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"'Who is Sylvia,'" suggested Mrs. Clayton.
This she sang in a full, sweet voice. Her tone was true.
"More, more," they insisted, clapping their hands.
"Just _one_ more song," pleaded Edith.
"Do you sing, 'Drink to me only with thine eyes'?" asked Kenneth. For answer, she struck the chords, and sang; then she laid down the guitar.
"Please sing one of your American ballads. Sing 'Home, Sweet Home,'"
he suggested.
She had been homesick all day, so there was a home-sigh in her voice as she sang. Kenneth moved his chair into the shadow, and watched her.
At last he rose to go; and with promises of an early return, he withdrew.
Not to the saloon did he go that night, as had been his custom since coming to the mining camp. He walked on and on, out into the vast aloneness of the mountains. Once in a while he stopped, and looked down towards Clayton Ranch. At intervals he whistled softly.--The strain was "Home, Sweet Home."
John Clayton and his wife sat long before the fire after Esther and Edith had retired. Mary Clayton was a gentle being, with a fair, sweet English face. And she adored her husband. They had been talking earnestly.
"Any way, Mary," John Clayton was saying, "I believe Miss Bright could make an unusually fine man of Kenneth. I believe she could make him a better man, too."
"That might be, John," she responded, "but you wouldn't want so rare a soul as she is to marry him to reform him, would you? She's like a snow-drop."
"No, like a rose," he suggested, "all sweet at the heart. I'd really like to see her marry Kenneth. In fact, I'd like to help along a little."
"Oh, my dear! How could you?" And she looked at him reproachfully.
"Why not?" he asked. "Tell me honestly." He lifted her face and looked into it with lover-like tenderness. "You like Kenneth, don't you? And we are always glad to welcome him in our home."
"Y-e-s," she responded hesitatingly, "but--"
"But what?"
"I fear he frequents the saloons, and is sometimes in company totally unworthy of him. In fact, I fear he isn't good enough for Miss Bright.
I can't bear to think of her marrying any man less pure and n.o.ble than she is herself."
He took his wife's hand in both of his.
"You forget, Mary," he said, "that Miss Bright is a very unusual woman. There are few men, possibly, who are her peers. Don't condemn Kenneth because he isn't exactly like her. He's not perfect, I admit, any more than the rest of us. But he's a fine, manly fellow, with a good mind and n.o.ble traits of character. If the right woman gets hold of him, she'll make him a good man, and possibly a great one."
"That may be," she said, "but I don't want Miss Bright to be that woman."
"Suppose he were your son, would you feel he was so unworthy of her?"
"Probably not," came her hesitating answer.
"Mary, dear," he said, "I fear you are too severe in your judgment of men. I wish you had more compa.s.sion. You see, it is this way: many who seem evil have gone astray because they have not had the influence of a good mother or sister or wife." He bent his head and kissed her.
A moment later, he leaned back and burst into a hearty laugh.
"Why, what's the matter?" she asked. "I don't think it's a laughing matter."
"It's so ridiculous, Mary. Here we've been concerning ourselves about the possible marriage of Kenneth and Miss Bright, when they have only just met, and it isn't likely they'll ever care for each other, anyway. Let's leave them alone."
And the curtain went down on a vital introductory scene in the drama of life.
CHAPTER IV
THE ANGEL OF THE GILA
Days came and went. The Bible school of Gila had ceased to be an experiment. It was a fact patent to all that the adobe schoolhouse had become the social center of the community, and that the soul of that center was Esther Bright. She had studied sociology in college and abroad. She had theorized, as many do, about life; now, life itself, in its bald reality, was appealing to her heart and brain. She did not stop to a.n.a.lyze her fitness for the work. She indulged in no morbid introspection. It was enough for her that she had found great human need. She was now to cope, almost single handed, with the forces that drag men down. She saw the need, she realized the opportunity. She worked with the quiet, unfailing patience of a great soul, leaving the fruitage to G.o.d.
Sometimes the seriousness in Esther's face would deepen. Then she would go out into the Open. On one of these occasions, she strayed to her favorite haunt in the timber along the river, and seated herself on the trunk of a dead cottonwood tree, lying near the river bank.
Trees, covered with green mistletoe, towered above her. Tremulous aspens sparkled in the suns.h.i.+ne. The air was crystal clear; the vast dome of the sky, of the deepest blue. She sat for a long time with face lifted, apparently forgetful of the open letter in her hand. At last she turned to it, and read as follows:
LYNN, Ma.s.s., Tenth Month, Fifth Day, 1888.
MY BELOVED GRANDDAUGHTER:
Thy letter reached me Second Day. Truly thou hast found a field that needs a worker, and I do not question that the Lord's hand led thee to Gila. What thou art doing and dost plan to do, interest me deeply; but it will tax thy strength. I am thankful that thou hast felt a deepening sense of G.o.d's nearness. His world is full of Him, only men's eyes are holden that they do not know.
All who gain strength to lead and inspire their fellows, learn this surely at last:--that the soul of man finds G.o.d most surely in the Open. If men would help their fellows, they must seek inspiration and strength in communion with G.o.d.
To keep well, one must keep his mind calm and cheerful.
So I urge thee not to allow the sorrowfulness of life about thee to depress thee. Thou canst not do thy most effective work if thy heart is always bowed down. The great sympathy of thy nature will lead thee to sorrow for others more than is well for thee. Joy is necessary to all of us. So, Beloved, cultivate joyousness, and teach others to do so. It keeps us sane, and strong and helpful.
I know that the conditions thou hast found shock and distress thee, as they do all G.o.dly men and women; but I beg thee to remember, Esther, that our Lord had compa.s.sion on such as these, on the sinful as well as on the good, and that He offers salvation to all. How to have compa.s.sion! Ah, my child, men are so slow in learning that. Love,--compa.s.sion, is the key of Christ's philosophy.
I am often lonely without thee; but do not think I would call thee back while the Lord hath need of thee.
Thy Uncle and Aunt are well, and send their love to thee.
I have just been reading John Whittier's 'Our Master.'
Read it on next First Day, as my message to thee.
G.o.d bless thee.
Thy faithful grandfather,
DAVID BRIGHT.
As she read, her eyes filled.
In the veins of Esther Bright flowed the blood of honorable, G.o.d-fearing people; but to none of these, had humanity's needs called more insistently than to her. Her grandfather had early recognized and fostered her pa.s.sion for service; and from childhood up, he had frequently taken her with him on his errands of mercy, that she might understand the condition and the needs of the unfortunate. Between the two there existed an unusual bond.