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ack of understanding. She felt infinitely older than this tall, honest-eyed boy in his stained uniform--older and more sophisticated. But if she had understood the Marion Hayden situation, she was totally at a loss as to Anna. "But I don't understand!" she cried. "How could you make love to her if you didn't love her?" "I don't know. Fellows do those things. It's just mischief--some sort of a devil in them, I suppose." When he reached the beating and Anna's flight, however, she understood a little better. "Of course you had to stand by her," she agreed. "You haven't heard it all," he said quietly. "When I'm through, if you get up and leave me, I'll understand, Delight, and I won't blame you." He told her the rest of the story in a voice strained with anxiety. It was as though he had come to a tribunal for judgment. He spared her nothing, the dinner at the road-house with Rudolph at the window, his visit to Anna's room, and her subsequent disappearance. "She told the Department of Justice people that Rudolph found her that night, and, took her home. She was a prisoner then, poor little kid. But she overheard her father and Rudolph plotting to blow up the mill. That's where I came in, Delight. He was crazy at me. He was a German, of course, and he might have done it anyhow. But Rudolph told him a lot of lies about me, and--he did it. When I think about it all, and about Joey, I'm crazy." She slipped her hand over his. "Of course they would have done it anyhow," she said softly. "You aren't going to get up and go away?" "Why should I?" she asked. "I only feel--oh, Graham, how wretched you must have been." Something in her voice made him sit up straighter. He knew now that it had always been Delight, always. Only she had been too good for him. She had set a standard he had not hoped to reach. But now things were different. He hadn't amounted to much in other things, but he was a soldier now. He meant to be a mighty good soldier. And when he got his commission-- "You won't mind, then, if I come in to see you now and then?" "Mind? Why, Graham!" "And you don't think I'm quite hopeless, do you?" There were tears in her eyes, but she answered bravely: "I believe in you every minute. But then I think I always have." "Like fun you have!" But although he laughed, it was a shaky laugh. Suddenly he stood up and shook himself. He felt young and strong and extremely happy. There had been a bad
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