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The trouble with the Sun Road is this: one is apt to be blinded by the glare.
In their solitude, the solitude of a big city, Raymond and Joan trod the shining way with high courage.
This was romance in an age when romance was supposed to be dead! Here they were, they two, nameless--for they decided upon remaining so--living according to their own codes; feeling more and more secure, as time pa.s.sed, that they were safe and were wisely enjoying what so easily might have been lost had they been limited in faith.
"It's the line in our hands!" Raymond declared. "It means something, all right. Think what we must have missed had we been unjust to each other and ourselves."
Joan nodded.
The sun and the dust of the pleasant highway had blinded her completely by the end of a week.
Patricia was a missing quant.i.ty most of the time. Patricia had taken to the Sun Road, also, but with her eyes wide open. If Patricia ever turned aside it would be because she knew the danger, not because she did not.
She never explained her absences nor her private affairs to Joan. When she did appear at Sylvia's studio she was quiet and nervous.
"It's the heat," she explained. "I'm not hot, but I cannot get enough air to breathe."
Meanwhile, Sylvia was basking in success and cool breezes on the Ma.s.sachusetts coast. Her letters had the tang of the sea.
And Raymond was always on hand, now, at the dinner hour. He was like a boy, and took great pride in his knowledge of just the right places to eat. Quiet, but not too quiet; good food, and, occasionally, good music, and if the night was not too hot, a dance with Joan which set his very soul to keeping time.
"Gee!" he said, after their first dance; "I wonder what you are, anyway?
Do you do everything--to perfection?"
Joan twinkled.
"Every man must decide that for himself," she replied with a charming turn of her head.
"Every--man?" Raymond's face fell.
"Certainly. You don't think you are the only man, do you?"
"Well, the only one left in town."
Raymond gave a little laugh and changed the subject. He had no intention of getting behind his companion's screen. With a wider conception of his path, he more diligently kept to the middle.
After the first fortnight he even went so far as to arrange for business engagements, now and then, in order to keep his brain clear.
Joan always met these empty s.p.a.ces in her days with a keen sense of loss which she hid completely from Raymond.
His business demands were offset by her skilfully timed escapes from the Brier Bush. She would either be too early or too late for Raymond, and so while he paid homage to his code, Joan appeared to make the code unnecessary.
And the weather became hotter and moister and the moral and physical fibre of the city-bound became limper.
After a week of not seeing each other Joan and Raymond made up for lost time by galloping instead of trotting along.
"Stevenson and O. Henry couldn't beat this adventure of ours," Raymond exclaimed one evening, wiping the moisture from his forehead. "And I bet thousands of folks would think better of one another if----"
"If--they had the line in their hands," Joan broke in; "but they haven't, you know!"
"Exactly."
Just then Raymond made a bad break. He asked Joan if she did not trust him well enough to give him her telephone number.
"Something might occur," he said, "business pops up unexpectedly. I hate to lose a chance of seeing you--and I hate to wait on street corners."
"I am sorry," Joan replied, "but that would spoil everything."
Raymond flushed. It was just such plunges as this that made him recoil.
"I understand," he replied, coolly; "I had hoped that you could trust me."
"It is not a matter of trust. It's keeping to the bargain."
There was nothing more to say. But, quite naturally, several days elapsed before they saw each other again.
Fierce, broiling days without even the debilitating moisture to ease the suffering citizens.
Joan, alone in the dark, hot studio, thought of Doris and Nancy and wondered!
"Of course, what I am doing would be horrid if I didn't know all about _him_," and then Joan tossed about. "Some day--it will be such a lark to tell them--and think of his surprise when he--knows! I'll see him with all barriers down next winter," for at this time Joan had written and accepted all Doris's plans for her. She was to study music determinedly--she had a proud little bank account--and she would live at the old house and revel in Nancy's social triumphs.
And Raymond, in his shrouded house, had his restless hours and with greater reason, for he was playing utterly in the dark and had to acknowledge to his grim, off-standing self that, except for the fact that he was in the dark, he would not dare play the very amusing game he was playing.
"If she is masquerading," Raymond beat about with his conscience, "it's the biggest lark ever, and she and I will have many a good laugh over it."
"_But if she--isn't?_" demanded the shadowy self.
"Well, if she isn't, she jolly well knows how to take care of herself!
Besides, I'm not going to hurt her. Why, in thunder, can't two fellow creatures enjoy innocent things without having evil suggestions?"
"_They can!_" thundered the Other Self, "_but this isn't innocent--at least it is dangerous_."
"Oh! be hanged!" Raymond flung back and the Shadow sank into oblivion.
Left to himself--one of his selves--Raymond resorted to sentiment.
"Of course we both know--under what might be--what _is_. She's like Kipling's girl in the Brushwood Boy."
But that did not take in the Other Self in the least. It laughed.
When July came the heat settled down in earnest on the panting city.
"Aren't you going to take any vacation?" asked Raymond. He and Joan were sauntering up Fifth Avenue to a certain haven in a backyard where the fountain played and the birds sang.
"No. I'm going to stay in town and let Miss Gordon have her outing. The Brier Bush is too young to be left alone this year. Next year it will be my turn."
"I'm afraid you'll wilt," Raymond looked at the blooming creature beside him. "Funny, isn't it, how things turn out? I expected to go in August to--to that lady with whom you first saw me" (Joan looked divinely innocent); "but only yesterday she informed me that she had resolved to go abroad, and asked if it would make any difference to me. She's like that. Her procedure resembles jumping off a diving plank."