solved. This, then, would be solved. All human affairs reached some solution.

He shook sober thought from his brain and returned to the bliss of memory, reaching his hand to another caress of his knee, his lips breathing again to the breathing of hers against them. He even reined Selim to a halt in order to gaze at the hollow resting place of his bent arm which she had filled.

Not until dinner did Graham see Paula again, and he found her the very usual Paula. Not even his eye, keen with knowledge, could detect any sign of the day's great happening, nor of the anger that had whitened her face and blazed in her eyes when she half-lifted her whip to strike him. In everything she was the same Little Lady of the Big House. Even when it chanced that her eyes met his, they were serene, untroubled, with no hint of any secret in them. What made the situation easier was the presence of several new guests, women, friends of Dick and her, come for a couple of days.

Next morning, in the music room, he encountered them and Paula at the piano.

«Don't you sing, Mr. Graham?» a Miss Hoffman asked.

She was the editor of a woman's magazine published in San Francisco,

Graham had learned.

«Oh, adorably,» he assured her. «Don't I, Mrs. Forrest?» he appealed.

«It is quite true,» Paula smiled, «if for no other reason that he is kind enough not to drown me quite.»

«And nothing remains but to prove our words,» he volunteered. «There's a duet we sang the other evening —» He glanced at Paula for a sign. «—Which is particularly good for my kind of singing.» Again he gave her a passing glance and received no cue to her will or wish. «The music is in the living room. I'll go and get it.»

«It's the 'Gypsy Trail,' a bright, catchy thing,» he heard her saying to the others as he passed out.

They did not sing it so recklessly as on that first occasion, and much of the thrill and some of the fire they kept out of their voices; but they sang it more richly, more as the composer had intended it and with less of their own particular interpretation. But Graham was thinking as he sang, and he knew, too, that Paula was thinking, that in their hearts another duet was pulsing all unguessed by the several women who applauded the song's close.

«You never sang it better, I'll wager,» he told Paula.

For he had heard a new note in her voice. It had been fuller, rounder, with a generousness of volume that had vindicated that singing throat.

«And now, because I know you don't know, I'll tell you what a patteran is,» she was saying…

CHAPTER XXII

«Dick, boy, your position is distinctly Carlylean,» Terrence McFane said in fatherly tones.

The sages of the madrono grove were at table, and, with Paula, Dick and Graham, made up the dinner party of seven.

«Mere naming of one's position does not settle it, Terrence,» Dick replied. «I know my point is Carlylean, but that does not invalidate it. Hero-worship is a very good thing. I am talking, not as a mere scholastic, but as a practical breeder with whom the application of Mendelian methods is an every-day commonplace.»

«And I am to conclude,» Hancock broke in, «that a Hottentot is as good as a white man?»

«Now the South speaks, Aaron,» Dick retorted with a smile. «Prejudice, not of birth, but of early environment, is too strong for all your philosophy to shake. It is as bad as Herbert Spencer's handicap of the early influence of the Manchester School.»

«And Spencer is on a par with the Hottentot?» Dar Hyal challenged.

Dick shook his head.

«Let me say this, Hyal. I think I can make it clear. The average Hottentot, or the average Melanesian, is pretty close to being on a par with the average white man. The difference lies in that there are proportionately so many more Hottentots and negroes who are merely average, while there is such a heavy percentage of white men who are not average, who are above average. These are what I called the pace– makers that bring up the speed of their own race average-men. Note that they do not change the nature or develop the intelligence of the average- men. But they give them better equipment, better facilities, enable them to travel a faster collective pace.

«Give an Indian a modern rifle in place of his bow and arrows and he will become a vastly more efficient game-getter. The Indian hunter himself has not changed in the slightest. But his entire Indian race sported so few of the above-average men, that all of them, in ten thousand generations, were unable to equip him with a rifle.»

«Go on, Dick, develop the idea,» Terrence encouraged. «I begin to glimpse your drive, and you'll soon have Aaron on the run with his race prejudices and silly vanities of superiority.»

«These above-average men,» Dick continued, «these pace-makers, are the inventors, the discoverers, the constructionists, the sporting dominants. A race that sports few such dominants is classified as a lower race, as an inferior race. It still hunts with bows and arrows. It is not equipped. Now the average white man, per se, is just as bestial, just as stupid, just as inelastic, just as stagnative, just as retrogressive, as the average savage. But the average white man has a faster pace. The large number of sporting dominants in his society give him the equipment, the organization, and impose the law.

«What great man, what hero—and by that I mean what sporting dominant—

has the Hottentot race produced? The Hawaiian race produced only one—

Kamehameha. The negro race in America, at the outside only two, Booker

T. Washington and Du Bois—and both with white blood in them…»

Paula feigned a cheerful interest while the exposition went on. She did not appear bored, but to Graham's sympathetic eyes she seemed inwardly to droop. And in an interval of tilt between Terrence and Hancock, she said in a low voice to Graham:

«Words, words, words, so much and so many of them! I suppose Dick is right—he so nearly always is; but I confess to my old weakness of inability to apply all these floods of words to life—to my life, I mean, to my living, to what I should do, to what I must do.» Her eyes were unfalteringly fixed on his while she spoke, leaving no doubt in his mind to what she referred. «I don't know what bearing sporting dominants and race-paces have on my life. They show me no right or wrong or way for my particular feet. And now that they've started they are liable to talk the rest of the evening…

«Oh, I do understand what they say,» she hastily assured him; «but it doesn't mean anything to me. Words, words, words—and I want to know what to do, what to do with myself, what to do with you, what to do with Dick.»

But the devil of speech was in Dick Forrest's tongue, and before Graham could murmur a reply to Paula, Dick was challenging him for data on the subject from the South American tribes among which he had traveled. To look at Dick's face it would have been unguessed that he was aught but a carefree, happy arguer. Nor did Graham, nor did Paula, Dick's dozen years' wife, dream that his casual careless glances were missing no movement of a hand, no change of position on a chair, no shade of expression on their faces.

What's up? was Dick's secret interrogation. Paula's not herself. She's positively nervous, and all the discussion is responsible. And Graham's off color. His brain isn't working up to mark. He's thinking about something else, rather than about what he is saying. What is that something else?

And the devil of speech behind which Dick hid his secret thoughts impelled him to urge the talk wider and wilder.

«For once I could almost hate the four sages,» Paula broke out in an undertone to Graham, who had finished furnishing the required data.

Dick, himself talking, in cool sentences amplifying his thesis, apparently engrossed in his subject, saw Paula make the aside, although no word of it reached his ears, saw her increasing nervousness, saw the silent sympathy of Graham, and wondered what had been the few words she uttered, while to the listening table he was saying:

«Fischer and Speiser are both agreed on the paucity of unit-characters that circulate in the heredity of the lesser races as compared with the immense variety of unit-characters in say the French, or German, or

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