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used and brought with me. Judge Pike has all the papers--everything."

      Joe looked troubled. "And Roger Tabor, did he--"

      "The dear man!" She shook her head. "He was just the same. To him poor Uncle Jonas's money seemed to come from heaven through the hands of Judge Pike--"

      "And there's a handsome roundabout way!" said Joe.

      "Wasn't it!" she agreed, cheerfully. "And he trusted the Judge absolutely. I don't, you see."

      He gave her a thoughtful look and nodded. "No, he isn't a good man," he said, "not even according to his lights; but I doubt if he could have managed to get away with anything of consequence after he became the administrator. He wouldn't have tried it, probably, unless he was more desperately pushed than I think he has been. It would have been too dangerous. Suppose you wait a week or so and think it over."

      "But there's something I want you to do for me immediately, Joe."

      "What's that?"

      "I want the old house put in order. I'm going to live there."

      "Alone?"

      "I'm almost twenty-seven, and that's being enough of an old maid for me to risk Canaan's thinking me eccentric, isn't it?"

      "It will think anything you do is all right."

      "And once," she cried, "it thought everything I did all wrong!"

      "Yes. That's the difference."

      "You mean it will commend me because I'm thought rich?"

      "No, no," he said, meditatively, "it isn't that. It's because everybody will be in love with you."

      "Quite everybody!" she asked.

      "Certainly," he replied. "Anybody who didn't would be absurd."

      "Ah, Joe!" she laughed. "You always were the nicest boy in the world, my dear!"

      At that he turned toward her with a sudden movement and his lips parted, but not to speak. She had rested one arm upon the desk, and her cheek upon her hand; the pen she had picked up, still absently held in her fingers, touching her lips; and it was given to him to know that he would always keep that pen, though he would never write with it again. The soft lamplight fell across the lower part of her face, leaving her eyes, which were lowered thoughtfully, in the shadow of her hat. The room was blotted out in darkness behind her. Like the background of an antique portrait, the office, with its dusty corners and shelves and hideous safe, had vanished, leaving the charming and thoughtful face revealed against an even, spacious brownness. Only Ariel and the roses and the lamp were clear; and a strange, small pain moved from Joe's heart to his throat, as he thought that this ugly office, always before so harsh and grim and lonely--loneliest for him when it had been most crowded,--was now transfigured into something very, very different from an office; that this place where he sat, with a lamp and flowers on a desk between him and a woman who called him "my dear," must be like--like something that people called "home."

      And then he leaned across the desk toward her, as he said again what he had said a little while before,--and his voice trembled:

      "Ariel, it IS you?"

      She looked at him and smiled.

      "You'll be here always, won't you? You're not going away from Canaan again?"

      For a moment it seemed that she had not heard him. Then her bright glance at him wavered and fell. She rose, turning slightly away from him, but not so far that he could not see the sudden agitation in her face.

      "Ah!" he cried, rising too, "I don't want you to think I don't understand, or that I meant _I_ should ever ask you to stay here! I couldn't mean that; you know I couldn't, don't you? You know I understand that it's all just your beautiful friendliness, don't you?"

      "It isn't beautiful; it's just ME, Joe," she said. "It couldn't be any other way."

      "It's enough that you should be here now," he went on, bravely, his voice steady, though his hand shook. "Nothing so wonderful as your staying could ever actually happen. It's just a light coming into a dark room and out again. One day, long ago--I never forgot it--some apple-blossoms blew by me as I passed an orchard; and it's like that, too. But, oh, my dear, when you go you'll leave a fragrance in my heart that will last!"

      She turned toward him, her face suffused with a rosy light. "You'd rather have died than have said that to me once," she cried. "I'm glad you're weak enough now to confess it!"

      He sank down again into his chair and his arms fell heavily on the desk. "Confess it!" he cried, despairingly. "And you don't deny that you're going away again--so it's true! I wish I hadn't realized it so soon. I think I'd rather have tried to fool myself about it a little longer!"

      "Joe," she cried, in a voice of great pain, "you mustn't feel like that! How do you know I'm going away again? Why should I want the old house put in order unless I mean to stay? And if I went, you know that I could never change; you know how I've always cared for you--"

      "Yes," he said, "I do know how. It was always the same and it always will be, won't it?"

      "I've shown that," she returned, quickly.

      "Yes. You say I know how you've cared for me--and I do. I know HOW. It's just in one certain way--Jonathan and David--"

      "Isn't that a pretty good way, Joe?"

      "Never fear that I don't understand!" He got to his feet again and looked at her steadily.

      "Thank you, Joe." She wiped sudden tears from her eyes.

      "Don't you be sorry for me," he said. "Do you think that 'passing the love of women' isn't enough for me?"

      "No," she answered, humbly.

      "I'll have people at work on the old house to-morrow," he began. "And for the--"

      "I've kept you so long!" she interrupted, helped to a meek sort of gayety by his matter-of-fact tone. "Good-night, Joe." She gave him her hand. "I don't want you to come with me. It isn't very late and this is Canaan."

      "I want to come with you, however," he said, picking up his hat. "You can't go alone."

      "But you are so tired, you--"

      She was interrupted. There were muffled, flying footsteps on the stairs, and a shabby little man ran furtively into the room, shut the door behind him, and set his back against it. His face was mottled like a colored map, thick lines of perspiration shining across the splotches.

      "Joe," he panted, "I've got Nashville good, and he's got me good, too;--I got to clear out. He's fixed me good, damn him! but he won't trouble nobody--"

      Joe was across the room like a flying shadow.

      "QUIET!" His voice rang like a shot, and on the instant his hand fell sharply across the speaker's mouth. "In THERE, Happy!"

      He threw an arm across the little man's shoulders and swung him toward the door of the other room.

      Happy Fear looked up from beneath the down-bent brim of his black slouch hat; his eyes followed an imperious gesture toward Ariel, gave her a brief, ghastly stare, and stumbled into the inner chamber.

      "Wait!" Joe said, cavalierly, to Ariel. He went in quickly after Mr. Fear and closed the door.

      This was Joseph Louden, Attorney-at-Law; and to Ariel it was like a new face seen in a flash-light--not at all the face of Joe. The sense of his strangeness, his unfamiliarity in this electrical aspect, overcame her. She was possessed by astonishment: Did she know him so well, after all? The strange client had burst in, shaken beyond belief with some passion unknown to her, but Joe, alert, and masterful beyond denial, had

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