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The Seventh Noon

Creator: Bartlett, Frederick Orin
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was once during that wonderful summer when he had taken them abroad. She was seventeen, and on the boat she met a man with whom she fell in love. He was very much older than she, and possessed a glorious mustache which turned up at the corners. He helped her up and down the deck one day when the wind was blowing, and that night she lay awake thinking about him. When she appeared in the morning with her eyes heavy and her thoughts far away, the father put his arm about her and escorted her to the stern of the boat. Then sitting down beside her, he said, "Tell me what is on your mind, little girl." She told him quite simply, and had been surprised to see his face grow white and terrible. "He put those thoughts into your heart?" He rose to his feet and started towards the saloon. She knew what he was about to do. She flung her arms around his knees and, sobbing, pleaded with him until he stayed. Then after she had calmed a little, he talked to her and she listened as though to a stranger. "Little girl," he cried fiercely, "there is much that you do not understand, and much that I pray God you never will understand. One of these things is the nature of man. If it were not for all the other
Stories by English Authors: The Orient (Selected by Scribners)

Produced by Dagny; and John Bickers STORIES BY ENGLISH AUTHORS ORIENT CONTENTS: THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING, Rudyard Kipling TAJIMA, Miss Mitford A CHINESE GIRL GRADUATE, R. K. Douglas THE REVENGE OF HER RACE, Mary Beaumont KING BILLY OF BALLARAT, Morley Roberts THY HEART'S DESIRE, Netta Syrett
fair things there are in life I would place you in a convent, for the best man who ever lived, little girl, is not good enough to take into his keeping the worst woman. They break their hearts with their weaknesses--they break their hearts." "But you, dear Dada--" "I did it! God forgive me, I did it, too!" At this point he gained control of himself and his wild speech, but the words remained forever an echo in her heart. They passed the next summer in the Adirondacks, and here in the deep woods she spent the pleasantest period of her life. She was strangely atune with the big pines and the fragrant shadows which lay beneath them. Arsdale used to sit beside her in these solitudes and read aloud by the hour from the poets in his sweet musical voice. At such times she wondered more than ever what he had meant in that outburst on the steamer. Here, too, he told her more of her mother who had died at almost the same time that Ben's mother had died. But of the father all he ever told her was, "My brother was an Arsdale--like the rest of us." So she lived her peaceful life and was conscious of missing nothing, save at odd moments the man with the beautiful mustache. Marie, the