Purchase one of 1st World Library's Classic Books and help support our free internet library of downloadable eBooks. Visit us online at www.1stWorldLibrary.ORG - - What subtle strange message had come to her out of the West? Carley Burch laid the letter in her lap and gazed dreamily through the window. It was a day typical of early April in New York rather cold and gray with steely sunlight. Spring breathed in the air but the women passing along Fifty-seventh Street wore furs and wraps. She heard the distant clatter of an L train and then the hum of a motor car. A hurdy-gurdy jarred into the interval of quiet. Glenn has been gone over a year she mused three months over a year-and of all his strange letters this seems the strangest yet. She lived again for the thousandth time the last moments she had spent with him. It had been on New-Year's Eve 1918. They had called upon friends who were staying at the McAlpin in a suite on the twenty-first floor overlooking Broadway. And when the last quarter hour of that eventful and tragic year began slowly to pass with the low swell of whistles and bells Carley's friends had discreetly left her alone with her lover at the open window to watch and hear the old year out the new year in. Glenn Kilbourne had returned from France early that fall shell-shocked and gassed and otherwise incapacitated for service in the army-a wreck of his former sterling self and in many unaccountable ways a stranger to her. Cold silent haunted by something he had made her miserable with his aloofness. But as the bells began to ring out the year that had been his ruin Glenn had drawn her close tenderly passionately and yet strangely too.
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