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ardently blue and tender and intense, danced with incautious gleams of laughter. His color was high. He was gay and utterly friendly. An odd jealous hunger sprang up in the invalid's eyes. "Are you mad?" he demanded. "Quite!" said Kenny. "More like," said the old man tartly, "you're drunk." "Drunk," nodded Kenny, "with heather ale. Only the fairies know how to make it now. And who wouldn't be drunk in the head of him to-night with the Good People dancing on the hills and the dead dancing with them." Adam frowned and shivered. "You Irish," he said harshly, "are as morbid as you are poetic." "'Tis all a part of the night," cried Kenny gayly and poured himself some brandy. "The druids," he remembered, "poured libations on the ground to propitiate the evil spirits and the spirits of the dead; but, Adam, I'm drinking to-night to Destiny! To Destiny," he added under his breath, "and the foreverness of her gift!" "What gift," demanded Adam Craig, "are you trying to clinch with a gift to yourself of my brandy?" "The gift," said Kenny cryptically, "of--Life!" Well, he had spoken truth there. Life was love and love was life and perhaps until now he'd known neither. Still the old man stared at him in dazed and sullen envy. His wild vitality seemed a barrier impossible to surmount. "And it isn't just Samhain," said Kenny, setting down his glass. "Ugh, Adam, your brandy's abominable! It's the Eve of All Souls. To-night the dead revisit their homes. Once I remember when I was tramping through Ireland, an old woman left a chair by the fireside that the spirit of her son might come back to her. She even left some embers in the fire." "That," said Adam Craig with a shudder, "will be enough of your damned ghosts and fairies." Afterward to Kenny the evening was always a blur but he knew they had gotten on badly. And Adam, quiet and sullen, had drunk more than usual. Kenny sparkled through the evening in a baffling, dreamlike oblivion to everything but his thoughts, and floated away to his room, feeling curiously light and iridescent. He meant not to sleep. He meant to roll the shades to the top and with the cold wind upon his face and the stars winking in silver beneficence overhead, to lie awake and think until the dawn came. He slept soundly, dreaming of thistledown and a little old woman in a green cloak who came out of a hill and played a tune upon a sort of lantern-flute. The n
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