“Why, Miss Ainslie?”

“Because it is my birthday—I am fifty-five years old.”

Ruth's face mirrored her astonishment. “You don't look any older than I do,” she said.

Except for the white hair, it was true. Her face was as fresh as a rose with the morning dew upon it, and even on her neck, where the folds of lace revealed a dazzling whiteness, there were no lines.

“Teach us how to live, Miss Ainslie,” said Winfield, softly, “that the end of half a century may find us young.”

A delicate pink suffused her cheeks and she turned her eyes to his. “I've just been happy, that's all,” she answered.

“It needs the alchemist's touch,” he said, “to change our sordid world to gold.”

“We can all learn,” she replied, “and even if we don't try, it comes to us once.”

“What?” asked Ruth.

“Happiness—even if it isn't until the end. In every life there is a perfect moment, like a flash of sun. We can shape our days by that, if we will—before by faith, and afterward by memory.”