

museum dedicated to past eras. It was crowded with useless junk that

stood for divers memories and much wandering. Many of the pictures that

cumbered the walls were redolent of the atmosphere of overseas.

There were photographs wherein the master of "Idle Times" and Mr. George

Benton appeared together, ranging from ancient football days to

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snapshots of a mountain-climbing expedition in the Andes, dated only two

years back.

It was into this sanctum that Benton clanked, booted and spurred, early

the following morning.

Ostensibly Van was looking over business letters, but there was a trace

of wander-lust in the eyes that strayed off with dreamy truancy beyond

the tree-tops.

Benton planted himself before his host with folded arms, and stood

looking down almost accusingly into the face of his old friend.

"Whenever I have anything particularly unpleasant to do," began the

guest, "I do it quick. That's why I'm here now."

Van Bristow looked up, mildly astonished.

During a decade of intimacy these two men had joyously, affectionately

and consistently insulted each other on all possible occasions. Now,

however, there was a certain purposeful ring in Benton's voice which

told the other this was quite different from the time-honored

affectation of slander. Consequently his demand for further

enlightenment came with terse directness.

Benton nodded and a defiant glint came to his pupils.

"I come to serve notice," he announced briefly, "of something I mean to

do."

Van took the pipe from his mouth and regarded it with concentrated

attention, while his friend went on in carefully gauged voice.

"I am here," he explained, "as a guest in your house. I mean to make war

on certain plans and arrangements which presumably have your sympathy

and support--and I mean to make the hardest war I know." He paused, but

as Van gave no indication of cutting in, he went on in aggressive

announcement. "What I mean to do is my business--mine and a girl's--but

since she is your kinswoman and this is your place, it wouldn't be quite

fair to begin without warning."

For a time Bristow's attitude remained that of deep and silent

reflection. Finally he knocked the ashes from his pipe and came over

until he stood directly confronting Benton.

"So she has told you?" was his brief question at last.

The other nodded.

The master of "Idle Times" paced thoughtfully up and down the room. When

at length he stopped it was to clap his hand on his class-mate's

shoulder.

"George," he said, with a voice hardened to edit down the note of

sympathy that threatened it, "you seem to start out with the assumption

that I am against you. Get that out of your head. Cara has hungered for

freedom. We've felt that she had the right to, at least, her little

intervals of recess. It happened that she could have them here. Here she

could be Miss Carstow--and cease to be Cara of Maritzburg. I am sorry if

you--and she--must pay for these vacations with your happiness. I see

now that people who are sentenced to imprisonment, should not play with

liberty."




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