CHAPTER IX

  THE DIVINE SPARK

  "Boney, old chap, you're the very man I want!" Such was Lucas Errol'sgreeting to the man who had shot like a thunderbolt into the peacefulatmosphere that surrounded him, to the general disturbance of all otherswho dwelt therein.

  "I guess you must have known it," he said, the sinewy hand fast grippedin his. "You've come like an answer to prayer. Where have you been allthis time? And why didn't you write? It's worried me some not hearing."

  "Great Lucifer!" said Nap.

  He sat down, leaving his hand in his brother's grasp. The cynicism hadgone utterly from his face, but he did not answer either question.

  "So you are winning out?" he said. "It's been a long trail, I'll wager."

  "Oh, damnably long, Boney." Lucas uttered a weary sigh. "I was nearlydown and out in the winter. But I'm better, you know. I'm better." Hemet the open criticism of Nap's eyes with a smile. "What's theverdict?" he asked.

  "I'll tell you presently. You're not looking overfed anyway." Nap'sfingers began to feel along his wrist. "Did Capper say he wanted askeleton to work on?"

  "Shucks, dear fellow! There's more than enough of me. Tell me aboutyourself. What have you been doing? I want to know."

  "I?" Nap jerked back his head. "I've nothing to tell," he declared."You know what I went to do. Well, I've done it, and that's all thereis to it."

  "I'm not quite clear as to what you went to do," Lucas answered. "Youdidn't turn up in Arizona. I was puzzled what to think."

  "You never expected me to go to Arizona," said Nap with conviction. "Youwere shrewd enough for that."

  "Thanks, Boney! P'r'aps I was. But I've been hoping all this while,nevertheless, that you might have the grit to keep the devil atarm's length."

  Nap laughed, stretched his arms above his head, and made a vehementgesture as if flinging something from him--something that writhedand clung.

  "Will it interest you to know that the devil has ceased to provide mewith distractions?" he asked suddenly.

  A certain eagerness came into the blue eyes. "That so, Boney?"

  Nap leaned back and stared at the ceiling. "It's no virtue of mine," hesaid. "I found I wanted solitude, so I went to the Rockies and stayedthere till I was tired. That's all."

  Again the skeleton hand of the man on the bed sought and pressed his."Old chap, I'm real glad," the tired voice drawled. "You've foundyourself at last. I always felt you would--sooner or later."

  Nap's lips twitched a little. "Don't be too sure of that. Anyway itdoesn't follow that I shall sit at home and practise the domesticvirtues. I've got to wander a bit first and find my own level."

  "Not yet, dear fellow. I'm wanting you myself."

  "You!" The thin lips began to smile. "That's real magnanimous of you.But--thanks all the same--I'm not taking any. You have the mater andBertie and Anne Carfax to bolster you up. I guess I'm not essential."

  "And I guess you can do more for me than any one of them," Lucas madequiet reply. "P'r'aps you'll think me a selfish brute to say so, but Ineed you badly. You're like a stimulating drug to me. You pick me up whenI'm down. There is no one can help me in the same way."

  "You wouldn't get Capper to say 'Amen' to that," remarked Nap.

  "Capper is no oracle out of his own sphere. Besides," there was almost anote of pleading in Lucas's voice, "I know what I want better than hecan tell me."

  "True, very true!" Nap was smiling somewhat grimly. "And doubtless yourwish is law. But it doesn't follow that you always desire what is bestfor yourself. Hadn't you better consult the queen before you admit thewasp to the hive?"

  "You're too fond of talking in parables, my son," protested Lucas,frowning slightly. "My intelligence won't stretch to it."

  "We'll try another," said Nap imperturbably. "Do you think Anne Carfaxwould thank you for asking me to pull in the same boat? Do you think shewould second that request? Because, if so, I beg to differ."

  He looked his brother full in the face as he said it, without the flickerof an eyelid. Lucas's frown deepened. He lay in silence.

  After a moment Nap went on. "She may be ready to put up with it for yoursake. There's nothing some women won't do for a man they care for, and Itake it she has your welfare next her heart. But it's rather much to askof her. You wouldn't want to run the risk of frightening her away."

  Lucas was watching him gravely, his brows still drawn. "Boney," he saidslowly at length, "I'd give a good deal to see into your soul."

  Nap smiled with a faint return of cynicism. "Who's talking in parablesnow? Afraid I can't show you what I haven't got."

  Lucas passed the rejoinder by. "What makes you conclude that I am moreto her than--any other man?"

  "Circumstances," said Nap.

  "What circumstances?"

  "Finding her installed here as one of the family for one. Finding youpulling off the biggest deal of your life for another. And othersigns--crowds of them--that I can't explain but that I can't fail tonotice when I've got my nose to the trail. You needn't be shy about it.I'm just as pleased as you are."

  But Lucas's face did not clear. There followed a very decided pause.Then, with an effort, very earnestly, he spoke.

  "Nap, I don't believe you'll lie to me when I tell you that I'd ratherdie than be deceived. I know you cared for her once."

  "I care for most women," said Nap indifferently. "What of that? It's theway I'm made, and I must say they don't most of 'em seem to mind."

  "But, Boney--Anne Carfax?"

  Nap threw up his head with a brief laugh. "Oh, I'm cured of that--quitecured. The paths of perpetual virtue are not for me. I prefer more rapidtravelling and a surer goal."

  He stood up, his arms stretched up above his head. "I make you a presentof Anne Carfax," he said lightly. "Not that she is mine to give. But Iwouldn't keep her if she were. We belong to different spheres."

  "And yet--" Lucas said.

  "My dear fellow, that's an old story." Impulsively Nap cut in, almostfierily. "Do you think the woman is living who could hold me afterall this time? I tell you that fire is burnt out. Why rake over thedead ashes?"

  "I am looking for the Divine Spark," Lucas answered quietly.

  "And if you found it?" Nap's words came through smiling lips, and yetthey sounded savage.

  "If I found it," very steadily came the answer, "I would blow it to aflame, Boney, for your sake--and hers."

  "For hers?" Something fierce showed in Nap's eyes. It was as if a goadedanimal suddenly looked out of them.

  Lucas must have seen it, for on the instant his manner changed.

  "We won't go any further," he said. "Only, dear fellow, I can't part withyou yet. Let that be understood. I want you."

  "So be it!" said Nap. "I will stay and see you married."

  And with the words he stooped and grasped his brother's hand for amoment.

  "Go on and prosper, Luke," he said. "It's high time that you came intoyour own."