<h2>VIII</h2>
<p>Ruth sat looking into space with starry eyes and
glowing cheeks after she had read the letter. It
seemed to her a wonderful letter, quite the most
wonderful she had ever received. Perhaps it was
because it fitted so perfectly with her ideal of the
writer, who from her little girlhood had always been
a picture of what a hero must be. She used to
dream big things about him when she was a child.
He had been the best baseball player in school when
he was ten, and the handsomest little rowdy in
town, as well as the boldest, bravest champion of
the little girls.</p>
<p>As she grew older and met him occasionally she
had always been glad that he kept his old hero look
though often appearing in rough garb. She had
known they were poor. There had been some story
about a loss of money and a long expensive sickness
of the father’s following an accident which
made all the circumstances most trying, but she
had never heard the details. She only knew that
most of the girls in her set looked on him as a nobody
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_112' name='page_112'></SPAN>112</span>
and would no more have companied with him than
with their father’s chauffeur. After he grew older
and began to go to college some of the girls began
to think he was good looking, and to say it was
quite commendable in him to try to get an education.
Some even unearthed the fact that his had
been a fine old family in former days and that there
had been wealth and servants once. But the story
died down as John Cameron walked his quiet way
apart, keeping to his old friends, and not responding
to the feeble advances of the girls. Ruth had
been away at school in these days and had seldom
seen him. When she had there had always been
that lingering admiration for him from the old days.
She had told herself that of course he could not be
worth much or people would know him. He was
probably ignorant and uncultured, and a closer
acquaintance would show him far from what her
young ideas had pictured her hero. But somehow
that day at the station, the look in his face had revealed
fine feeling, and she was glad now to have
her intuition concerning him verified by his letter.</p>
<p>And what a letter it was! Why, no young man
of her acquaintance could have written with such
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_113' name='page_113'></SPAN>113</span>
poetic delicacy. That paragraph about the rose was
beautiful, and not a bit too presuming, either, in one
who had been a perfect stranger all these years.
She liked his simple frankness and the easy way he
went back twelve years and began just where they
left off. There was none of the bold forwardness
that might have been expected in one who had not
moved in cultured society. There was no unpleasant
assumption of familiarity which might have
emphasized her fear that she had overstepped the
bounds of convention in writing to him in the first
place. On the contrary, her humiliation at his long
delayed answer was all forgotten now. He had
understood her perfectly and accepted her letter in
exactly the way she had meant it without the least
bit of foolishness or unpleasantness. In short, he
had written the sort of a letter that the kind of man
she had always thought—hoped—he was would be
likely to write, and it gave her a surprisingly pleasant
feeling of satisfaction. It was as if she had
discovered a friend all of her own not made for her
by her family, nor one to whom she fell heir because
of her wealth and position; but just one she
had found, out in the great world of souls.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_114' name='page_114'></SPAN>114</span></p>
<p>If he had been going to remain at home there
might have been a number of questions, social and
conventional, which would have arisen to bar the
way to this free feeling of a friendship, and which
she would have had to meet and reason with before
her mind would have shaken itself unhampered;
but because he was going away and on such an
errand, perhaps never to return, the matter of what
her friends might think or what the world would
say, simply did not enter into the question at all.
The war had lifted them both above such ephemeral
barriers into the place of vision where a soul
was a soul no matter what he possessed or who he
was. So, as she sat in her big white room with all
its dainty accessories to a luxurious life, fit setting
for a girl so lovely, she smiled unhindered at this
bit of beautiful friendship that had suddenly drifted
down at her feet out of a great outside unknown
world. She touched the letter thoughtfully with
caressing fingers, and the kind of a high look in her
eyes that a lady of old must have worn when she
thought of her knight. It came to her to wonder
that she had not felt so about any other of her men
friends who had gone into the service. Why should
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_115' name='page_115'></SPAN>115</span>
this special one soldier boy represent the whole war,
as it were, in this way to her. However, it was but
a passing thought, and with a smile still upon her
lips she went to the drawer and brought out the
finely knitted garments she had made, wrapping
them up with care and sending them at once upon
their way. It somehow gave her pleasure to set
aside a small engagement she had for that afternoon
until she had posted the package herself.</p>
<p>Even then, when she took her belated way to a
little gathering in honor of one of her girl friends
who was going to be married the next week to a
young aviator, she kept the smile on her lips and
the dreamy look in her eyes, and now and then
brought herself back from the chatter around her
to remember that something pleasant had happened.
Not that there was any foolishness in her thoughts.
There was too much dignity and simplicity about
the girl, young as she was, to allow her to deal even
with her own thoughts in any but a maidenly way,
and it was not in the ordinary way of a maid with a
man that she thought of this young soldier. He was
so far removed from her life in every way, and all
the well-drilled formalities, that it never occurred
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_116' name='page_116'></SPAN>116</span>
to her to think of him in the same way she thought
of her other men friends.</p>
<p>A friend who understood her, and whom she
could understand. That was what she had always
wanted and what she had never quite had with any
of her young associates. One or two had approached
to that, but always there had been a point
at which they had fallen short. That she should
make this man her friend whose letter crackled in
her pocket, in that intimate sense of the word, did
not occur to her even now. He was somehow set
apart for service in her mind; and as such she had
chosen him to be her special knight, she to be the
lady to whom he might look for encouragement—whose
honor he was going forth to defend. It was
a misty dreamy ideal of a thought. Somehow she
would not have picked out any other of her boy
friends to be a knight for her. They were too flippant,
too careless and light hearted. The very way
in which they lighted their multitudinous cigarettes
and flipped the match away gave impression that
they were going to have the time of their lives in
this war. They might have patriotism down at the
bottom of all this froth and boasting, doubtless they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_117' name='page_117'></SPAN>117</span>
had; but there was so little seriousness about them
that one would never think of them as knights, defenders
of some great cause of righteousness. Perhaps
she was all wrong. Perhaps it was only her
old baby fancy for the little boy who could always
“lick” the other boys and save the girls from
trouble that prejudiced her in his favor, but at least
it was pleasant and a great relief to know that her
impulsive letter had not been misunderstood.</p>
<p>The girls prattled of this one and that who were
“going over” soon, told of engagements and marriages
soon to occur; criticized the brides and
grooms to be; declared their undying opinions about
what was fitting for a war bride to wear; and
whether they would like to marry a man who had
to go right into war and might return minus an arm
or an eye. They discoursed about the U-boats with
a frothy cheerfulness that made Ruth shudder; and
in the same breath told what nice eyes a young captain
had who had recently visited the town, and
what perfectly lovely uniforms he wore. They
argued with serious zeal whether a girl should wear
an olive-drab suit this year if she wanted to look
really smart.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_118' name='page_118'></SPAN>118</span></p>
<p>They were the girls among whom she had been
brought up, and Ruth was used to their froth, but
somehow to-day it bored her beyond expression.
She was glad to make an excuse to get away and
she drove her little car around by the way of John
Cameron’s home hoping perhaps to get a glimpse of
his mother again. But the house had a shut up
look behind the vine that he had trained, as if it
were lonely and lying back in a long wait till he
should come—or not come! A pang went through
her heart. For the first time she thought what it
meant for a young life like that to be silenced by
cold steel. The home empty! The mother alone!
His ambitions and hopes unfulfilled! It came to
her, too, that if he were her knight he might have
to die for her—for his cause! She shuddered and
swept the unpleasant thought away, but it had left
its mark and would return again.</p>
<p>On the way back she passed a number of young
soldiers home on twenty-four hour leave from the
nearby camps. They saluted most eagerly, and she
knew that any one of them would have gladly
occupied the vacant seat in her car, but she was
not in the mood to talk with them. She felt that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_119' name='page_119'></SPAN>119</span>
there was something to be thought out and fixed in
her mind, some impression that life had for her that
afternoon that she did not want to lose in the mild
fritter of gay banter that would be sure to follow
if she stopped and took home some of the boys. So
she bowed graciously and swept by at a high speed
as if in a great hurry. The war! The war! It was
beating itself into her brain again in much the same
way it had done on that morning when the drafted
men went away, only now it had taken on a more
personal touch. She kept seeing the lonely vine-clad
house where that one soldier had lived, and
which he had left so desolate. She kept thinking
how many such homes and mothers there must be in
the land.</p>
<p>That evening when she was free to go to her
room she read John Cameron’s letter again, and
then, feeling almost as if she were childish in her
haste, she sat down and wrote an answer. Somehow
that second reading made her feel his wish for
an answer. It seemed a mute appeal that she
could not resist.</p>
<p>When John Cameron received that letter and
the accompanying package he was lifted into the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_120' name='page_120'></SPAN>120</span>
seventh heaven for a little while. He forgot all his
misgivings, he even forgot Lieutenant Wainwright
who had but that day become a most formidable foe,
having been transferred to Cameron’s company,
where he was liable to be commanding officer in
absence of the captain, and where frequent salutes
would be inevitable. It had been a terrible blow
to Cameron. But now it suddenly seemed a small
matter. He put on his new sweater and swelled
around the way the other boys did, letting them all
admire him. He examined the wonderful socks
almost reverently, putting a large curious finger
gently on the red and blue stripes and thrilling with
the thought that her fingers had plied the needles in
those many, many stitches to make them. He almost
felt it would be sacrilege to wear them, and he laid
them away most carefully and locked them into the
box under his bed lest some other fellow should
admire and desire them to his loss. But with the
letter he walked away into the woods as far as the
bounds of the camp would allow and read and reread
it, rising at last from it as one refreshed from
a comforting meal after long fasting. It was on
the way back to his barracks that night, walking
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_121' name='page_121'></SPAN>121</span>
slowly under the starlight, not desiring to be back
until the last minute before night taps because he
did not wish to break the wonderful evening he had
spent with her, that he resolved to try to get leave
the next Saturday and go home to thank her.</p>
<p>Back in the barracks with the others he fairly
scintillated with wit and kept his comrades in roars
of laughter until the officer of the night suppressed
them summarily. But long after the others were
asleep he lay thinking of her, and listening to the
singing of his soul as he watched a star that twinkled
with a friendly gleam through a crack in the roof
above his cot. Once again there came the thought
of God, and a feeling of gratitude for this lovely
friendship in his life. If he knew where God was
he would like to thank Him. Lying so and looking
up to the star he breathed from his heart a
wordless thanksgiving.</p>
<p>The next night he wrote and told her he was
coming, and asked permission to call and thank her
face to face. Then he fairly haunted the post office
at mail time the rest of the week hoping for an
answer. He had not written his mother about his
coming, for he meant not to go this week if there
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_122' name='page_122'></SPAN>122</span>
came no word from Ruth. Besides, it would be nice
to surprise his mother. Then there was some doubt
about his getting a pass anyway, and so between the
two anxieties he was kept busy up to the last minute.
But Friday evening he got his pass, and in the last
mail came a special delivery from Ruth, just a brief
note saying she had been away from home when
his letter arrived, but she would be delighted to see
him on Sunday afternoon as he had suggested.</p>
<p>He felt like a boy let loose from school as he
brushed up his uniform and polished his big army
shoes while his less fortunate companions kidded
him about the girl he was going to see. He denied
their thrusts joyously, in his heart repudiating any
such personalities, yet somehow it was pleasant. He
had never realized how pleasant it would be to
have a girl and be going to see her—such a girl!
Of course, she was not for him—not with that possessiveness.
But she was a friend, a real friend,
and he would not let anything spoil the pleasure
of that!</p>
<p>He had not thought anything in his army experience
could be so exciting as that first ride back
home again. Somehow the deference paid to his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_123' name='page_123'></SPAN>123</span>
uniform got into his blood and made him feel that
people all along the line really did care for what
the boys were doing for them. It made camp life
and hardships seem less dreary.</p>
<p>It was great to get back to his little mother and
put his big arms around her again. She seemed so
small. Had she shrunken since he left her or was
he grown so much huskier with the out of door life?
Both, perhaps, and he looked at her sorrowfully.
She was so little and quiet and brave to bear life all
alone. If he only could get back and get to succeeding
in life so that he might make some brightness
for her. She had borne so much, and she ought
not to have looked so old and worn at her age! For
a brief instant again his heart was almost bitter, and
he wondered what God meant by giving his good
little mother so much trouble. Was there a God
when such things could be? He resolved to do something
about finding out this very day.</p>
<p>It was pleasant to help his mother about the
kitchen, saving her as she had not been saved since
he left, telling her about the camp, and listening to
her tearful admiration of him. She could scarcely
take her eyes from him, he seemed so tall and big
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_124' name='page_124'></SPAN>124</span>
and handsome in his uniform; he appeared so much
older and more manly that her heart yearned for
her boy who seemed to be slipping away from her.
It was so heavenly blessed to sit down beside him
and sew on a button and mend a torn spot in his
flannel shirt and have him pat her shoulder now and
then contentedly.</p>
<p>Then with pride she sent him down to the store
for something nice for dinner, and watched him
through the window with a smile, the tears running
down her cheeks. How tall and straight he
walked! How like his father when she first knew
him! She hoped the neighbors all were looking out
and would see him. Her boy! Her soldier boy!
And he must go away from her, perhaps to die!</p>
<p>But—<i>he was here to-day</i>! She would not think
of the rest. She would rejoice now in his presence.</p>
<p>He walked briskly down the street past the
houses that had been familiar all his life, meeting
people who had never been wont to notice him before;
and they smiled upon him from afar now;
greeted him with enthusiasm, and turned to look
after him as he passed on. It gave him a curious
feeling to have so much attention from people who
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_125' name='page_125'></SPAN>125</span>
had never known him before. It made him feel
strangely small, yet filled with a great pride and
patriotism for the country that was his, and the
government which he now represented to them all.
He was something more to them now than just one
of the boys about town who had grown up among
them. He was a soldier of the United States. He
had given his life for the cause of righteousness.
The bitterness he might have felt at their former
ignoring of him, was all swallowed up in their
genuine and hearty friendliness.</p>
<p>He met the white-haired minister, kindly and
dignified, who paused to ask him how he liked camp
life and to commend him as a soldier; and looking in
his strong gentle face John Cameron remembered
his resolve.</p>
<p>He flashed a keen look at the gracious countenance
and made up his mind to speak:</p>
<p>“I’d like to ask you a question, Doctor Thurlow.
It’s been bothering me quite a little ever since
this matter of going away to fight has been in my
mind. Is there any way that a man—that <i>I</i> can find
God? That is, if there is a God. I’ve never thought
much about it before, but life down there in camp
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_126' name='page_126'></SPAN>126</span>
makes a lot of things seem different, and I’ve been
wondering. I’m not sure what I believe. Is there
anyway I can find out?”</p>
<p>A pleasant gleam of surprise and delight
thrilled into the deep blue eyes of the minister. It
was startling. It almost embarrassed him for a
moment, it was so unexpected to have a soldier ask
a question about God. It was almost mortifying
that he had never thought it worth while to take
the initiative on that question with the young man.</p>
<p>“Why, certainly!” he said heartily. “Of
course, of course. I’m very glad to know you are
interested in those things. Couldn’t you come in
to my study and talk with me. I think I could help
you. I’m sure I could.”</p>
<p>“I haven’t much time,” said Cameron shyly,
half ashamed now that he had opened his heart to
an almost stranger. He was not even his mother’s
minister, and he was a comparative newcomer in
the town. How had he come to speak to him so
impulsively?</p>
<p>“I understand, exactly, of course,” said the
minister with growing eagerness. “Could you
come in now for five or ten minutes? I’ll turn back
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_127' name='page_127'></SPAN>127</span>
with you and you can stop on your way, or we
can talk as we go. Were you thinking of uniting
with the church? We have our communion the first
Sunday of next month. I should be very glad if
you could arrange. We have a number of young
people coming in now. I’d like to see you come
with them. The church is a good safe place to be.
It was established by God. It is a school in which
to learn of Him. It is——”</p>
<p>“But I’m not what you would call a Christian!”
protested Cameron. “I don’t even know that I believe
in the Bible. I don’t know what your church
believes. I don’t have a very definite idea what any
church believes. I would be a hypocrite to stand up
and join a church when I wasn’t sure there was
a God.”</p>
<p>“My dear young fellow!” said the minister
affectionately. “Not at all! Not at all! The
church is the place for young people to come when
they have doubts. It is a shelter, and a growing
place. Just trust yourself to God and come in
among His people and your doubts will vanish.
Don’t worry about doubts. Many people have
doubts. Just let them alone and put yourself in the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_128' name='page_128'></SPAN>128</span>
right way and you will forget them. I should be
glad to talk with you further. I would like to see
you come into communion with God’s people. If
you want to find God you should come where He
has promised to be. It is a great thing to have a
fine young fellow like you, and a soldier, array himself
on the side of God. I would like to see you
stand up on the right side before you go out to
meet danger and perhaps death.”</p>
<p>John Cameron stood watching him as he talked.</p>
<p>“He’s a good old guy,” he thought gravely,
“but he doesn’t get my point. He evidently believes
what he says, but I don’t just see going blindfolded
into a church. However, there’s something
to what he says about going where God is if I want
to find him.”</p>
<p>Out loud he merely said:</p>
<p>“I’ll think about it, Doctor, and perhaps come
in to see you the next time I’m home.” Then he
excused himself and went on to the store.</p>
<p>As he walked away he said to himself:</p>
<p>“I wonder what Ruth Macdonald would say if
I asked her the same question? I wonder if she has
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_129' name='page_129'></SPAN>129</span>
thought anything about it? I wonder if I’d ever
have the nerve to ask her?”</p>
<p>The next morning he suggested to his mother
that they go to Doctor Thurlow’s church together.
She would have very much preferred going to her
own church with him, but she knew that he did not
care for the minister and had never been very
friendly with the people, so she put aside her secret
wish and went with him. To tell the truth she was
very proud to go anywhere with her handsome soldier
son, and one thing that made her the more willing
was that she remembered that the Macdonalds
always went to the Presbyterian church, and perhaps
they would be there to-day and Ruth would
see them. But she said not a word of this to her boy.</p>
<p>John spent most of the time with his mother.
He went up to college for an hour or so Saturday
evening, dropping in on his fraternity for a few
minutes and realizing what true friends he had
among the fellows who were left, though most of
them were gone. He walked about the familiar
rooms, looking at the new pictures, photographs of
his friends in uniform. This one was a lieutenant
in Officers’ Training Camp. That one had gone
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_130' name='page_130'></SPAN>130</span>
with the Ambulance Corps. Tom was with the
Engineers, and Jimmie and Sam had joined the
Tank Service. Two of the fellows were in France
in the front ranks, another had enlisted in the
Marines, it seemed that hardly any were left, and
of those three had been turned down for some slight
physical defect, and were working in munition factories
and the ship-yard. Everything was changed.
The old playmates had become men with earnest
purposes. He did not stay long. There was a
restlessness about it all that pulled the strings of
his heart, and made him realize how different everything
was.</p>
<p>Sunday morning as he walked to church with
his mother he wondered why he had never gone more
with her when he was at home. It seemed a pleasant
thing to do.</p>
<p>The service was beautifully solemn, and Doctor
Thurlow had many gracious words to say of the
boys in the army, and spent much time reading letters
from those at the front who belonged to the
church and Sunday school, and spoke of the
“supreme sacrifice” in the light of a saving grace;
but the sermon was a gentle ponderous thing that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_131' name='page_131'></SPAN>131</span>
got nowhere, spiced toward its close with thrilling
scenes from battle news. John Cameron as he
listened did not feel that he had found God. He
did not feel a bit enlightened by it. He laid it to
his own ignorance and stupidity, though, and determined
not to give up the search. The prayer at the
close of the sermon somehow clinched this resolve
because there was something so genuine and sweet
and earnest about it. He could not help thinking
that the man might know more of God than he was
able to make plain to his hearers. He had really
never noticed either a prayer or a sermon before in
his life. He had sat in the room with very few. He
wondered if all sermons and prayers were like these
and wished he had noticed them. He had never been
much of a church goer.</p>
<p>But the climax, the real heart of his whole two
days, was after Sunday dinner when he went out to
call upon Ruth Macdonald. And it was characteristic
of his whole reticent nature, and the way he had
been brought up, that he did not tell his mother
where he was going. It had never occurred to him
to tell her his movements when they did not directly
concern her, and she had never brought herself
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_132' name='page_132'></SPAN>132</span>
up to ask him. It is the habit of some women,
and many mothers.</p>
<p>A great embarrassment fell upon him as he
entered the grounds of the Macdonald place, and
when he stood before the plate-glass doors waiting
for an answer to his ring he would have turned and
fled if he had not promised to come.</p>
<p>It was perhaps not an accident that Ruth let
him in herself and took him to a big quiet library
with wide-open windows overlooking the lawn, and
heavy curtains shutting them in from the rest of
the house, where, to his great amazement, he could
feel at once at ease with her and talk to her just as
he had done in her letters and his own.</p>
<p>Somehow it was like having a lifetime dream
suddenly fulfilled to be sitting this way in pleasant
converse with her, watching the lights and shadows
of expression flit across her sensitive face, and knowing
that the light in her eyes was for him. It seemed
incredible, but she evidently enjoyed talking to him.
Afterwards he thought about it as if their souls had
been calling to one another across infinite space,
things that neither of them could quite hear, and
now they were within hailing distance.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_133' name='page_133'></SPAN>133</span></p>
<p>He had thanked her for the sweater and other
things, and they had talked a little about the old
school days and how life changed people, when he
happened to glance out of the window near him
and saw a man in officer’s uniform approaching.
He stopped short in the midst of a sentence and
rose, his face set, his eyes still on the rapidly approaching
soldiers:</p>
<p>“I’m sorry,” he said, “I shall have to go. It’s
been wonderful to come, but I must go at once.
Perhaps you’ll let me go out this way. It is a
shorter cut. Thank you for everything, and perhaps
if there’s ever another time—I’d like to come
again——”</p>
<p>“Oh, please don’t go yet!” she said putting out
her hand in protest. But he grasped the hand with
a quick impulsive grip and with a hasty: “I’m sorry,
but I must!” he opened the glass door to the side
piazza and was gone.</p>
<p>In much bewilderment and distress Ruth
watched him stride away toward the hedge and disappear.
Then she turned to the front window and
caught a glimpse of Lieutenant Wainwright just
mounting the front steps. What did it all mean?</p>
<hr class='major' />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_134' name='page_134'></SPAN>134</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />