The Alchemists Secret | Page 7

Isabel Cecilia Williams
regard to my lodgings, and as there is
nothing around here that quite suits me, I just crawl under the engine
and sleep there.'
"'But when it rains, Jim?'
"'Well, it just rains, that's all.'
"The next morning Jim attended my Mass and received Holy
Communion, and every morning after that when I entered the church to
offer up the Holy Sacrifice the first person I would see would be my
one-armed tramp kneeling in a far corner, his rosary slipping through
his fingers. The rosary had belonged to his mother, and during all his
years of tramping he had guarded it as his most precious treasure. He
had worn it in a little chamois bag suspended from a string around his
neck, but had not used it in many, many years. He came regularly one
evening in each week to make his confession and to have a little chat
with me. As the summer progressed I wondered more and more at this
strange new acquaintance of mine; this rough looking tramp with the
manners of a gentleman and the speech, except for a few lapses in the
vernacular of the road, of a man of considerable education. The oddest
thing of all was the feeling I had that somewhere, at some time, Jim and
I had met before. Little tricks of voice and expression would seem
strangely familiar.

"The summer gradually faded into autumn, and one evening in late
September when I stood at the gate to say good-night to my tramp, he
remarked sadly:
"'This is good-by as well as good-night, Father. I have given up my
work here and am off early in the morning.'
"'Not the road again!' I cried, and the next second would have given
anything to recall the thoughtless words. A pained look crossed Jim's
face, but he answered quietly:
"'No, Father, not the road. Never again shall I return to that life. I have
saved my wages this summer and am going back into the world to
begin life all over again. This time, with God's help, I shall not make
such a muddle of it as I did before.'
"The next day he was gone, and many a night as I sat over my
study-fire reading or trying to work up my sermon for Sunday, my
thoughts would stray from the subject in hand and wander out into the
world in search of my friend the tramp. I would listen to the wintry
blasts whistling down my chimney and wonder where Jim was, and
wonder still more at his complete silence. Surely he might let me know
if all were well with him. Had he persevered? Or had he, perhaps,
lapsed into his former ways, and was he, even now, tramping the
highways and byways?
"Winter passed and spring came; still no news of Jim. Another summer,
another fall, another winter. Silence, absolute silence on the part of my
tramp. Then, one evening in May, exactly two years from the day when
I first met him, Jim stood before me once again. I recognized him by
the missing right hand and the scar on the temple. Aside from those two
points and the old merry twinkle in his eye he bore absolutely no
resemblance to my tramp of two years ago. The face was smooth
shaven, the bloat, caused by years of drinking, had all disappeared, and
he looked at least ten years younger than my former friend. His ragged
tramp's garb had been replaced by neat garments such as a fairly
prosperous business man might wear. His whole appearance seemed to
indicate that Jim had done well in the world to which he had returned.

Sitting in the garden, he told me all about it.
"Yes, he had done well. It had been hard at first, oh! very hard. There
had been a time when, his savings all gone and no employment in sight,
he had faced actual starvation. But the darkest hour comes before dawn,
and that had been Jim's darkest hour. From then on things began to
mend. He had obtained a good situation and was happy in it. He had
not written because for long, for so very long, he had no news but bad
news to send. There was nothing but ill-luck and misfortune to report,
and he waited from day to day hoping things would brighten. Then,
when the unexpected stroke of good luck came, he decided to wait yet a
little longer until he could bring me the good news in person.
"All the time he was talking I watched his face carefully. That puzzling,
baffling resemblance to some one whom I had known was stronger than
ever since the beard which concealed so much of his face had been
removed. I became more and more
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