The Butterfly Man swallowed this a bit ungraciously.
“You’ve got a devil of a way of twisting things into parables. I’m talking birds and thinking birds, and here you must go and make my birds people! I wasn’t thinking about people—that is, I wasn’t, until you have to go and put the notion into my head. It’s not fair. The thing’s bad enough already, without your lugging folks into it and making it worse!”
Laurence looked at him steadily. “You’ve got to think of people, when you see things like that,” said he, slowly; “otherwise you only half-see. I have to think of people—of kids, particularly—and their mothers.” He turned as he spoke, and stared out over our garden, with its sunny spaces, and its shrubs and flowers, and trees, to where, over in the sky a pillar of smoke rose steadily, endlessly, and merged into a cloud overhanging the quiet little town.
“The pillar of cloud by day,” said he “that leads the children—” He stopped, and the whimsical smile faded from his face; his jaw set.
The bluejay, having exhausted his vocabulary of jay-ribaldry, screeched one last outrageous bit of billingsgate into Flint’s ears, shut up his tail like a fan, and darted off, a streak of blue and gray. The Butterfly Man’s eyes followed him smilelessly; then they came back and dwelt for a moment upon the ruined nest and the fluttering mother-bird, still vexing the ear with her shrill lamentable futile protests. From her his eyes went, out over the trees and flowers to that pillar mounting lazily and inevitably into the sky. For a long moment he stared at that, too, fixedly. After an interval he clenched his hand upon his stick and struck the ground.
“Nothing’s got any business to break up a nest! I’d rather sit up all night and watch than see what I’ve just seen and listen to that mother-thing calling to Something that’s far-off and stone deaf and can’t hear nor heed. Why, the little birds haven’t got even the chance to get themselves born, much less grow up and sing! I—Say, you two go on a bit. I feel mighty bad about this. I’d been watching her. She knew me. She let me feed her. If only I’d thought about the jay, why, I might have saved her. But just when she needed me I wasn’t there!” He turned abruptly, and strode off toward his own rooms. Kerry followed with a drooping head and tail. But Laurence looked after him hopefully.
“Padre, the Butterfly Man’s seen something this morning that will sink to the bottom of his soul and stay there: didn’t you see his eyes? Now, which of those two have taught him the most—the happy thief and murderer, or the innocent unhappy victim? The bluejay’s not a whit the worse for it, remember; in fact, he’s all the better off, for his stomach is full and his mischief satisfied, and that’s all that ever worries a bluejay. And there isn’t any redress for the mother-bird. The thing’s done, and can’t be undone. But between them they’ve shown John Flint something that forces a man to take sides. Doesn’t the bluejay deserve some little credit for that? And is there ever any redress for the mother-bird, Padre?”


