of 
Tuning Master, and unless he can dance to its music he is a misfit. That 
is what my friend said to extenuate her. She fitted into this kind of life 
splendidly. He was in the other groove. She loved light, laughter, wine, 
song, and excitement. He, the misfit, loved his books, his work, and his 
home. His greatest joy would have been to go with her, hand in hand, 
through some wonderful cathedral, pointing out its ancient glories and 
mysteries to her. He wanted aloneness--just they two. Such was his 
idea of love. And she--wanted other things. You understand, Father?... 
The thing grew, and at last he saw that she was getting away from him. 
Her passion for admiration and excitement became a madness. I know, 
because I saw it. My friend said that it was madness, even as he was 
going mad. And yet he did not suspect her. If another had told him that 
she was unclean I am sure he would have killed him. Slowly he came 
to experience the agony of knowing that the woman whom he 
worshipped did not love him. But this did not lead him to believe that 
she could love another--or others. Then, one day, he left the city. She 
went with him to the train--his wife. She saw him go. She waved her 
handkerchief at him. And as she stood there she was--glorious." 
Through partly closed eyes the Little Missioner saw his shoulders
tighten, and a hardness settle about his mouth. The voice, too, was 
changed when it went on. It was almost emotionless. 
"It's sometimes curious how the Chief Arbiter of things plays His tricks 
on men--and women, isn't it, Father? There was trouble on the line 
ahead, and my friend came back. It was unexpected. It was late when 
he reached home, and with his night key he went in quietly, because he 
did not want to awaken her. It was very still in the house--until he came 
to the door of her room. There was a light. He heard voices--very low. 
He listened. He went in." 
There was a terrible silence. The ticking of Father Roland's big silver 
watch seemed like the beating of a tiny drum. 
"And what happened then, David?" 
"My friend went in," repeated David. His eyes sought Father Roland's 
squarely, and he saw the question there. "No, he did not kill them," he 
said. "He doesn't know what kept him from killing--the man. He was a 
coward, that man. He crawled away like a worm. Perhaps that was why 
my friend spared him. The wonderful part of it was that the woman--his 
wife--was not afraid. She stood up in her ravishing dishevelment, with 
that mantle of gold he had worshipped streaming about her to her knees, 
and she laughed? Yes, she laughed--a mad sort of laugh; a laughter of 
fear, perhaps--but--laughter. So he did not kill them. Her laughter--the 
man's cowardice--saved them. He turned. He closed the door. He left 
them. He went out into the night." 
He paused, as though his story was finished. 
"And that is--the end?" asked Father Roland softly. 
"Of his dreams, his hopes, his joy in life--yes, that was the end." 
"But of your friend's story? What happened after that?" 
"A miracle, I think," replied David hesitatingly, as though he could not 
quite understand what had happened after that. "You see, this friend of
mine was not of the vacillating and irresolute sort. I had always given 
him credit for that--credit for being a man who would measure up to a 
situation. He was quite an athlete, and enjoyed boxing and fencing and 
swimming. If at any time in his life he could have conceived of a 
situation such as he encountered in his wife's room, he would have 
lived in a moral certainty of killing the man. And when the situation did 
come was it not a miracle that he should walk out into the night leaving 
them not only unharmed, but together? I ask you, Father--was it not a 
miracle?" 
Father Roland's eyes were gleaming strangely under the shadow of his 
broad-brimmed black hat. He merely nodded. 
"Of course," resumed David, "it may be that he was too stunned to act. 
I believe that the laughter--her laughter--acted upon him like a 
powerful drug. Instead of plunging him into the passion of a murderous 
desire for vengeance it curiously enough anesthetized his emotions. For 
hours he heard that laughter. I believe he will never forget it. He 
wandered the streets all that night. It was in New York, and of course 
he passed many people. But he did not see them. When morning came 
he was on Fifth Avenue many miles from his home. He wandered 
downtown in a constantly growing human stream whose noise and 
bustle and many-keyed    
    
		
	
	
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