"I stood in need of good counsel," he answered, cheerfully, "or a friendly word, perhaps, and--as I sat there--after a while it came.""What was it?""To forget that I was sodden with selfishness;to pretend not to be as full of meanness as I really was! Doesn't that seem to be Eskew's own voice?""Weren't you happy last night, Joe?""Oh, it was all right," he said, quickly."Don't you worry."And at this old speech of his she broke into a little laugh of which he had no comprehension.
"Mamie came to see me early this morning,"she said, after they had walked on in silence for a time."Everything is all right with her again;that is, I think it will be.Eugene is coming home.
And," she added, thoughtfully, "it will be best for him to have his old place on the Tocsin again.
She showed me his letter, and I liked it.I think he's been through the fire--"Joe's distorted smile appeared."And has come out gold?" he asked.
"No," she laughed; "but nearer it! And Ithink he'll try to be more worth her caring for.
She has always thought that his leaving the Tocsin in the way he did was heroic.That was her word for it.And it WAS the finest thing he ever did.""I can't figure Eugene out." Joe shook his head."There's something behind his going away that I don't understand." This was altogether the truth; nor was there ever to come a time when either he or Mamie would understand what things had determined the departure of Eugene Bantry;though Mamie never questioned, as Joe did, the reasons for it, or doubted those Eugene had given her, which were the same he had given her father.
For she was content with his return.