“I am my own maid to-night,” she said, as she stooped to light it. “Sarah usually goes to town Saturday evening. Now we shall see if someone is in good humor.”

The fire curled up pleasantly about the wood. “There!” she exclaimed, clapping her hands. “All is well. You see how economical I am; if we must spend on fires we save on light. I love a wood fire; I suppose it is something which reaches back to the original savage in all of us.”

“To the days when our great ancestors roasted their victims while they danced about the coals,” said Grant, completing the picture. “And yet they say that human nature doesn’t change.”

“Does it? I think our methods change with our environments, but that is all. Wasn’t it you who propounded a theory about an age when men took what they wanted by force giving way to an age in which they took what they wanted by subtlety? Now, I believe, you want society to restrain the man of clever wits just as it has learned to restrain the man of big biceps. And when that is done will not man discover some other means of taking what he wants?”

She had seated herself beside him on a divanette and the joy of her nearness fired Grant with a very happy intoxication. It recalled that night on the hillside when, as she had since said, she felt safe in his protection.

“I am really very interested,” she continued. “I followed the argument at the table on Sunday with as much concern as if it had been my pet hobby, not yours, that was under discussion. If I said little it was because I did not wish to appear too interested.”

Her amazing frankness brought Grant, figuratively, to his feet at every turn. She seemed to have no desire to conceal her interest in him, her attachment for him. Hers was such candor as might well be born of the vast hillsides, the great valleys, the brooding silences of her girlhood. Yet it seemed obvious that she must be less candid with Transley....

“I am glad you were interested,” he answered. “I was afraid I was rather boring the company, but it was MY scheme and I had to stand up for it. I fear I made few converts.”

“You were dealing with practical men,” she returned, “and practical men are never converted to a new idea. That is one of the things I have learned in my years of married life, Dennison. Practical men find many ways of turning an old idea to advantage, but they never evolve new ones. New ideas come from dreamers—theoretical fellows like you.”

“The dreamer is always a lap ahead of the rest of civilization, and the funny thing is that the rest always thinks itself much more sane than the dreamer, out there blazing the way.”